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2025-05-11T07:03:16
RDF description of Changing trends in bisphosphonate therapy: a twenty-five-year surveillance in a single US integrated healthcare system - http://repository.healthpartners.com/individual/document-rn43550
Bisphosphonate
Changing trends in bisphosphonate therapy: a twenty-five-year surveillance in a single US integrated healthcare system
Treatment
public
Osteoporosis
10.1007/s00198-024-07372-2
41198
Osteoporosis International
23789
document-rn43550
2025-02-14T21:34:35.132-06:00
<p>In a single, large integrated US healthcare system, bisphosphonate treatment initiation for fracture prevention among older adults shifted towards higher-risk populations over a 25-year time period (1998-2022). The temporal trends among women and men who initiated treatment reflected changing practice patterns and both primary and secondary fracture prevention efforts. <br>INTRODUCTION: While bisphosphonate (BP) drugs remain first-line for fracture prevention, treatment has changed over time. This study examines trends over 25 years among adults initiating BP in a single healthcare system. <br>METHODS: Among adults aged 50-89 years who initiated alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, or zoledronate in Kaiser Permanente Northern California during 1998-2022, age, sex, race and ethnicity, and fracture history were examined. Findings across 5-year periods were evaluated. <br>RESULTS: A total of 212,289 adults (86.0% women) initiated BP during 1998-2022. After 2008, a much lower proportion of adults who initiated BP were age�<�65 years. Across successive 5-year periods, the percentages of women who were age�<�65 years were 35.1%, 35.2%, 24.1%, 18.8%, and 17.8%. Among men, these percentages were 26.9%, 25.4%, 17.6%, 12.6%, and 4.7%. In later years, sustained or increasing numbers of adults initiating BP coincided with electronic health record targets for BMD screening (since 2016 for women, 2017-2019 for men), an impact greater for men. The proportions with prior fracture among women initiating BP increased from 21-24% (1998-2007) to 35-38% (2008-2022) after implementing a secondary fracture prevention program for women in 2008. Among men, this proportion increased from 28 to 37%, 40%, and 47% during successive 5-year periods in 1998-2017 (the secondary fracture prevention program for men began in 2015) but fell to 26% in 2018-2022 after BMD screening targeted older men. <br>CONCLUSIONS: In a large primary care population of adults initiating BP, greater treatment of older adults and those with prior fracture highlights the key role of targeted fracture prevention initiatives, sustaining treatment efforts.<p>