| Literature DB >> 35384943 |
Gregory W Hartley1, Kathryn E Roach1, Robert W Nithman2, Sherri R Betz3, Carleen Lindsey4, Robyn K Fuchs5, Keith G Avin5.
Abstract
A clinical practice guideline on physical therapist management of patients with suspected or confirmed osteoporosis was developed by a volunteer guideline development group (GDG) that was appointed by the Academy of Geriatric Physical Therapy (APTA Geriatrics). The GDG consisted of an exercise physiologist and 6 physical therapists with clinical and methodological expertise. The guideline was based on a systematic review of existing clinical practice guidelines, followed by application of the ADAPTE methodological process described by Guidelines International Network for adapting guidelines for cultural and professional utility. The recommendations contained in this guideline are derived from the 2021 Scottish Intercollegiate Guideline Network (SIGN) document: Management of Osteoporosis and the Prevention of Fragility Fractures. These guidelines are intended to assist physical therapists practicing in the United States, and implementation in the context of the US health care system is discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35384943 PMCID: PMC8983944 DOI: 10.1519/JPT.0000000000000346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Geriatr Phys Ther ISSN: 1539-8412 Impact factor: 3.190
AGREE II Rigor and Quality Scores for Osteoporosis Clinical Practice Guidelines
| Guideline Title | AGREE II Rigor Score | AGREE II Quality Score |
|---|---|---|
| Management of osteoporosis and the prevention of fragility fractures. Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN). (Scotland, 2015, updated 2020 and 2021) | 93% | 95% |
| Too Fit to Fracture: Exercise recommendations for individuals with osteoporosis or osteoporotic vertebral fracture. International Osteoporosis Foundation and National Osteoporosis Foundation. (Canada, 2013) | 85% | 85% |
| National Osteoporosis Guideline Group (NOGG) 2017: Clinical guideline for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) accredited. (Britain/United Kingdom, 2017) | 71% | 65% |
| 2015 Guidelines for Osteoporosis in Saudi Arabia: Recommendations from the Saudi Osteoporosis Society. (Saudi Arabia, 2015) | 41% | 56% |
| Clinical guidelines for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis: Summary statements and recommendations from the Italian Society of Orthopedics and Traumatology. (Italy, 2017) | 26% | 47% |
| Taiwanese Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Osteoporosis. (Taiwan, 2014) | 21% | 38% |
Abbreviation: AGREE, Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation.
Exercise Interventions Definitions
| Exercise | Definition |
|---|---|
| SWB | Static weight-bearing exercise including single-leg standing. |
| DWBLF | Dynamic weight-bearing exercise with low force including walking and tai chi. |
| DWBHF | Dynamic weight-bearing exercise with high force including jogging, jumping, running, dancing, and vibration platform. |
| NWBLF | Non–weight-bearing exercise with low force, eg, low-load high-repetition strength training. |
| NWBHF | Non–weight-bearing exercise high force, eg, progressive resisted strength training. |
| COMB | Combination of exercise types with more than one of the above exercise interventions. |
Grades/Strength of Recommendation
| Letter Grade | Strength of Recommendation | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| A | Strong | A high level of certainty of |
| B | Moderate | A high level of certainty of |
| C | Weak | A moderate level of certainty of |
| D | Theoretical/foundational | A preponderance of evidence from animal or cadaver studies, from conceptual/theoretical models/principles, or from basic science/bench research, or published expert opinion in peer-reviewed journals that supports the recommendation. |
| P | Best practice | Recommended practice based on current clinical practice norms, exceptional situations in which validating studies have not or cannot be performed; yet, there is a clear benefit, harm, or cost, expert opinion. |
| R | Research | An absence of research on the topic or disagreement among conclusions from high-quality studies on the topic. |
Abbreviation: RCT, randomized clinical trial.
Detailed Information on Exercise Interventions for Postmenopausal Women
| Exercise Type | Exercise | Exercise Dose | Participants | Adverse Events | Evidence Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Static weight bearing | Single-leg standing | 1 min per limb | 94 Japanese women, mean age: 68 y (age range: 61-85 y) | None reported | Evidence |
| Dynamic weight bearing: | Walking, | 50-60 min | Healthy postmenopausal women, women with UE fracture, women with osteopenia | Exercise and control groups reported injuries. One exercise-specific injury reported | Evidence |
| Dynamic weight bearing: | Standing weight lifting | 50-55 min per session | Healthy postmenopausal women, women with osteopenia or osteoporosis | One injury reported in an intervention group | Evidence |
| Non–weight bearing: | Seated low-load, high-repetition strength training | ∼40% 1RM | Healthy postmenopausal women | None reported | Evidence |
| Non–weight bearing: | Seated progressive resistive, high-load strength training | 1-3 sets | Healthy postmenopausal women | None reported | Evidence |
| Combination of exercise types | Combinations of any 2 of the exercise types described previously | 2-7 d/wk | Postmenopausal women | None reported | Evidence |
Abbreviations: BMD, bone mineral density; RM, repetition maximum; UE, upper extremity.
Detailed Information on Exercise Interventions for Premenopausal Women
| Exercise Type | Exercise | Exercise Dose | Participants | Adverse Events | Evidence Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Static weight bearing | Single-leg standing | No systematic reviews available | Not applicable | Not applicable | There is |
| Dynamic weight bearing: low force | Walking, tai chi | No systematic reviews available | Not applicable | Not applicable | There is |
| Dynamic weight bearing: high force | Jumping, jogging, skipping, running, dancing, vibration platforms | Healthy, premenopausal women | None reported | Evidence | |
| Non–weight bearing: | Progressive resistive, low-load strength training | No systematic reviews available | Not applicable | Not applicable | There is |
| Non–weight bearing: | Seated progressive resistive, high-load strength training | 60% 1RM | Healthy, premenopausal women | None reported | Evidence |
| Combination of exercise types | Circuit strength and high-impact aerobics | 2-9 sets of 8-12 repetitions | Healthy premenopausal women. | None reported | Evidence |
Abbreviations: BMD, bone mineral density; RM, repetition maximum.