Postmenopausal Osteoporosis Clinical Trial
— FRAMEOfficial title:
A Multicenter, International, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Parallel-group Study to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Romosozumab Treatment in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis
Verified date | May 2024 |
Source | Amgen |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study is to determine if treatment with romosozumab is effective in preventing fractures in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 7180 |
Est. completion date | December 28, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | December 14, 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 55 Years to 90 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, defined as low bone mineral density (BMD T-score at the total hip or femoral neck of = -2.50) Exclusion Criteria: - BMD T-score of = -3.50 at the total hip or femoral neck - History of hip fracture - Any severe or more than 2 moderate vertebral fractures, as assessed by the central imaging based on lateral spine x-rays - Use of agents affecting bone metabolism - History of metabolic or bone disease (except osteoporosis) - Vitamin D insufficiency (vitamin D repletion and rescreening is permitted) - Current hyper- or hypocalcemia - Current, uncontrolled hyper- or hypothyroidism - Current, uncontrolled hyper- or hypoparathyroidism |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Argentina | Research Site | Buenos Aires | |
Argentina | Research Site | Buenos Aires | |
Argentina | Research Site | Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires | Buenos Aires |
Argentina | Research Site | Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires | Buenos Aires |
Argentina | Research Site | Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires | Buenos Aires |
Argentina | Research Site | Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires | Buenos Aires |
Argentina | Research Site | Cordoba | Córdoba |
Argentina | Research Site | Mar del Plata | Buenos Aires |
Australia | Research Site | Footscray | Victoria |
Australia | Research Site | Geelong | Victoria |
Australia | Research Site | Heidelberg West | Victoria |
Australia | Research Site | Herston | Queensland |
Australia | Research Site | Keswick | South Australia |
Australia | Research Site | Maroubra | New South Wales |
Australia | Research Site | Nedlands | Western Australia |
Australia | Research Site | St Leonards | New South Wales |
Belgium | Research Site | Bruxelles | |
Belgium | Research Site | Genk | |
Belgium | Research Site | Ghent | |
Belgium | Research Site | Leuven | |
Belgium | Research Site | Liège | |
Belgium | Research Site | Lommel | |
Belgium | Research Site | Yvoir | |
Brazil | Research Site | Curitiba | Paraná |
Brazil | Research Site | Sao Paulo | São Paulo |
Brazil | Research Site | São Paulo | |
Brazil | Research Site | São Paulo | |
Brazil | Research Site | São Paulo | |
Canada | Research Site | Calgary | Alberta |
Canada | Research Site | Hamilton | Ontario |
Canada | Research Site | Lachine | Quebec |
Canada | Research Site | Oakville | Ontario |
Canada | Research Site | Quebec | |
Canada | Research Site | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Colombia | Research Site | Barranquilla | Atlántico |
Colombia | Research Site | Bogota | Cundinamarca |
Colombia | Research Site | Bogota | Cundinamarca |
Colombia | Research Site | Bogota | Cundinamarca |
Colombia | Research Site | Bogota | Cundinamarca |
Colombia | Research Site | Bogota | |
Colombia | Research Site | Medellin | Antioquia |
Czechia | Research Site | Brno | |
Czechia | Research Site | Ceske Budejovice | |
Czechia | Research Site | Havlickuv Brod | |
Czechia | Research Site | Klatovy | |
Czechia | Research Site | Ostrava-Trebovice | |
Czechia | Research Site | Pardubice | |
Czechia | Research Site | Plzen | |
Czechia | Research Site | Praha 11 - Chodov | |
Czechia | Research Site | Praha 2 | |
Czechia | Research Site | Praha 3 | |
Czechia | Research Site | Uherske Hradiste | |
Czechia | Research Site | Zlin | |
