| Literature DB >> 35672434 |
Antonio Naranjo1,2, Amparo Molina3, Adrián Quevedo3, Francisco J Rubiño3, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso4, Carlos Rodríguez-Lozano3, Soledad Ojeda3.
Abstract
Long-term adherence to antiosteoporosis medication (AOM) in the setting of a fracture liaison service (FLS) are not well known. Patients ≥ 50 with hip fracture seen in an FLS and recommended for treatment to prevent new fractures were analyzed. Baseline data included demographics, identification mode, previous treatment and FRAX items. Patient records were reviewed 3-8 years later, and these data were collected: (1) survival; (2) major refracture; (3) initiation of treatment, proportion of days covered (PDC) and persistence with AOM. 372 patients (mean age, 79 years; 76% women) were included. Mean follow-up was 47 months, 52 patients (14%) had a refracture (22 hip) and 129 (34.5%) died. AOM was started in 283 patients (76.0%). Factors associated with initiation of AOM were previous use of bisphosphonate (OR 9.94; 95% CI 1.29-76.32) and a lower T-score lumbar (OR 0.80; 95% CI 0.65-0.99). Persistence decreased to 72.6%, 60% and 47% at 12, 36 and 60 months. A PDC > 80% was confirmed in 208 patients (55.7%) and associated with previous use of bisphosphonate (OR 3.38; 95% CI 1.34-8.53), treatment with denosumab (OR 2.69; 95% CI:1.37-5.27), and inpatient identification (OR 2.26; 95% CI 1.18-4.34). Long-term persistence with AOM was optimal in patients with hip fracture seen at an FLS. A PDC > 80% was associated with inpatient identification and prescription of denosumab.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35672434 PMCID: PMC9174234 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-13465-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Flow diagram of patients. Edited with Microsoft 365 A3 for faculty.
Baseline characteristics of patients.
| Patients | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) mean (SD), range | 79.4 (8.9), 53–102 |
| Sex (female), n (%) | 283 (76.1) |
| Pertrochanteric | 191 (51.3) |
| Intracapsular | 151 (40.6) |
| Subtrochanteric | 24 (6.4) |
| Others | 6 (1.6) |
| Emergency registry | 217 (58.3) |
| Admission | 129 (34.6) |
| Rheumatology osteoporosis clinic | 26 (6.9) |
| 53 (14.4) | |
| Previous fragility fracture | 76 (20.4) |
| Parental hip fracture | 35 (9.4) |
| Smoking | 37 (9.9) |
| Corticosteroids | 40 (10.7) |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 10 (2.7) |
| Secondary osteoporosis | 59 (15.8) |
| Alcohol | 17 (4.6) |
| Normal | 11 (5.3) |
| Osteopenia | 81 (39.1) |
| Osteoporosis | 115 (55.5) |
| T score lumbar spine, mean (SD) | − 1.9 (1.6) |
| T score femoral neck, mean (SD) | − 2.4 (1.0) |
| FRAX major, mean (SD) | 18.4 (10.2) |
| FRAX hip, mean (SD) | 9.7 (8.2) |
| Rheumatology osteoporosis clinic | 57 (15.3) |
| Primary care | 315 (84.7) |
aPrevious treatment recorded in 369 patients. Densitometry values were recorded in 207 patients.
Comparison of patients who were prescribed antiosteoporosis medication and those who were not.
| No prescription | Prescription at any time | OR (95% CI) | p | Model OR (95% CI) | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 89) | (n = 283) | |||||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 81.0 (8.5) | 78.9 (9.0) | 0.97 (0.95–1.00) | 0.054 | 0.94 (0.90–0.99) | 0.001 |
| Sex (female), n (%) | 55 (61.8) | 228 (80.5) | 2.56 (1.52–4.31) | 0.0001 | 1.72 (0.79–3.74) | 0.168 |
| Identification of patients, n (%) | ||||||
| Emergency registry | 54 (60.6) | 163 (57.6) | 0.55 (0.18–1.66) | 0.289 | ||
| Admission (hip fracture) | 31 (34.8) | 98 (34.6) | 0.57 (0.18–1.80) | 0.341 | ||
| Attended < 12 weeks after the fracture | 32 (35.9) | 113 (39.9) | 1.16 (0.71–1.91) | 0.55 | ||
| Previous fracture, n (%) | 10 (11.2) | 67 (23.6) | 2.45 (1.20–5.00) | 0.014 | ||
| Previous treatment with bisphosphonates, n (%)a | 2 (2.2) | 51 (18.0) | 9.58 (2.28–40.19) | 0.002 | 9.94 (1.29–76.32) | 0.027 |
| Lumbar T score, mean (SD) | − 1.38 (1.6) | − 2.05 (1.6) | 0.78 (0.64–0.95) | 0.014 | 0.80 (0.65–0.99) | 0.039 |
| Densitometry result; osteoporosis, n (%)a | 22 (24.7) | 92 (32.5) | 1.89 (1.00–3.59) | 0.05 | ||
| FRAX major, mean (SD) | 19.0 (10.2) | 16.4 (9.9) | 1.03 (1.00–1.05) | 0.04 | ||
| Referral to primary care after baseline visit, n (%) | 79 (88.7) | 237 (83.7) | 0.64 (0.31–1.32) | 0.22 | ||
aPrevious treatment recorded in 369 patients. Densitometry values were recorded in 207 patients.
