4.4 Article

Anti-osteoporosis medication treatment pattern after osteoporotic fracture during 2010-2016 in Fujian, China

Journal

ARCHIVES OF OSTEOPOROSIS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s11657-020-00798-1

Keywords

Osteoporosis; Fracture; Anti-osteoporotic drugs; Secular trends

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. Summary This study demonstrates a low anti-osteoporosis drug treatment rate (22.1% in women, 9.5% in men) after osteoporotic fracture in the real-world setting of Fujian, China. The primary medication was calcitonin. The suboptimal treatment was particularly critical among men, low-level hospitals, wrist/vertebral fracture, and the younger elderly patients. Introduction The objective of this study was to investigate the prescription patterns and related influencing factors of anti-osteoporosis drug prescribing after osteoporotic fracture in Fujian, China, between 2010 and 2016. Methods This is a retrospective cohort study based on an existing electronic health record database (National Healthcare Big Data in Fuzhou, China, 37 hospitals included). Patients over 50 years old with newly diagnosed osteoporotic fractures between 2010 and 2016 were included. Postfracture osteoporosis therapies were summarized by overall and fracture site. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify influencing factors of anti-osteoporosis medication (AOM) prescription. Results Overall, 22.1% of women and 9.5% of men over 50 years old received AOM treatment after osteoporotic fracture within 1 year during 2010-2016, with particular low use of bisphosphonates, 5.3% in women and 1.5% in men. The highest rate of AOM treatment was found in patients with hip fracture (24.5%), followed by vertebral fracture (14.2%) and wrist fracture (2.3%). Of the AOM-treated patients, 90.5% received calcitonin therapy. The treatment rate of AOM showed a slight decline during 2010-2016, but steady rise trends were observed in Ca/vitamin D (VD) prescription. Hospital level, age, sex, previous osteoporosis, previous AOM prescription, and previous oral glucocorticoid prescription were strong predicting factors of AOM prescription. Conclusion In a real-world setting, AOM treatment was suboptimal and the treatment rate even decreased over time among osteoporosis fracture patients in Fujian, China. The suboptimal treatment was particularly critical among men, low-level hospitals, wrist/vertebral fracture, and the younger elderly patients.

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