Denmark | Research Site | Aalborg | |
Denmark | Research Site | Århus C | |
Denmark | Research Site | Ballerup | |
Denmark | Research Site | Glostrup | |
Denmark | Research Site | Hvidovre | |
Denmark | Research Site | Odense | |
Denmark | Research Site | Vejle | |
Dominican Republic | Research Site | Santo Domingo | Distrito Nacional |
Dominican Republic | Research Site | Santo Domingo | Distrito Nacional |
Dominican Republic | Research Site | Santo Domingo | |
Estonia | Research Site | Pärnu | |
Estonia | Research Site | Tallinn | |
Estonia | Research Site | Tartu | |
Germany | Research Site | Berlin | |
Germany | Research Site | Berlin (Hellersdorf) | |
Germany | Research Site | Bochum | |
Germany | Research Site | Dresden | |
Germany | Research Site | Dresden | |
Germany | Research Site | Frankfurt am Main | |
Germany | Research Site | Frankfurt am Main | |
Germany | Research Site | Görlitz | |
Germany | Research Site | Hamburg | |
Germany | Research Site | Hannover | |
Germany | Research Site | Heinsberg | |
Germany | Research Site | Leipzig | |
Germany | Research Site | Magdeburg | |
Germany | Research Site | Marburg | |
Germany | Research Site | Schkeuditz | |
Hungary | Research Site | Bekescsaba | |
Hungary | Research Site | Budapest | |
Hungary | Research Site | Budapest | |
Hungary | Research Site | Budapest | |
Hungary | Research Site | Debrecen | |
Hungary | Research Site | Gyor | |
Hungary | Research Site | Heviz | |
Hungary | Research Site | Szeged | |
Hungary | Research Site | Zalaegerszeg | |
India | Research Site | Bangalore | Karnataka |
India | Research Site | Chennai | Tamil Nadu |
India | Research Site | Jaipur | Rajasthan |
India | Research Site | Mumbai | Maharashtra |
India | Research Site | Pune | Maharashtra |
India | Research Site | Vellore | Tamil Nadu |
Japan | Research Site | Akashi-shi | Hyogo |
Japan | Research Site | Anjyo-shi | Aichi |
Japan | Research Site | Atugi-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Bungoono-shi | Oita |
Japan | Research Site | Chiisagata-gun | Nagano |
Japan | Research Site | Chitose-shi | Hokkaido |
Japan | Research Site | Fujimi-shi | Saitama |
Japan | Research Site | Fujinomiya-shi | Shizuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Fukui-shi | Fukui |
Japan | Research Site | Fukui-shi | Fukui |
Japan | Research Site | Fukui-shi | Fukui |
Japan | Research Site | Fukui-shi | Fukui |
Japan | Research Site | Fukuoka-shi | Fukuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Fukutsu-shi | Fukuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Hachioji-shi | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Hiroshima-shi | Hiroshima |
Japan | Research Site | Ishikari-shi | Hokkaido |
Japan | Research Site | Kako-gun | Hyogo |
Japan | Research Site | Kikugawa-shi | Shizuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Kirishima-shi | Kagoshima |
Japan | Research Site | Kitakyushu-shi | Fukuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Kiyose-shi | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Kofu-shi | Yamanashi |
Japan | Research Site | Kumamoto-shi | Kumamoto |
Japan | Research Site | Kurume-shi | Fukuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Kurume-shi | Fukuoka |
Japan | Research Site | Matsue-shi | Shimane |
Japan | Research Site | Matsumoto-shi | Nagano |
Japan | Research Site | Matsumoto-shi | Nagano |
Japan | Research Site | Minamikyusyu-shi | Kagoshima |
Japan | Research Site | Minato-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Morioka-shi | Iwate |
Japan | Research Site | Osaka-shi | Osaka |
Japan | Research Site | Ota-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Saga-shi | Saga |
Japan | Research Site | Sagamihara-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Sendai-shi | Miyagi |
Japan | Research Site | Setagaya-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Shinagawa-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Shinagawa-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Suginami-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Suginami-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Sunagawa-shi | Hokkaido |
