| Literature DB >> 26068295 |
S Ferrari1, J D Adachi2, K Lippuner3, C Zapalowski4, P D Miller5, J-Y Reginster6, O Törring7, D L Kendler8, N S Daizadeh4, A Wang4, C D O'Malley4, R B Wagman4, C Libanati4, E M Lewiecki9.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Limited data exist on the efficacy of long-term therapies for osteoporosis. In osteoporotic postmenopausal women receiving denosumab for 7 years, nonvertebral fracture rates significantly decreased in years 4-7 versus years 1-3. This is the first demonstration of a further benefit on fracture outcomes with long-term therapy for osteoporosis.Entities:
Keywords: Denosumab; Fracture threshold; Hip bone mineral density; Long-term osteoporosis therapy; Nonvertebral fracture; Treatment to goal
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26068295 PMCID: PMC4656715 DOI: 10.1007/s00198-015-3179-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteoporos Int ISSN: 0937-941X Impact factor: 4.507
Fig. 1Subject disposition in the FREEDOM study and its extension and the nonvertebral fracture analysis. Subjects included in the nonvertebral fracture analysis cohort enrolled in the FREEDOM extension, missed ≤1 dose of denosumab during their first 3 years of denosumab treatment (whether during FREEDOM or the extension), and continued their fourth year of denosumab treatment. Gray boxes indicate subjects receiving denosumab. Asterisk: Two women who discontinued denosumab also entered the extension in the long-term denosumab group. NVFX = nonvertebral fractures
Baseline demographics
| This study cohort | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full FREEDOM population at baseline | NVFX cohort at FREEDOM baseline | Long-term subjects at FREEDOM baselinea
| Cross-over subjects at extension baselinea
| |
| Age, years | 72.3 (5.2) | 71.6 (4.9) | 71.9 (5.0) | 74.3 (4.9) |
| Age groups -- | ||||
| ≥65 years | 7,394 (94.7) | 3,819 (93.7) | 2,209 (94.3) | 1,681 (97.1) |
| ≥75 years | 2,471 (31.6) | 1,082 (26.6) | 662 (28.3) | 842 (48.6) |
| Years since menopause | 24.2 (7.5) | 23.4 (7.2) | 23.7 (7.3) | 26.1 (7.2) |
| Prevalent vertebral fractures -- | 1,844 (23.6) | 927 (22.8) | 559 (23.9) | 421 (24.3) |
| Prevalent nonvertebral fractures at age ≥55 -- | 2,340 (30.0) | 1,198 (29.4) | 702 (30.0) | 578 (33.4) |
| Lumbar spine T-score | −2.83 (0.69) | −2.84 (0.67) | −2.83 (0.67) | −2.83 (0.75) |
| Total hip T-score | −1.90 (0.81) | –1.84 (0.79) | −1.85 (0.79) | −1.92 (0.80) |
| Femoral neck T-score | −2.16 (0.72) | −2.10 (0.71) | −2.11 (0.71) | −2.13 (0.71) |
| CTXb (ng/mL) -- median (Q1, Q3) | 0.516 (0.389, 0.702) | 0.533 (0.355, 0.674) | 0.505 (0.357, 0.700) | 0.496 (0.413, 0.662) |
| P1NPb (μg/L) -- median (Q1, Q3) | 46.5 (36.0, 61.2) | 46.2 (32.6, 59.5) | 46.2 (31.5, 56.8) | 48.6 (35.0, 62.2) |
Data are means with standard deviations unless otherwise noted
BMD bone mineral density, CTX C-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen, N number of participants enrolled in the extension study, NVFX nonvertebral fractures, P1NP procollagen type 1 N-terminal propeptide
aRepresents characteristics at the time of denosumab treatment start
bData are from participants who were included in the bone turnover marker substudy
Fig. 2Yearly incidence of nonvertebral fractures in the post hoc analysis participants. a Yearly incidence of nonvertebral fractures through 4 years of denosumab treatment for the cross-over group. b Yearly incidence of nonvertebral fractures through 7 years for the long-term denosumab group in the long-term participants. Percentages for nonvertebral fractures are Kaplan-Meier estimates. DMAb = denosumab, n = number of subjects who have ≥1 nonvertebral fracture
Fig. 3Nonvertebral fracture rate ratios. a All denosumab-treated participants. b Cross-over participants. c Long-term participants. N = number of subjects who completed FREEDOM (i.e., completed their 3-year visit and did not discontinue IP), missed ≤1 dose of IP in FREEDOM, and who enrolled in the extension. In addition, cross-over subjects completed 3 years of the extension and missed ≤1 dose of denosumab during the first 3 years of the extension. Fracture rates and rate ratios were obtained using generalized estimating equation Poisson models; fracture rates are per 100 participant-years. Rate ratios relative to the first 3 years of denosumab treatment were adjusted for age, total hip T-score, weight, and history of nonvertebral fracture. In addition, the treatment group variable was included in the model for the combined analysis only
Fig. 4Effect of femoral neck T-score on nonvertebral fracture rates in year 4 compared with years 1–3. Circles are rate ratios and lines indicate 95 % confidence intervals for the comparison of nonvertebral fracture rate per 100 participant-years for years 1–3 of denosumab treatment versus year 4 in the combined cohort overall and for subgroups determined by femoral neck T-score at the end of 3 years of denosumab treatment. Asterisk: 398 subjects did not have BMD data available at the end of year 3 of denosumab treatment