4.6 Article

Subtrochanteric and Diaphyseal Femur Fractures in Patients Treated With Alendronate: A Register-Based National Cohort Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 1095-1102

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1359/JBMR.081247

Keywords

alendronate; subtrochanteric fractures; osteoporosis; epidemiology; adverse events

Funding

  1. Kaptajnlojtnant Harald Jensen og Hustrus Fond

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Alendronate (aln) is a potent bisphosphonate with a prolonged duration of action. Recent reports have found long-term aln use to be common in patients with subtrochanteric or proximal diaphyseal femur fracture, raising concerns that these fractures could be a consequence of excessive suppression of bone turnover. Two national observational register-based studies were performed: (I) cross-sectional study (N = 11,944) comparing age distribution, exposure, and trauma mechanisms between different types of proximal femur fractures and (2) matched cohort study in patients with prior nonhip fractures (N = 5187 + 10,374) testing the hypothesis that the increase in the risk of subsequent atypical femur fractures exceeded the increase in typical hip fractures. We also sought evidence of a dose-response relationship, where high adherence to or long-term use of aln led to more atypical femur fractures. We found that 7% of patients with atypical fractures were aln exposed, and the same was found for typical hip fractures. In the cohort study, the H R for subtrochanteric/diaphyseal fracture with aln was 1.46 (0.91-2.35, p = 0.12) compared with 1.45 (1.21-1.74, p < 0.001) for hip fracture after adjustment for comorbidity and co-medications. The risk was reduced by high adherence, and the ratio between hip and subtrochanteric/diaphyseal femur fractures was identical In aln-treated patients and the control cohort even in the limited number of patients who received long-term treatment. Subtrochanteric/diaphyseal femur fractures share the epidemiology and treatment response of classical hip fractures and are best classified as osteoporotic fractures. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24:1095-1102. Published online on December 29, 2008; doi: 10.1359/JBMR.081247

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