Japan | Research Site | Takamatsu-shi | Kagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Takatsuki-shi | Osaka |
Japan | Research Site | Tokushima-Shi | Tokushima |
Japan | Research Site | Toride-shi | Ibaraki |
Japan | Research Site | Toshima-ku | Tokyo |
Japan | Research Site | Ueda-shi | Nagano |
Japan | Research Site | Ueda-shi | Nagano |
Japan | Research Site | Urayasu-shi | Chiba |
Japan | Research Site | Yokohama-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Yokohama-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Yokohama-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Yokohama-shi | Kanagawa |
Japan | Research Site | Yokohama-shi | Kanagawa |
Latvia | Research Site | Liepaja | |
Latvia | Research Site | Riga | |
Latvia | Research Site | Riga | |
Lithuania | Research Site | Kaunas | |
Lithuania | Research Site | Kaunas | |
Lithuania | Research Site | Klaipeda | |
Lithuania | Research Site | Vilnius | |
Lithuania | Research Site | Vilnius | |
Mexico | Research Site | Ciudad Obregon | Sonora |
Mexico | Research Site | Mexico | Distrito Federal |
Mexico | Research Site | Monterrey | Nuevo León |
New Zealand | Research Site | Christchurch | |
New Zealand | Research Site | Grafton, Auckland | |
Poland | Research Site | Dabrowka Dopiewo | |
Poland | Research Site | Elblag | |
Poland | Research Site | Krakow | |
Poland | Research Site | Lodz | |
Poland | Research Site | Swidnik | |
Poland | Research Site | Warszawa | |
Poland | Research Site | Wroclaw | |
Romania | Research Site | Bucharest | |
Romania | Research Site | Bucuresti | |
Romania | Research Site | Timisoara | |
Spain | Research Site | Barcelona | Cataluña |
Spain | Research Site | Madrid | |
Spain | Research Site | Madrid | |
Spain | Research Site | Pozuelo de Alarcon | Madrid |
Spain | Research Site | Valencia | Comunidad Valenciana |
Switzerland | Research Site | Bern | |
Switzerland | Research Site | Fribourg | |
Switzerland | Research Site | Genève 14 | |
Switzerland | Research Site | Lausanne | |
Switzerland | Research Site | Zurich | |
Switzerland | Research Site | Zurich | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Chorley | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Glasgow | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Liverpool | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | London | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Manchester | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Northwood | |
United Kingdom | Research Site | Reading | |
United States | Research Site | Albuquerque | New Mexico |
United States | Research Site | Asheville | North Carolina |
United States | Research Site | Bethesda | Maryland |
United States | Research Site | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | Research Site | Cincinnati | Ohio |
United States | Research Site | Denton | Texas |
United States | Research Site | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Research Site | Duncansville | Pennsylvania |
United States | Research Site | Fargo | North Dakota |
United States | Research Site | Gainesville | Georgia |
United States | Research Site | Laguna Hills | California |
United States | Research Site | Lakewood | Colorado |
United States | Research Site | Leesburg | Florida |
United States | Research Site | Los Angeles | California |
United States | Research Site | Madison | Wisconsin |
United States | Research Site | Mayfield | Ohio |
United States | Research Site | New Orleans | Louisiana |
United States | Research Site | Palm Harbor | Florida |
United States | Research Site | Plantation | Florida |
United States | Research Site | Richmond | Virginia |
United States | Research Site | Sacramento | California |
United States | Research Site | Santa Maria | California |
United States | Research Site | Tampa | Florida |
United States | Research Site | Tucson | Arizona |
United States | Research Site | Walnut Creek | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Amgen |
