| Literature DB >> 33502559 |
M Chandran1, P J Mitchell2, T Amphansap3, S K Bhadada4, M Chadha5, D-C Chan6, Y-S Chung7, P Ebeling8, N Gilchrist9, A Habib Khan10, P Halbout11, F L Hew12, H-P T Lan13, T C Lau14, J K Lee15, S Lekamwasam16, G Lyubomirsky17, L B Mercado-Asis18, A Mithal19, T V Nguyen20, D Pandey21, I R Reid22, A Suzuki23, T T Chit24, K L Tiu25, T Valleenukul26, C K Yung27, Y L Zhao28.
Abstract
Guidelines for doctors managing osteoporosis in the Asia-Pacific region vary widely. We compared 18 guidelines for similarities and differences in five key areas. We then used a structured consensus process to develop clinical standards of care for the diagnosis and management of osteoporosis and for improving the quality of care.Entities:
Keywords: Asia-Pacific; Consensus; Guidelines; Osteoporosis; Standards of care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33502559 PMCID: PMC8192320 DOI: 10.1007/s00198-020-05742-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteoporos Int ISSN: 0937-941X Impact factor: 4.507
The 5IQ model for analyzing the content of clinical practice guidelines
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Identification | A statement of which individuals should be identified |
| Investigation | A description of the types of investigations that will be undertaken |
| Information | A description of the types of information that will be provided to the individual |
| Intervention | A description of pharmacological interventions and falls prevention |
| Integration | A statement on the need for integration between primary and secondary care |
| Quality | A description of professional development, audit, and peer-review activities |
Osteoporosis management clinical practice guidance documents included in the 5IQ analysis
| Country or region | Organization(s) | Name of guideline |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | Osteoporosis Australia The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners | Osteoporosis prevention, diagnosis and management in postmenopausal women and men over 50 years of age |
| China | Osteoporosis and Bone Mineral Disease Branch of Chinese Medical Association | Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of primary osteoporosis |
| China | Osteoporosis Society of China Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2018 China guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of senile osteoporosis |
| China | Osteoporosis Group, Orthopedic Branch, Chinese Medical Association | Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of osteoporotic fractures |
| Hong Kong SAR | The Osteoporosis Society of Hong Kong | OSHK guideline for clinical management of postmenopausal osteoporosis in Hong Kong |
| Chinese Taipei | Taiwanese Osteoporosis Association | Consensus and guidelines for the prevention and treatment of adult osteoporosis in Taiwan |
| India | Indian Menopause Society | Clinical practice guidelines on postmenopausal osteoporosis: An executive summary and recommendations |
| India | Indian Society for Bone and Mineral Research | Indian Society for Bone and Mineral Research guidelines 2020 |
| Indonesia | Indonesian Osteoporosis Association (Perhimpunan Osteoporosis Indonesia) | Summary of the Indonesian guidelines for diagnosis and management of osteoporosis |
| Japan | Japan Osteoporosis Society The Japanese Society for Bone and Mineral Research Japan Osteoporosis Foundation | Japanese 2015 guidelines for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis |
| Malaysia | Malaysian Osteoporosis Society Academy of Medicine Ministry of Health Malaysia | Clinical guidance on management of osteoporosis |
| Myanmar | Myanmar Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism | Myanmar clinical practice guidelines for osteoporosis |
| New Zealand | Osteoporosis New Zealand | Guidance on the diagnosis and management of osteoporosis in New Zealand |
| Philippines | Osteoporosis Society of Philippines Foundation Philippine Orthopedic Association | Consensus statements on osteoporosis diagnosis, prevention, and management in the Philippines |
| Singapore | Agency for Care Effectiveness, Ministry of Health Singapore | Appropriate care guide: osteoporosis identification and management in primary care |
| South Korea | Korean Society for Bone and Mineral Research | KSBMR Physician's Guide for Osteoporosis |
| Thailand | Thai Osteoporosis Foundation | Thai Osteoporosis Foundation (TOPF) position statements on management of osteoporosis |
| Vietnam | Vietnam Rheumatology Association | Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis |
Recommendations for timing of bone densitometry in follow-up
| Guideline | Mode | First test (if stated separately) | Intervals for repeat tests (if stated) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | DXA | – | ≥ 2 years when considering efficacy of treatment, risk assessment or decision to change or interrupt treatment Every 1 year in patients at high risk |
