March 25, 2024

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New evidence-based guideline for the management of osteoporosis in men

Improvements in BMD with anti-osteoporosis medications. The figure provides a representation of the percentage improvement of total hip bone mineral density (BMD) with use of anti-osteoporosis medications including alendronate, risedronate, zoledronate, ibandronate, denosumab, abaloparatide and romosozumab. Thresholds for benefit (surrogate threshold effect (STE)) for fracture, depicted as horizontal lines on the graph, are 3.18% for hip fracture, 2.13% for non-vertebral fracture, 1.83% for all fractures and 1.42% for vertebral fractures. These thresholds are derived from a large series of placebo-controlled trials evaluating various anti-osteoporosis agents in women with osteoporosis. Credit: Nature Reviews Rheumatology (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41584-024-01094-9
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Improvements in BMD with anti-osteoporosis medications. The figure provides a representation of the percentage improvement of total hip bone mineral density (BMD) with use of anti-osteoporosis medications including alendronate, risedronate, zoledronate, ibandronate, denosumab, abaloparatide and romosozumab. Thresholds for benefit (surrogate threshold effect (STE)) for fracture, depicted as horizontal lines on the graph, are 3.18% for hip fracture, 2.13% for non-vertebral fracture, 1.83% for all fractures and 1.42% for vertebral fractures. These thresholds are derived from a large series of placebo-controlled trials evaluating various anti-osteoporosis agents in women with osteoporosis. Credit: Nature Reviews Rheumatology (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41584-024-01094-9

Worldwide, it is estimated that one in five men over the age of 50 years will experience an osteoporotic fracture in their remaining lifetime, and the number of hip fractures in men is expected to rise by approximately 310% between 1990 and 2050. Despite its great burden among older men, osteoporosis is still often viewed as a 'woman's' disease, and underdiagnosis and undertreatment of the condition in men are even more prevalent than in women.

In response, an international multidisciplinary working group of the European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases (ESCEO) has now issued GRADE-assessed recommendations for the diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment of osteoporosis in men.

Professor Jean-Yves Reginster, senior author and President of ESCEO, stated, "It's important to recognize that osteoporosis in men carries substantial morbidity and mortality, with rates comparable to or even exceeding those in women with the condition."

"The ESCEO international working group was convened to provide new management recommendations that are informed by the latest developments in research and up-to-date expert opinion related to diagnostic and screening approaches for osteoporosis and its associated high fracture risk in men."

The Working Group recommendations cover disease burden, approaches to fracture risk assessment in men, including appropriate interpretation of bone densitometry and absolute fracture risk, thresholds for treatment, and interventions that can be used therapeutically together with their health economic evaluation.

The guidance also notes the need for more research with future work specifically addressing the efficacy of anti-osteoporosis medications, including denosumab and bone-forming therapies.

Among the key recommendations and guidelines, the following may be particularly useful for clinicians:

Professor Nicholas Harvey, senior author and chairman of the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) Committee of Scientific Advisors, noted, "We hope that these guidelines will assist clinicians in their clinical practice and encourage them to be proactive in managing osteoporosis in their male patients."

"Following an approach similar to that advocated for women with osteoporosis, we recommend the use of oral anti-resorptive agents as first-line agents in men at a high risk of fracture and the use of bone-forming agents followed sequentially by anti-resorptive agents in men at a very high risk of fracture."

IOF CEO Dr. Philippe Halbout concluded, "Osteoporosis in men poses an enormous global burden, and must be urgently addressed by as well as health authorities. As the world's largest global organization in the osteoporosis arena, IOF welcomes the publication of this important new guideline which we hope will contribute to better patient care and to reducing the devastating consequences of in around the world."

The work is published in the journal Nature Reviews Rheumatology.

More information: Nicholas R. Fuggle et al, Evidence-Based Guideline for the management of osteoporosis in men, Nature Reviews Rheumatology (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41584-024-01094-9

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