Expert Commentary
STOP enforcing a 5-year rule for menopausal hormone therapy
START individualizing therapy to optimize health and quality of life
Steven R. Goldstein, MD, is Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at New York University School of Medicine in New York City. He is Director of Gynecologic Ultrasound and Co-Director of Bone Densitometry at New York University Medical Center in New York City. He serves on the OBG Management Board of Editors.
The author reports that he is a speaker for Warner Chilcott and Shionogi.
A look at recent expert guidelines and key studies in bone health, the findings of which affect your patients young and old
Because the low bone mass and deterioration of bone microarchitecture and quality that characterize osteoporosis can lead to fragility fracture, it is vital that we intervene in our patients’ health in a timely manner to reduce this risk. One way to accomplish this goal is to understand the role of age in determining a woman’s fracture risk. For example, an 80-year-old woman and a 50-year-old woman with a T-score of –2.5, as measured by dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), will have dramatically different fracture risks. According to the World Health Organization’s fracture-risk assessment tool (http://www.shef.ac.uk/FRAX/), the older woman has a 10-year probability of hip fracture approximately five times greater than the younger woman.
Although no new therapies have been approved during the past year, several important findings were published that affect clinical management of menopausal patients or suggest changes likely in the future.
In this article, I review:
ACOG ISSUES RECOMMENDATIONS ON SCREENING, TREATMENT, AND LIFESTYLE
Committee on Practice Bulletins–Gynecology. ACOG Practice Bulletin #129: Osteoporosis. Obstet Gynecol. 2012;120(3):718–734.
This comprehensive review of management guidelines for ObGyns deserves “top billing” in this update. It offers recommendations on important interventions, from BMD measurement and subsequent monitoring to calcium and vitamin D supplementation.
When to initiate screening
Which patients should be treated?
Treatment is recommended for:
Only therapies approved by the US FDA should be used for medical treatment. They are raloxifene (Evista), bisphosphonates (Actonel, Boniva, Fosamax, Reclast), parathyroid hormone, denosumab (Prolia), and calcitonin (Fortical, Miacalcin) (Level A evidence).
Monitoring of therapy
In the absence of new risk factors, do not repeat DXA monitoring of therapy once BMD has been determined to be stable or improved (Level B evidence).
Lifestyle recommendations
WHAT THIS EVIDENCE MEANS FOR PRACTICE
By utilizing the FRAX risk-assessment tool, we can determine which patients truly require treatment. In the process, we should be able to reduce the overtreatment of younger women with low bone mass as well as the undertreatment of older women who appear to have less deranged bone mass.
ACOG also emphasizes the need to avoid the overutilization of DXA scans in various groups, as well as the importance of lifestyle adjustments to promote bone health in all age groups.
Related Article: STOP performing DXA scans in healthy, perimenopausal women Lisa Larkin, MD, and Andrew M. Kaunitz, MD (Stop/Start, Januaray 2013)
CLINICAL DENSITOMETRISTS WEIGH IN ON INDICATIONS FOR BMD ASSESSMENT
International Society for Clinical Densitometry (ISCD). Indications for bone mineral density (BMD) testing. http://www.iscd.org/official-positions/2013-iscd-official-positions-adult/. Updated August 15, 2013. Accessed November 7, 2013.
In its comprehensive review of BMD assessment, the ISCD elucidates the process, which typically involves DXA imaging.
Indications for BMD assessment
START individualizing therapy to optimize health and quality of life
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