United States, Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Czechia, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Estonia, Germany, Hungary, India, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Mexico, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, United Kingdom,
Chavassieux P, Chapurlat R, Portero-Muzy N, Roux JP, Garcia P, Brown JP, Libanati C, Boyce RW, Wang A, Grauer A. Bone-Forming and Antiresorptive Effects of Romosozumab in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis: Bone Histomorphometry and Microcomputed Tomography Analysis After 2 and 12 Months of Treatment. J Bone Miner Res. 2019 Sep;34(9):1597-1608. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.3735. Epub 2019 Jun 24. — View Citation
Cosman F, Crittenden DB, Adachi JD, Binkley N, Czerwinski E, Ferrari S, Hofbauer LC, Lau E, Lewiecki EM, Miyauchi A, Zerbini CA, Milmont CE, Chen L, Maddox J, Meisner PD, Libanati C, Grauer A. Romosozumab Treatment in Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis. N Engl J Med. 2016 Oct 20;375(16):1532-1543. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1607948. Epub 2016 Sep 18. — View Citation
Cosman F, Crittenden DB, Ferrari S, Khan A, Lane NE, Lippuner K, Matsumoto T, Milmont CE, Libanati C, Grauer A. FRAME Study: The Foundation Effect of Building Bone With 1 Year of Romosozumab Leads to Continued Lower Fracture Risk After Transition to Denosumab. J Bone Miner Res. 2018 Jul;33(7):1219-1226. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.3427. Epub 2018 May 17. — View Citation
Cosman F, Crittenden DB, Ferrari S, Lewiecki EM, Jaller-Raad J, Zerbini C, Milmont CE, Meisner PD, Libanati C, Grauer A. Romosozumab FRAME Study: A Post Hoc Analysis of the Role of Regional Background Fracture Risk on Nonvertebral Fracture Outcome. J Bone Miner Res. 2018 Aug;33(8):1407-1416. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.3439. Epub 2018 May 11. — View Citation
Eriksen EF, Boyce RW, Shi Y, Brown JP, Betah D, Libanati C, Oates M, Chapurlat R, Chavassieux P. Reconstruction of Remodeling units reveals positive effects after 2 and 12 months of Romosozumab treatment. J Bone Miner Res. 2024 Apr 19:zjae055. doi: 10.1093/jbmr/zjae055. Online ahead of print. — View Citation
Eriksen EF, Chapurlat R, Boyce RW, Shi Y, Brown JP, Horlait S, Betah D, Libanati C, Chavassieux P. Modeling-Based Bone Formation After 2 Months of Romosozumab Treatment: Results From the FRAME Clinical Trial. J Bone Miner Res. 2022 Jan;37(1):36-40. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.4457. Epub 2021 Nov 19. — View Citation
Lane NE, Betah D, Deignan C, Oates M, Wang Z, Timoshanko J, Khan AA, Binkley N. Effect of Romosozumab Treatment in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis and Knee Osteoarthritis: Results From a Substudy of a Phase 3 Clinical Trial. ACR Open Rheumatol. 2024 Jan;6(1):43-51. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11619. Epub 2023 Nov 20. — View Citation
Lewiecki EM, Dinavahi RV, Lazaretti-Castro M, Ebeling PR, Adachi JD, Miyauchi A, Gielen E, Milmont CE, Libanati C, Grauer A. One Year of Romosozumab Followed by Two Years of Denosumab Maintains Fracture Risk Reductions: Results of the FRAME Extension Study. J Bone Miner Res. 2019 Mar;34(3):419-428. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.3622. Epub 2018 Dec 3. — View Citation
McCloskey EV, Johansson H, Harvey NC, Lorentzon M, Shi Y, Kanis JA. Romosozumab efficacy on fracture outcomes is greater in patients at high baseline fracture risk: a post hoc analysis of the first year of the frame study. Osteoporos Int. 2021 Aug;32(8):1601-1608. doi: 10.1007/s00198-020-05815-0. Epub 2021 Feb 3. — View Citation
McClung MR, Betah D, Deignan C, Shi Y, Timoshanko J, Cosman F. Romosozumab Efficacy in Postmenopausal Women With No Prior Fracture Who Fulfill Criteria for Very High Fracture Risk. Endocr Pract. 2023 Sep;29(9):716-722. doi: 10.1016/j.eprac.2023.06.011. Epub 2023 Jul 4. — View Citation
