Literature DB >> 33308627

Pharmacological management of osteoporosis in nursing home residents: the Shelter study.

Alireza Malek Makan1, Hein van Hout2, Graziano Onder3, Henriëtte van der Roest4, Harriet Finne-Soveri5, Eva Topinková6, Michael Denkinger7, Jacob Gindin8, Rob van Marum9.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To prevent osteoporotic fractures in nursing home residents a combination of bisphosphonates, calcium and vitamin D is recommended. This study assessed the prevalence of pharmacological osteoporosis prevention in nursing home residents from eight countries, and assessed its association with patient characteristics.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional analyses of the SHELTER study data. We assessed the overall prevalence of osteoporosis medication (OM) use (vitamin D, calcium and bisphosphonates) in residents stratified for falls and fractures over last 30 days, health instability with high mortality risk, cognitive impairment, and dependence in walking. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Nursing home residents in the Czech Republic, England, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands and Israel.
RESULTS: Of 3832 eligible residents, vitamin D, calcium and bisphosphonates were used by 16.2%, 10.4%, and 4.5% respectively. All 3 classes of OM together were used by 1.5% of all residents. Of residents with a recent fracture, 9.5% used a bisphosphonate (2.7% all 3 OMs). In patients with recent falls, 20.8% used vitamin D and 15.3% calcium. In residents with severe cognitive impairment, 15.5% used vitamin D and 9.3% used calcium. Of the bisphosphonate users, 33.7% also used both vitamin D and calcium, 25.8% used only calcium in addition and 17.4% only vitamin D in addition. The use of any OM varied widely across countries, from 66.8% in Finland to 3.0% in Israel. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: We found substantial pharmacological under-treatment of prevention of osteoporosis in residents with recent falls, fractures and dependence in walking. Only two-thirds of bisphosphonate users also took a vitamin D-calcium combination, despite guideline recommendations. On the other hand, possible over-treatment was found in residents with high mortality risk in whom preventive pharmacotherapy might not have still been appropriate. The prevalence of pharmacological prevention of osteoporosis differed substantially between countries. Efforts are needed to improve pharmacotherapy in residents.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  life expectancy; nursing home; osteoporosis; osteoporosis medication

Year:  2020        PMID: 33308627     DOI: 10.1016/j.maturitas.2020.10.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Maturitas        ISSN: 0378-5122            Impact factor:   4.342


  1 in total

1.  Declining serum bone turnover markers are associated with the short-term positive change of lumbar spine bone mineral density in postmenopausal women.

Authors:  Shengli Zhao; Xiaoyi Mo; Zhenxing Wen; Ming Liu; Zhipeng Chen; Wei Lin; Zifang Huang; Bailing Chen
Journal:  Menopause       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 3.310

  1 in total

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