4.5 Article

Effectiveness of a minimal resource fracture liaison service

Journal

OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages 3165-3175

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-016-3643-2

Keywords

Efficiency; FLS; Fracture; Fracture liaison service; Osteoporosis

Funding

  1. Skaraborg Hospital Skovde, Sweden
  2. Swedish Research Council (VR)
  3. Gothenburg Society of Medicine (GLS)
  4. ALF/LUA grant from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital
  5. Gustaf V:s och Drottning Victorias Frimurarstiftelse

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Purpose The purpose of this study was to investigate if a 2-year intervention with a minimal resource fracture liaison service (FLS) was associated with increased investigation and medical treatment and if treatment was related to reduced refracture risk. Methods The FLS started in 2013 using existing secretaries (without an FLS coordinator) at the emergency department and orthopaedic wards to identify risk patients. All patients older than 50 years of age with a fractured hip, vertebra, shoulder, wrist or pelvis were followed during 2013-2014 (n = 2713) and compared with their historic counterparts in 2011-2012 (n = 2616) at the same hospital. Re-fractures were X-ray verified. A time-dependent adjusted (for age, sex, previous fracture, index fracture type, prevalent treatment, comorbidity and secondary osteoporosis) Cox model was used. Results The minimal resource FLS increased the proportion of DXA-investigated patients after fracture from 7.6 to 39.6% (p < 0.001) and the treatment rate after fracture from 12.6 to 31.8 %, which is well in line with FLS types using the conventional coordinator model. Treated patients had a 51 % lower risk of any re-fracture than untreated patients (HR 0.49, 95 % CI 0.37-0.65 p<0.001). Conclusions We found that our minimal resource FLS was effective in increasing investigation and treatment, in line with conventional coordinator-based services, and that treated patients had a 51 % reduced risk of new fractures, indicating that also non-coordinator based fracture liaison services can improve secondary prevention of fractures.

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