Comparison of patients with proportion of days covered (PDC) with antiosteoporosis medication higher and lower than 80%.
| PDC < 80 | PDC > 80 | OR (95% CI) | p | Model OR (95% CI) | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 164) | (n = 208) | |||||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 79.1 (9.5) | 79.5 (8.4) | 1.01 (0.98–1.03) | 0.52 | ||
| Sex (female), n (%) | 110 (67.0) | 173 (83.1) | 2.43 (1.49–3.95) | 0.0001 | 1.12 (0.62–2.23) | 0.568 |
| Identification of patients (ref emergency registry), n (%) | ||||||
| Admission (hip fracture) | 47 (28.6) | 82 (39.4) | 1.76 (1.13–2.75) | 2.26 (1.18–4.34) | 0.014 | |
| Previous fracture, n (%) | 26 (15.8) | 51 (24.5) | 1.72 (1.02–2.91) | 0.04 | ||
| Previous treatment with bisphosphonates, n (%)a | 8 (4.8) | 45 (21.6) | 5.38 (2.46–11.78) | 0.0001 | 3.38 (1.34–8.54) | 0.01 |
| Densitometry result; osteoporosis, n (%)a | 55 (33.5) | 59 (28.3) | 1.30 (0.75–2.26) | 0.28 | ||
| Lumbar T score mean (SD) | − 1.856 (1.701) | − 1.933 (1.603) | 0.97 (0.82–1.15) | 0.74 | ||
| FRAX major, mean (SD) | 16.4 (10.2) | 19.9 (10.0) | 1.04 (1.01–1.06) | 0.001 | ||
| Referral to primary care after baseline visit, n (%)a | 143 (87.1) | 172 (82.6) | 0.70 (0.39–1.26) | 0.23 | ||
| Start denosumab vs bisphosphonates | 14 (8.5) | 86 (41.3) | 3.07 (1.61–5.84) | 0.0001 | 2.70 (1.38–5.27) | 0.004 |
a Previous treatment recorded in 369 patients. Densitometry values were recorded in 207 patients.
Figure 2Persistence of treatment with antiosteoporosis medication over the 5-year follow-up period. 100% of patients were recommended antiosteoporotic treatment. Edited with Microsoft 365 A3 for faculty.
Figure 3Persistence of treatment with antiosteoporosis medication over a 3-year follow-up in patients and controls. 100% of patients from FLS were recommended antiosteoporotic treatment. Edited with Microsoft 365 A3 for faculty.
Comparison of baseline characteristics of patients with and without refracture during follow-up.
| No refracture (N = 320) | Refracture (N = 52) | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) mean (SD), range | 79.8 (8.7) | 77.9 (10.0) | 0.1659 |
| Sex (female), n (%) | 239 (74.7) | 44 (84.6) | 0.12 |
| Pertrochanteric | 169 (52.8) | 22 (42.3) | 0.577 |
| Intracapsular | 126 (39.4) | 25 (48.1) | |
| Subtrochanteric | 20 (6.3) | 4 (7.7) | |
| Others | 5 (1.6) | 1 (1.9) | |
| Emergency registry | 184 (57.5) | 33 (63.5) | 0.383 |
| Admission | 115 (35.9) | 14 (26.9) | |
| Rheumatology osteoporosis clinic | 21 (6.6) | 5 (9.6) | |
| Previous treatment with bisphosphonates, n (%)a | 45 (14.2) | 8 (15.7) | 0.778 |
| Previous fragility fracture | 63 (19.7) | 14 (26.9) | 0.232 |
| Parental hip fracture | 29 (9.1) | 6 (11.5) | 0.576 |
| Smoking | 29 (9.1) | 8 (15.4) | 0.158 |
| Corticosteroids | 35 (11.0) | 5 (9.6) | 0.77 |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 9 (2.8) | 1 (2.0) | 0.723 |
| Secondary osteoporosis | 49 (15.3) | 11 (21.2) | 0.288 |
| Alcohol | 14 (4.4) | 3 (5.8) | 0.655 |
| Normal | 10 (5.8) | 2 (5.9) | 0.879 |
| Osteopenia | 69 (39.9) | 12 (35.3) | |
| Osteoporosis | 94 (54.3) | 20 (58.8) | |
| T score lumbar spine, mean (SD) | − 1.8 (1.6) | − 2.4 (1.6) | 0.073 |
| T score femoral neck, mean (SD) | − 2.4 (1.1) | − 2.8 (1.0) | 0.088 |
| FRAX® major, mean (SD) | 18.2 (10.1) | 19.8 (10.9) | 0.304 |
| FRAX® hip, mean (SD) | 9.6 (8.1) | 10.9 (9.5) | 0.284 |
| Rheumatology osteoporosis clinic | 50 (15.6) | 7 (13.5) | 0.688 |
| Primary care | 270 (84.4) | 45 (86.5) | |
aPrevious treatment recorded in 369 patients. Densitometry values were recorded in 207 patients.
Figure 4Kaplan–Meier estimates for refracture over 7 years of follow-up.