New national osteoporosis guidance—implications for geriatricians

Author:

Gregson Celia L123,Compston Juliet E4

Affiliation:

1. Musculoskeletal Research Unit , Bristol Medical School, , Bristol, BS10 5NB, UK

2. University of Bristol , Bristol Medical School, , Bristol, BS10 5NB, UK

3. Older Person’s Unit, Royal United Hospital NHS Foundation Trust , Bath, BA1 3NG, UK

4. Cambridge Biomedical Campus, University of Cambridge , Cambridge, CB2 0AH, UK

Abstract

Abstract Fragility fractures are painful, debilitating, often life-changing and accounted for an estimated 2.4% of pre-pandemic health care spending in the UK. Those who are older, frail and multimorbid have the highest fracture risk and therefore the most to gain from anti-osteoporosis treatments to reduce this risk. Currently, an unacceptable treatment gap exists between those eligible for and those who receive treatment. This commentary discusses the major changes to the new, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence accredited, UK National Osteoporosis Guideline Group (NOGG) guidance (published March 2022) most relevant to the management of older people’s bone health. Changes include intervention thresholds; using fracture probabilities from FRAX; for patients too frail to undergo DXA; greater emphasis on vertebral fracture detection and the use of intravenous zoledronate as a first-line anti-osteoporosis therapy; the new concept of ‘very high fracture risk’ which should prompt consideration of use of parenteral anti-osteoporosis therapy; new guidance regarding anabolic treatment options; concerns regarding denosumab cessation; and the urgent need to get patients with a fragility fracture onto treatment to reduce re-fracture risk with follow-up to check tolerance and ensure adherence.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging,General Medicine

Reference22 articles.

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