| China (Orthopedic) | DXA | 1 year after starting treatment | – |
| China (CSOBMR) | Unspecified (bone density measurement) | 1 year after starting or changing treatment | Every 1–2 years when effect has stabilized |
| China (Geriatrics) | DXA or QCT (if available) | – | Unspecified (Monitor efficacy) |
| Biochemical markers of bone turnover | – | Every 3–6 months | |
| Chinese Taipei | DXA | 2 years after starting treatment < 2 years after starting treatment in patients with glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis | – |
| Hong Kong SAR | BMD (not specified) | 1–2 years after starting treatment in patients treated with antiresorptive treatment 1 year after starting treatment in patients treated with bone-forming agents | 2–3 after therapeutic effect established |
| India (IMS) | DXA (use same DXA machine) | – | 2 years |
| India (ISBMR) | DXA (if available) | – | 2 years |
| Indonesia | BMD (not specified) | – | 1–2 to evaluate treatment response (defined as stable over 1 year) |
| Japan | BMD (not specified) | 1 year after starting treatment | > 1 year (unspecified)—after 1 year’s treatment with bisphosphonates, intervals longer than 1 year needed to see change in BMD |
| Malaysia | DXA | Not specified | Not specified (Monitoring the effect of therapy) |
| New Zealand | BMD (not specified) | 4–5 years after starting treatment to determine whether bisphosphonates treatment should continue | ≥ 3 years (intervals < 3 years not recommended in most patients) |
| Singapore | DXA | 1–2 years after starting treatment to establish clinical effectiveness | Every 2–3 years after clinical effectiveness established |
| South Korea | DXA | – | Every 1 year until normal BMD (T-score > − 1.0) 2 years after previous normal BMD |
| Thailand | DXA (Use same axial DXA analyzer) | – | > 1 year |
| Vietnam | Not specified | 1–2 years | 1–2 years |
BMD bone mineral density, DXA dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, QCT quantitative computed tomography
Delphi round 1 responses
| Component | Inclusion of standard on this component | Consensus (% rating as extremely or very important, i.e., ≥ 75%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extremely important | Very important | Somewhat important | Not so important | Not at all important | ||
| Identification | ||||||
| Fragility fracture | 22 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Yes (100%) |
| Risk factors for osteoporosis | 12 | 10 | 2 | 0 | 0 | Yes (92%) |
| Medicines associated with bone loss/fracture risk | 7 | 15 | 3 | 0 | 0 | Yes (88%) |
| Medical conditions associated with bone loss/fracture risk | 5 | 16 | 4 | 0 | 0 | Yes (84%) |
| Investigation | ||||||
| Biochemistry | 5 | 11 | 8 | 1 | 0 | No |
| BMD testing | 8 | 9 | 8 | 0 | 0 | No |
| Risk assessment tools | 12 | 9 | 3 | 1 | 0 | Yes (84%) |
| Vertebral fracture assessment | 14 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 | Yes (79%) |
| Falls risk assessment | 9 | 13 | 3 | 0 | 0 | Yes (88%) |
| Specialist referral | 4 | 11 | 8 | 2 | 0 | No |
| Information for patients | 14 | 7 | 4 | 0 | 0 | Yes (84%) |
| Intervention | ||||||
| Indications—see Table | N/A | |||||
| Pharmacological | 10 | 12 | 3 | 0 | 0 | Yes (88%) |
| Non-pharmacological | 4 | 16 | 4 | 1 | 0 | Yes (80%) |
| Side effects | 6 | 15 | 3 | 1 | 0 | Yes (84%) |
| Monitoring effect | 11 | 11 | 3 | 0 | 0 | Yes (88%) |
| Duration | 13 | 8 | 4 | 0 | 0 | Yes (84%) |
| Adherence | 8 | 12 | 3 | 2 | 0 | Yes (80%) |
| Falls programs | 5 | 13 | 6 | 0 | 0 | No |
| Integration | ||||||
| Long-term management plans | 11 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 0 | Yes (80%) |
| Quality | ||||||
| Adherence to guideline-based care | 10 | 12 | 2 | 1 | 0 | Yes (88%) |
Respondents’ priority ratings for each of the key components identified in existing clinical practice guidelines. Consensus was defined as a rating of extremely important or very important by at least 75% of respondents
Fig. 1Delphi second-round consensus on wording of standards. The proportion of respondents who voted “strongly agree” or “agree” on the wording of 16 draft clinical practice standards
Delphi round 1 responses: indications for initiating osteoporosis-specific treatment
| Indications | Selected ( | Consensus (% rating as extremely or very important, i.e., ≥ 75%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | ||
| Hip fracture | 24 | 1 | Yes (96%) |
| Vertebral fracture | 24 | 1 | Yes (96%) |
| Non-hip non-vertebral fracture | 20 | 5 | Yes (80%) |
| BMD T-score ≤ − 2.5 SD | 18 | 7 | No |
| Osteopenia + FRAX® ≥ 3% hip or ≥ 20% MOF | 11 | 14 | No |
| Osteopenia + RFs or eligible by OSTA or SCORE | 7 | 18 | No |
| Osteopenia + ≥ 10 years post menopause | 3 | 23 | No |
| FRAX® or Garvan ≥ 3% hip or ≥ 20% MOF | 9 | 16 | No |
| Eligible by OSTA, MORES, or SCORE | 1 | 24 | No |
