| Literature DB >> 31041620 |
Connie M Weaver1, Heike A Bischoff-Ferrari2,3,4, Christopher J Shanahan5.
Abstract
If all adults with osteoporosis in the European Union (EU) and United States (US) used calcium and vitamin D supplements, it could prevent more than 500,000 fractures/year in the EU and more than 300,000/year in the US and save approximately €5.7 billion and US $3.3 billion annually.Entities:
Keywords: Bone fracture; Calcium; Cost savings; Costs and cost analysis; Osteoporosis; Vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31041620 PMCID: PMC6491825 DOI: 10.1007/s11657-019-0589-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Osteoporos Impact factor: 2.617
Summary of randomized, controlled trials included in meta-analysis for calcium plus vitamin D supplementation versus control and fracture risk reduction. Adapted by permission from Springer Customer Service Centre GmbH: Springer Nature, Osteoporosis International. Erratum and additional analyses re: Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation and the risk of fractures: an updated meta-analysis from the National Osteoporosis Foundation. Weaver CM, Dawson-Hughes B, Lappe JM, Wallace TC, 2016 [4]
| Study | Region | Population | Gender, | Age, year (range) | Calcium dose, mg/day | Vitamin D dose, IU/day | Number of fractures, | Calculated RR (95% CI) [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women | Men | Supplements | Control | ||||||||
| Chapuy 1992 [ | France | Institutionalized | 3270 | 3270 (100) | 0 | (69–106) 84 (6) 84 (6) | 1200 | 800 | 66/877 | 97/888 | 0.69 (0.51–0.93) |
| Dawson-Hughes 1997 [ | USA | Community dwelling | 445 | 246 (55.3) | 199 (44.7) | (≥ 65)a Women: 71 (4) 72 (5) Men: 70 (4) 71 (5) | 500 | 700 | 11/170 | 26/148 | 0.37 (0.19–0.72) |
| Porthouse 2005 [ | England | Community dwelling, unequally allocated group (2:1) | 3454 | 3454 (100) | 0 | (≥ 70)a 77 (5) 77 (5) | 1000 | 800 | 34/714 | 69/1391 | 0.96 (0.64–1.43) |
| Community dwelling, equally allocated group (1:1) | 24/607 | 22/602 | 1.08 (0.61–1.91) | ||||||||
| Prentice 2013b [ | USA | Community dwelling | 15,331 | 15,331 (100) | 0 | (50–79) NR NR | 1000 | 400 | 405/7530c | 458/7801c | 0.92 (0.80–1.04) |
| Salovaara 2010 [ | Finland | Community dwelling | 3195 | 3195 (100) | 0 | (65–71) 67 (2) 67 (2) | 1000 | 800 | 78/1586 | 94/1609 | 0.84 (0.63–1.13) |
| Grant 2005d [ | UK | Community dwelling with history of fracture | 2638e | 2232 (84.6) | 406 (15.4) | (≥ 70)a 78 (6) 77 (6) | 1000 | 800 | 179/1306 | 192/1332 | 0.95 (0.79–1.15) |
| Harwood 2004 [ | UK | Community dwelling with history of hip fracture | 76f | 76 | 0 | (67–92) 83 81g | 1000 | 800 | 3/29 | 5/35 | 0.72 (0.19–2.78) |
| Total (random model) [ | 800/12,819 | 963/13,806 | 0.86 (0.75–0.98) | ||||||||
aRange not reported; number in parentheses represents age-related inclusion criteria
bData analyzing the WHI for subgroup with adherence to assigned pills and no personal use of supplements, from Table 6 in Prentice et al. 2013 [29]
cData provided from WHI investigators
dResults from data on fracture confirmed by radiography
eA total of 5292 were randomized to four groups: 1306 to calcium and vitamin D, 1343 to vitamin D alone, 1311 to calcium alone, and 1332 to placebo; only the calcium + vitamin D and placebo groups are included here
fA total of 150 women were randomized to four groups: 38 to injected vitamin D, 36 to injected vitamin D with oral calcium; 39 to oral vitamin D and calcium, and 37 to control; only the oral vitamin D and calcium and control groups are included here
gSDs not reported
