Literature DB >> 21380637

Diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis before and after admission to long-term care institutions.

L A Beaupre1, S R Majumdar, S Dieleman, A Au, D W Morrish.   

Abstract

SUMMARY: Bisphosphonate treatment rates were examined before and after admission to long-term residential care. Bisphosphonate treatment rates were low (16%) pre-admission but doubled after long-term residential care admission (30%). Men were very undertreated for osteoporosis, while a history of falls with injury was not associated with treatment.
INTRODUCTION: To determine the rates and independent correlates of bisphosphonate treatment in elderly residents before and after admission to long-term care (LTC) institutions.
METHODS: Information was collected from records of 421 residents of four LTC institutions in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Osteoporosis-related diagnoses, treatments, and risk factors including falls in LTC and any adulthood fractures were abstracted. Osteoporosis was defined by physician diagnosis or documented fractures of the hip, spine, or upper extremity. Multivariable analyses were undertaken to determine factors independently associated with bisphosphonate treatment.
RESULTS: Mean age was 84 ± 8 years and 290 (70%) were female. Overall, 142 (34%) had previous fractures, 170 (41%) had physician-diagnosed osteoporosis, and 227 (54%) residents met the study's clinical definition of osteoporosis. Of those with osteoporosis, 44 (19%) were men. Before admission, 36 (16%) patients with osteoporosis were treated with bisphosphonates; after admission another 31 (14%) were started on bisphosphonates by LTC physicians. Women were far more likely than men to start bisphosphonate treatment [30 (97%) women vs. 1 (3%) man, adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 9.20 (95% confidence intervals 1.2,70.5)]. Falls with injury were common [72/227 (31%)] but not associated with bisphosphonate treatment (adjusted p value > 0.5).
CONCLUSION: Rates of pre-admission bisphosphonate treatment were low, but did double after LTC admission. Women were almost ten times more likely to start bisphosphonate treatment than men, although one fifth of those with documented osteoporosis were men. Although falls cause most fractures, a history of falls with injury was not associated with bisphosphonate treatment. Our findings suggest that targeting men and residents with falls for treatment with bisphosphonates might be warranted.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21380637     DOI: 10.1007/s00198-011-1582-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Osteoporos Int        ISSN: 0937-941X            Impact factor:   4.507


  40 in total

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2.  Residential status and risk of hip fracture.

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Journal:  Age Ageing       Date:  1999-03       Impact factor: 10.668

3.  A prospective study of the effect of nursing home residency on mortality following hip fracture.

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4.  Meta-analysis: excess mortality after hip fracture among older women and men.

Authors:  Patrick Haentjens; Jay Magaziner; Cathleen S Colón-Emeric; Dirk Vanderschueren; Koen Milisen; Brigitte Velkeniers; Steven Boonen
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5.  Prevalence and predictors of osteoporosis treatment in nursing home residents with known osteoporosis or recent fracture.

Authors:  C Colón-Emeric; K W Lyles; D A Levine; P House; A Schenck; J Gorospe; M Fermazin; K Oliver; J Alison; N Weisman; A Xie; J R Curtis; K Saag
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6.  Osteoporosis management among residents living in long-term care.

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7.  Risk factors for osteoporotic fractures in elderly men.

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8.  Hip and other osteoporotic fractures increase the risk of subsequent fractures in nursing home residents.

Authors:  K W Lyles; A P Schenck; C S Colón-Emeric
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9.  Population-based fracture risk assessment and osteoporosis treatment disparities by race and gender.

Authors:  Jeffrey R Curtis; Leslie A McClure; Elizabeth Delzell; Virginia J Howard; Eric Orwoll; Kenneth G Saag; Monika Safford; George Howard
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10.  BMI and low bone mass in an elderly male nursing home population.

Authors:  Miguel A Paniagua; Julie E Malphurs; Luis F Samos
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4.  Fracture risk assessment in long-term care: a survey of long-term care physicians.

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