| QCT | 2 | 23 | No |
| Height loss > 4 cm | 11 | 14 | No |
| Androgen deprivation therapy | 10 | 6 | No |
| Aromatase inhibitor treatment | 9 | 16 | No |
| Glucocorticoid treatment | 17 | 8 | No |
| Country-specific thresholds | 14 | 11 | No |
BMD bone mineral density, MORES Male Osteoporosis Risk Estimation Score, OSTA Self-Assessment Tool for Asians, SCORE Simple Calculated Osteoporosis Risk Estimation, QCT quantitative computed tomography
The percentage of APCO member respondents who rated each of the proposed indications for initiating osteoporosis treatment identified in existing clinical practice guidelines, as extremely or very important for inclusion in APCO clinical practice standard 9
| 1. Country/region | |
| 2. Sponsor organization | |
| 3. Year | |
| 4. Number of pages | |
| 5. Review date | |
| 6. Guideline published in English (Yes/No) | |
| 7. Corresponding author (Yes/No) | |
| 8. Does the guideline include a flowchart/algorithm? | |
| 1. Male, female, both male and female | |
| 2. Individuals who have sustained fragility fractures | a. Age threshold |
| b. Fracture types evaluated | |
| c. Other comments relating to secondary fracture prevention | |
| 3. Individuals taking medicines to manage other conditions which are associated with bone loss and/or increased fracture risk:[ | a. Androgen deprivation therapy |
| b. Anticoagulants | |
| c. Anticonvulsants | |
| d. Aromatase inhibitors | |
| e. Calcineurin inhibitors | |
| f. Glucocorticoids | |
| g. Medroxyprogesterone acetate | |
| h. Proton pump inhibitors | |
| i. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors | |
| j. Thiazolidinediones | |
| k. Other medicines | |
| 4. Conditions associated with bone loss and/or increased fracture risk:[ | a. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
| b. Diabetes | |
| c. Diseases of malabsorption | |
| d. Dementia | |
| e. Rheumatoid arthritis | |
| f. HIV | |
| g. Multiple myeloma | |
| h. Untreated/uncontrolled hyperthyroidism | |
| i. Other conditions | |
| 5. Other risk factors | a. Age 70 years or over |
| b. Early menopause | |
| c. Excessive alcohol intake | |
| e. Family history | |
| f. Height loss | |
| g. Low body mass index/weight | |
| h. Prolonged immobility | |
| i. Smoking | |
| j. Other risk factors | |
| k. Other comments on identification | |
| 1. BMD testing, if available | |
| 2. Fracture risk calculators | a. FRAX® |
| b. Garvan | |
| c. IOF 1-minute test | |
| d. KKOS | |
| e. OSTA | |
| f. MORES | |
| g. QFracture | |
| h. SCORE | |
| 3. Vertebral fracture assessment by X-Ray or DXA | |
| 4. Falls risk assessment | |
| 5. Blood biochemistry | a. Alkaline phosphatase |
| b. Calcium | |
| c. Creatinine | |
| d. Osteocalcin | |
| e. uNTX | |
| g. P1NP | |
| h. PTH | |
| i. Vitamin D | |
| j. Other assays | |
| 6. Referral to specialist | |
| 1. Information on calcium intake | |
| 2. Information relating to sun exposure | |
| 3. Information relating to osteoporosis and fracture risk | |
| 4. Information relating to exercise | |
| 5. Other information | |
| 1. Which patient groups are indicated for treatment? | a. Hip fracture |
| b. Vertebral fracture | |
| c. Non-hip, non-vertebral fracture | |
| d. BMD T-Score ≤ –2.5 SD | |
| e. Osteopenia + FRAX ≥3% Hip or ≥ 20% MOF | |
| f. Osteopenia + RFs or eligible by OSTA or SCORE | |
| g. Osteopenia + ≥10 years postmenopausal | |
| h. FRAX or Garvan ≥3% Hip or ≥ 20% MOF | |
| i. Eligible by OSTA, MORES or SCORE | |
| j. QCT <80 mg/cm3 | |
| k. Height loss >4 cm | |
| l. Androgen deprivation therapy use | |
| m. Aromatase inhibitor use | |
| n. Glucocorticoid use | |
| 2. Which treatment options are recommended? | a. Bisphosphonates (oral, IV) |
| b. Calcium | |
| c. HRT | |
| d. Monoclonal antibodies (denosumab, romosozumab) | |
| e. Parathyroid hormone analogues (abaloparatide, teriparatide) | |
| f. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (raloxifene. tamoxifen. toremifene) | |
| g. Vitamin D | |
| h. Other treatment options | |
| 3. Are recommendations made on monitoring treatment? | |
| 4. Are recommendations made on treatment duration? | |
| 5. Are recommendations made on checking adherence with treatment? | |
| 6. Comments on side effects | |
| 7. Comments on referral to falls prevention programs | |
| 8. Comments relating to other interventions | |
| 1. Are recommendations made to provide the patient with a long-term management plan? | |
| 2. Are recommendations made to provide the patient’s primary care provider with a long-term management plan? | |
| 1. Does the guideline advocate audit of care provision against clinical care standards? | |
| 2. Does the guideline advocate healthcare providers maintain ongoing professional medical education relating to osteoporosis? | |
| Identification | Considering the groups of individuals that the various guidelines recommend should be identified for bone health assessment, what are the most notable findings in the analysis? (You can indicate more than one) | [Free text] |