CI, confidence interval; NR, not reported; RR, relative risk; SD, standard deviation; Tx, treatment; WHI, Women’s Health Initiative
Osteoporosis-attributed fractures and related hospital expenditures in adults aged ≥ 50 years in the European Union and United States, by age and gender, 2016–2017
| Gender | Age, year | All women and men > 50 years of age | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women | Men | 50–59 | 60–69 | 70–79 | ≥ 80 | ||
| European Union | |||||||
| Overall population, | 110,412,069 | 94,341,393 | 72,894,061 | 61,182,643 | 42,352,016 | 28,324,742 | |
| Number (%) of people with osteoporosis | 24,289,066 (22.0) | 6,196,243 (6.6) | 5,400,985 (7.4) | 7,089,079 (11.6) | 10,096,028 (23.8) | 7,899,217 (27.9) | |
| Number of osteoporosis-attributable fractures/year | 2,582,774 | 1,341,884 | 695,781 | 908,098 | 1,313,006 | 1,007,773 | |
| Annual percentage of osteoporotic population who experience a fracture | 10.6 | 21.7 | 12.9 | 12.8 | 13.0 | 12.8 | |
| Per-person hospital-related cost of fracture, € | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Total annual hospital costs of osteoporosis-attributed fractures, €a | 33,305,134,948 | 16,818,991,244 | 8,886,229,029 | 11,597,857,669 | 16,769,170,031 | 12,870,869,463 | |
| United States | |||||||
| Overall population, | 56,943,826 | 49,204,489 | 44,980,229 | 31,374,453 | 17,789,749 | 12,005,722 | |
| Number (%) of people with osteoporosis | 8,772,758 (15.4) | 2,115,151 (4.3) | 2,296,013 (5.1) | 2,511,839 (8.0) | 2,917,720 (16.4) | 3,146,201 (26.2) | |
| Number of osteoporosis-attributable fractures/year | 1,655,814 | 675,591 | 492,660 | 517,406 | 634,765 | 686,574 | |
| Annual percentage of osteoporotic population who experience a fracture | 18.9 | 31.9 | 21.5 | 20.6 | 21.8 | 21.8 | |
| Per-person hospital-related cost of fracture, US $ | – | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Total annual hospital costs of osteoporosis-attributed fractures, US $a | 20,196,239,923 | 8,240,299,495 | 6,009,057,865 | 6,310,891,878 | 7,742,336,469 | 8,374,253,206 | |
The significance of the bold entries was to separate the overall totals from the individual age groups listed in Table 2, as well as the call out totals of each row
aPer-person hospital costs of fracture multiplied by the number of osteoporosis-attributable fractures per year
Fig. 1Estimated number of fractures avoided annually, by gender and age, with 100% use of calcium and vitamin D supplementation by adults aged ≥ 50 years in a the European Union and b the United States
Calcium and vitamin D supplementation cost benefit analysis, 2016–2017
| European Union, € | United States, US $ | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost savings (avoided hospital costs for osteoporosis-attributable fractures) | ||
| Total annual savings (S) | 6,956,520,691 | 3,946,589,993 |
| Per-person annual savings | 228.19 | 362.47 |
| Costs of calcium and vitamin D supplements | ||
| Total annual cost (C) per target population | 1,246,243,361 | 634,353,741 |
| Daily per-person cost | 0.11 | 0.16 |
| Annual per-person cost | 40.88 | 58.44 |
| Net cost benefits | ||
| Annual net cost benefit (S – C) | 5,710,277,330 | 3,312,236,252 |
| Net benefit/cost ratio (S/C) | 5.58 | 6.22 |
Fig. 2Cost analysis: net healthcare cost savings in terms of reduced hospital costs for osteoporosis-attributable fracture if all persons aged ≥ 50 years used calcium and vitamin D supplements in a the European Union and b the United States, 2016–2017
Fig. 3Net cost benefits, by gender and age, with 100% use of calcium and vitamin D supplementation by adults aged ≥ 50 years in a the European Union and b the United States