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The Journal of Musculoskeletal Medicine. Vol. 27 No. 4
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Diagnosis and treatment guidance for primary care physicians

 

All about osteoporosis: A comprehensive analysis

By STACY DAVIS, MBBS, ALOK SACHDEVA, MD, BRUCE GOECKERITZ, MD, ALYCE OLIVER, PhD, MD | April 9, 2010

Dr Davis is a fellow, Dr Goeckeritz is associate professor, and Drs Oliver and Sachdeva are assistant professors in the section of rheumatology, department of medicine, at the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta.


ABSTRACT: Osteoporosis affects more than half of persons older than 50 years. Earlier practice guidelines represented the standard of care but did not adequately address some populations. In 2008, revised guidelines addressed previous concerns. The fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX) helps physicians and patients gain a better understanding of a specific patient’s risk, and clinical experience has highlighted several other risk factors. The gold standard test for osteoporosis is dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. Antiresorptive and anabolic agents are used for treatment, and lifestyle changes are emphasized. Several osteoporosis agents are in development. Difficulty in gaining patients’ long-term adherence may adversely affect the efficacy of treatment. Monitoring a patient’s treatment progress and determining the appropriate time to terminate therapy are important. (J Musculoskel Med. 2010;27:149-153)


Osteoporosis is a major public health threat that affects more than half of persons older than 50 years. The most common bone disease in humans, osteoporosis is associated with pain, disability, and increased risk of mortality.

The primary reference that clinicians use in managing osteoporosis is the National Osteoporosis Foundation’s (NOF) Clinician’s Guide to Prevention and Treatment of Osteoporosis, published in 1999 and updated in 2003. The guidelines in this publication represented the standard of care but did not adequately address some populations that may be affected by osteoporosis. For example, little guidance was offered on how to treat men with osteoporosis or how to approach the variations associated with ethnicity.

Many clinicians welcomed the comprehensive revised NOF guidelines released in February 2008, appreciating the new practice parameters that addressed previous areas of concern not mentioned in the 2003 document. The NOF guidelines were complemented by release of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX), which helped physicians and patients gain a better understanding of a specific patient’s 10-year absolute risk of an osteoporosis-related fragility fracture.

The primary goal of treatment is to reduce the incidence and the morbidity and mortality associated with osteoporosis-related fragility fractures. Treatment often includes lifestyle modifications, such as performance of weight-bearing exercises.

A number of pharmacological therapies are currently available, although gaining patients’ adherence to therapy remains a challenge. Several new agents are under investigation.

This 2-part article provides an overview of osteoporosis diagnosis and management. In this first part, we interpret and summarize recent publications in this field; pool the data that are of greatest relevance to primary care physicians, including the epidemiology; review technologies available for diagnosis; and help decipher whom to test and to treat. The second part, to appear in a later issue of this journal, will discuss the current therapies for osteoporosis, their adverse effects, and reasonable approaches to monitoring.

DIAGNOSIS

Epidemiology

Osteoporosis is a threat to an estimated 44 million Americans. Ten million Americans are thought to already have the disorder and an estimated 34 million more to have low bone mass.1

Significant risk has been reported in all ethnicities. An estimated 20% of white and Asian women older than 50 years are thought to have osteoporosis; in a similar age-group, 5% of African American women and 10% of Hispanic women are thought to have the disease.

Osteoporosis risk is increasing most rapidly among Hispanic women.1 Some studies have shown that they consume less calcium than the recommended dietary allowance in all age-groups. Also, Hispanic women are twice as likely as white women to have diabetes mellitus, which may increase their risk of osteoporosis.2 Although osteoporosis is largely thought of as a disease that affects women, its prevalence is 7% in white men, 5% in African American men, and 3% in Hispanic men.3

Research into the diagnosis and management of osteoporosis continues to expand; the disease is projected to affect an even larger portion of the US population over the next 15 years as the average age increases. The economic burden is estimated to rise to more than $17 billion annually in the United States alone.4 By 2025, the costs of osteoporotic-related fractures are expected to rise to about $25 billion.1 The economic consequence is proposed to increase by about 50%.

A dramatic reality is that 1 of 2 women and 1 of 4 men 50 years and older probably will have an osteoporosis-related fracture in their lifetime. Therefore, clinicians should be well aware of osteoporosis and have a good understanding of its diagnosis and appropriate management.

Definition

The NOF defines osteoporosis as a disease characterized by low bone mass and structural deterioration of bone tissue that lead to bone fragility and an increased susceptibility to fractures (especially of the hip, spine, and wrist, although any bone can be affected).1 The WHO defines osteoporosis as a systemic skeletal disease characterized by low bone mass and microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue, with a consequent increase in bone fragility and susceptibility to fractures.5

The WHO further defines osteoporosis through radiographic parameters obtained from dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) on the basis of its 1994 classification (Table 1).5 T-score refers to the standard deviation between a patient’s bone mineral density (BMD) and that of a young adult in the reference population. The Z-score is a comparison of the patient’s BMD with an age-matched population.5

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