| Investigation | Considering the investigations that the various guidelines recommend should be undertaken, what are the most notable findings in the analysis? | [Free text] |
| Information | Considering the types of information that should be imparted to patients to engage them in their care, which are the most notable points identified by the analysis in your view? | [Free text] |
| Intervention | Considering the | [Free text] |
| Considering the | [Free text] | |
| Considering the findings of the analysis related to | [Free text] | |
| Integration | Considering how integration should occur between primary and secondary care, what are the most notable findings identified by the analysis in your view? | [Free text] |
| Quality | Considering the findings of the 5IQ Comparative analysis related to quality metrics, what are the most notable findings in your view? | [Free text] |
| How do you envisage the Framework being structured? Would you like to have it as a simple list of standards or have several levels of attainment (i.e. Level 1, Level 2, Level 3)? | [Free text] | |
This domain seeks your opinions on what specific aspects of care merit having a clinical standard. We invite you to rate the importance or not of having particular standards and invite you to add any comments as free text. | ||
| Identification | How important is it to have a standard relating to identification of individuals with | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to identification of individuals with | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to identification of individuals who take | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to identification of individuals with | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| Investigation | How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to use of | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to How important is it to have a standard relating to vertebral fracture assessment for individuals undergoing assessment? for individuals undergoing assessment? | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to scenarios when | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| Information | How important is it to have a standard relating to what information should be imparted to patients to engage them in their care (e.g. information on calcium intake, sun exposure, the relationship between osteoporosis and fracture risk, exercise and other information)? | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important |
| Intervention | The 5IQ analysis identified a broad range of Please indicate in priority order (where number 1 is the highest priority). Only provide rankings for those indications which you believe should be included. [ ] Hip fracture [ ] Vertebral fracture [ ] Non-hip, non-vertebral fracture [ ] BMD T-Score ≤ –2.5 SD [ ] Osteopenia + FRAX® ≥3% Hip or ≥ 20% MOF [ ] Osteopenia + RFs or eligible by OSTA or SCORE [ ] Osteopenia + ≥10 years postmenopausal [ ] FRAX® or Garvan ≥3% Hip or ≥ 20% MOF [ ] Eligible by OSTA, MORES or SCORE [ ] QCT <80 mg/cm3 [ ] Height loss >4 cm [ ] Androgen deprivation therapy use [ ] Aromatase inhibitor use [ ] Glucocorticoid use [ ] Country-specific thresholds | [Select items and rank according to priority] |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to which | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to which | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to description of | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| How important is it to have a standard relating to | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important | |
| Integration | How important is it to have a standard relating to provision of a long-term management plan to the patients and/or primary care provider? | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important |
| Quality | How important is it to have a standard relating to what quality metrics should be in place to assess adherence with guidelines-based care? | Extremely important Very important Somewhat important Not so important Not at all important |
| Do you have any other comments related to the development of the Framework clinical standards? | [Free text] | |
| Clinical standards | Levels of attainment | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Men and women who sustain a fragility fracture should be systematically and proactively identified to undergo assessment of bone health and, where appropriate, falls risk. | 1. Individuals who sustain hip fractures should be identified. 2: Individuals who sustain hip and/or clinical vertebral fractures should be identified. 3: Individuals who sustain hip, clinical and/or morphometric vertebral, and/or non-hip, non-vertebral major osteoporotic fractures should be identified. |
