Osteoporosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Osteoporosis and Peripheral Fractures: Treatment and Investigation Multidisciplinary at the chUS
Osteoporosis is a very frequent and easily treatable disease. Rates of treatment of affected
patients is very low, as few high risk patients initiate treatment and only a minority of
those pursue treatment for long enough time to prevent fractures. Patients presenting a
fragility fracture after 50 years of age are at high risk of osteoporosis and may represent
the ideal group of patients in which intervention aimed at improving initiation and
persistence on treatment will be most effective.
Our first hypothesis is that the availability of a dedicated nurse practitioner to identify
patients with fragility fractures among patients presenting at fracture clinics of orthopedic
surgeons will increase markedly the rate of identification of osteoporosis.
Our second hypothesis is that giving to both the patient and its primary health practitioner
(PHP) the patient's clinical, biological and radiological data along with individualized care
suggestions will yield significantly better results than giving to the patient and its PHP
generic information on osteoporosis risk, investigation and treatment.
3- The OPTIMUS INTERVENTIONS
3.1. PROGRAM GOALS and OBJECTIVES
The OPTIMUS program is a health intervention whose aim is to increase the rate of long-term
treatment of osteoporosis in patients with incident fragility fractures by addressing both
initiation of treatment and persistence on treatment. Participation to the program will be
voluntary.
Specifically, the goals of OPTIMUS are:
1. To increase the rate of initiation of treatment of osteoporosis following a fragility
fracture in patients presenting to the CHUS. This rate is currently of about 30% in the
Province of Quebec, according to the Recognizing Osteoporosis and its Consequences in
Quebec (ROCQ) survey.
We hope to demonstrate that a coordinated approach combining successful identification
of patients with fragility fractures evaluated at the CHUS, quality information to the
patients and to family physicians, rapid and appropriate management and initiation of
treatment (see below) of these patients by general practitioners will lead to
appropriate levels of treatment of osteoporosis after an episode of fracture. Our
objective is to initiate treatment within 8 months after fracture in at least 50% of
such patients who accept to participate with Minimal Intervention, 75% with Intensive
Intervention, and 90% with Immediate treatment. The specifics of each Intervention are
detailed below.
2. Improve long-term adherence to treatment of osteoporosis following initiation of
treatment after a fragility fracture. The current rate of persistence is 30-50% at 1
year, most loss of persistence occurring during the first months.
Initiating treatment of osteoporosis is important. However, long-term adherence to treatment
of osteoporosis is very poor, with most discontinuation or erratic intake of medication
observed during the first few months. Our objective is to maintain observance (i.e. intake of
at least 80% of the doses of drugs according to patient questionnaires and to delivery of
drugs by pharmacists) at one year in at least 80% of the patients who have initiated
treatment. To that end, we will also evaluate whether disclosure of the results of
measurements of blood markers of bone metabolism will influence patient adherence to
treatment over time. The correlation of these measurements with results of phone follow up
interviews and drug delivery by pharmacists as indicators of adherence will also be
determined.
Our objectives with the Intensive and Immediate treatment Interventions imply that 60% of
patients with a fragility fracture would be treated for at least 16 months (i.e. 80% of the
75% of patients who have initiated a treatment will adhere long-term). After 16 months of
treatment, the rate of loss of adherence is likely to be lower, but information is lacking on
that subject. We will partially address this question by following patients up to 2 years.
Longer rates of adherence need to be ascertained, but this represents an objective that is
not part of the current proposal.
Why setting these objectives at 60% of long-term adherence to treatment?
Our objective to treat 60% of the patients may appear quite low. However, it is significantly
higher than the appalling 20-30% rate of initiation of treatment currently seen in the
province of Quebec and in Canada in general, combined with the 30-50% long-term adherence
observed in practice (translating currently into 5-20% of patients taking appropriate
long-term treatment for osteoporosis). If we are successful, the rate of treatment will be
increased by 3 to 10 times.
On the contrary, our objective to treat 60% of the patients may appear unrealistic. To attain
this goal, we have to include all health practitioners involved in patients' care (e.g.,
family physician, orthopedist, pharmacist, and the patients themselves), as well as testing
additional safety nets to ensure adherence, including patients' recall by the nurse
coordinator, estimating the impact of adding the results of serum markers of bone metabolism,
and allowing problematic patients (i.e. patients with hip fracture, those without family
physicians, those with complex medical situations, and those who do not adhere despite all
other measures) the possibility to obtain a consultation with a bone specialist.
Effect on fracture rates If our objective to treat 60% of the patients is attained, it is
likely to translate into a significant reduction of close to 50% of vertebral fractures (a
decrease of 80-90% of the risk of recurrent vertebral fracture by bisphosphonates in 60% of
the population) and of close to 30% of non-vertebral fractures, including the hip (reduction
of 50% of the risk by bisphosphonate use in 60% of the population). These fractures are
associated with morbidity (chronic pain, invalidity) and increased mortality, and contribute
to increase the costs to the public Health Care System (hospitalization, surgery,
rehabilitation, short-, mid- and long-term care in nursing homes needed). However, this
impact on fractures will only become evaluable through access to Quebec's Health Insurance
Agency (RAMQ) databases (through the regional Health Agency), by comparing the rate of new
fracture for patients compliant to the intervention relative to the patients who will refuse
to give their informed consent to be included into the intervention (estimated to 10-15% of
the patients with fractures) and to the patients who will not be compliant (estimated to 40%
of the patients who will give their consent to participate). In addition, this effect on
fracture rates will only become significant after a longer period (3-5 years) of observation.
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