| 2 | Men and women with common risk factors for osteoporosis should be proactively identified to undergo assessment of bone health and, where appropriate, falls risk. A sex-specific age threshold for assessment should be determined for each country or region and should be included in new or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines. | |
| 3 | Men and women who take medicines that are associated with bone loss and/or increased fracture risk should be proactively identified to undergo assessment of bone health and, where appropriate, falls risk. A commentary should be included in new or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines to highlight commonly used medicines that are associated with bone loss and/or increased fracture risk. | |
| 4 | Men and women who have conditions associated with bone loss and/or increased fracture risk should be proactively identified to undergo assessment of bone health. A commentary should be included in new or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines to highlight common prevalent conditions in the country or region. | |
| 5 | The use of country-specific (if available) fracture risk assessment tools (e.g. FRAX®, Garvan, etc.) or osteoporosis screening tools (e.g. OSTA) should be a standard component of investigation of an individual’s bone health and prediction of future fracture risk and/or osteoporosis risk. | |
| 6 | Assessment for presence of vertebral fracture(s) either by X-ray (or other radiological investigations such as CT or MRI), or by DXA-based VFA should be a standard component of investigation of osteoporosis and prediction of future fracture risk. | 1. Individuals presenting with clinical vertebral fractures should undergo assessment for osteoporosis. 2. Individuals with incidentally detected vertebral fractures on X-ray and/or other radiological investigations should be assessed for osteoporosis. 3. Individuals being a ssessed for osteoporosis should undergo spinal imaging with X-ray or other appropriate radiological modalities, or with DXA-based VFA. |
| 7 | A falls risk assessment should be a standard component of investigation of an individual’s future fracture risk. | |
| 8 | In order to engage individuals in their own care, information should be provided on calcium and vitamin D intake, sun exposure, exercise, and the relationship between osteoporosis and fracture risk. | |
| 9 | The decision to treat with osteoporosis-specific therapies and the choice of therapy should be informed as much as possible by country-specific and cost-effective intervention thresholds. Intervention thresholds that can be considered include: • History of fragility fracture • BMD T-Score ≤ –2.5 S.D. • High fracture risk as assessed by country-specific intervention thresholds. | |
| 10 | New or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should include a commentary on the common side effects of pharmacological treatments that are recommended in the guidelines. | |
| 11 | New or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should provide a commentary on monitoring of pharmacological treatments. This could include, e.g. the role of biochemical markers of bone turnover and bone mineral density measurement. | |
| 12 | New or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should provide a commentary on the duration of pharmacological treatments that are recommended in the guidelines. This should include a discussion on the appropriate order of sequential treatment with available therapies and the role of ‘drug holidays’. | |
| 13 | Assessment of adherence to pharmacological treatments that are recommended in new or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should be undertaken on an ongoing basis after initiation of therapy, and appropriate corrective action be taken if treated individuals have become non-adherent. | |
| 14 | New and revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should provide a commentary on recommended non-pharmacological interventions, such as exercise and nutrition (including dietary calcium intake) and other non-pharmacological interventions (e.g. hip protectors). | |
| 15 | In collaboration with the patient, the treating clinician (hospital specialist and/or primary care provider) should develop a long-term management plan, that, provides recommendations on pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions to improve bone health and, where appropriate, measures to reduce falls risk. | |
| 16 | New or revised osteoporosis clinical guidelines should provide a commentary on what quality metrics should be in place to assess adherence with guideline-based care. | 1. Conduct a local ‘pathfinder audit’ in a hospital or primary care practice to assess adherence to APCO Framework Clinical Standards 1–9, 13 and 15. 2. Contribute to a local fracture/osteoporosis registry. 3. Contribute to a fracture/osteoporosis registry for your country or region. |