Miller PD, Adachi JD, Albergaria BH, Cheung AM, Chines AA, Gielen E, Langdahl BL, Miyauchi A, Oates M, Reid IR, Santiago NR, Vanderkelen M, Wang Z, Yu Z. Efficacy and Safety of Romosozumab Among Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis and Mild-to-Moderate Chronic Kidney Disease. J Bone Miner Res. 2022 Aug;37(8):1437-1445. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.4563. Epub 2022 May 20. — View Citation
Miyauchi A, Dinavahi RV, Crittenden DB, Yang W, Maddox JC, Hamaya E, Nakamura Y, Libanati C, Grauer A, Shimauchi J. Increased bone mineral density for 1 year of romosozumab, vs placebo, followed by 2 years of denosumab in the Japanese subgroup of the pivotal FRAME trial and extension. Arch Osteoporos. 2019 Jun 5;14(1):59. doi: 10.1007/s11657-019-0608-z. — View Citation
Miyauchi A, Hamaya E, Nishi K, Tolman C, Shimauchi J. Efficacy and safety of romosozumab among Japanese postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and mild-to-moderate chronic kidney disease. J Bone Miner Metab. 2022 Jul;40(4):677-687. doi: 10.1007/s00774-022-01332-8. Epub 2022 May 31. — View Citation
Miyauchi A, Hamaya E, Yang W, Nishi K, Libanati C, Tolman C, Shimauchi J. Romosozumab followed by denosumab in Japanese women with high fracture risk in the FRAME trial. J Bone Miner Metab. 2021 Mar;39(2):278-288. doi: 10.1007/s00774-020-01147-5. Epub 2020 Oct 15. — View Citation
Takada J, Dinavahi R, Miyauchi A, Hamaya E, Hirama T, Libanati C, Nakamura Y, Milmont CE, Grauer A. Relationship between P1NP, a biochemical marker of bone turnover, and bone mineral density in patients transitioned from alendronate to romosozumab or teriparatide: a post hoc analysis of the STRUCTURE trial. J Bone Miner Metab. 2020 May;38(3):310-315. doi: 10.1007/s00774-019-01057-1. Epub 2019 Nov 9. Erratum In: J Bone Miner Metab. 2020 Mar 20;: — View Citation
* Note: There are 15 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Percentage of Participants With New Vertebral Fracture Through Month 12 | New vertebral fractures occurred when there was = 1 grade increase from the previous grade of 0 in any vertebra from T4 to L4 using the Genant semiquantitative scoring method.
The Genant semiquantitative scoring method was based on assessment of x-rays according to the following scale: Grade 0 (Normal) = no fracture; Grade 1 (Mild) = mild fracture, 20 to 25% reduction in vertebral height (anterior, middle, or posterior); Grade 2 (Moderate) = moderate fracture, 25 to 40% reduction in anterior, middle, and/or posterior height; Grade 3 (Severe) = severe fracture, greater than 40% reduction in anterior, middle, and/or posterior height. |
12 Months | |
Primary | Percentage of Participants With New Vertebral Fracture Through Month 24 | New vertebral fractures occurred when there was = 1 grade increase from the previous grade of 0 in any vertebra from T4 to L4 using the Genant semiquantitative scoring method.
The Genant semiquantitative scoring method was based on assessment of x-rays according to the following scale: Grade 0 (Normal) = no fracture; Grade 1 (Mild) = mild fracture, 20 to 25% reduction in vertebral height (anterior, middle, or posterior); Grade 2 (Moderate) = moderate fracture, 25 to 40% reduction in anterior, middle, and/or posterior height; Grade 3 (Severe) = severe fracture, greater than 40% reduction in anterior, middle, and/or posterior height. |
24 months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Clinical Fracture Through Month 12 | Clinical fractures included clinical vertebral and nonvertebral fractures (excluding skull, facial, mandible, cervical vertebrae, thoracic vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae, metacarpus, finger phalanges, and toe phalanges) that were associated with signs and/or symptoms indicative of a fracture. Clinical vertebral fractures were included regardless of trauma severity or pathologic fractures; nonvertebral fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Nonvertebral Fracture Through Month 12 | A nonvertebral fracture was defined as a fracture present on a copy of radiographs or other diagnostic images such as computerized tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging confirming the fracture within 14 days of reported fracture image date recorded by the study site, and/or documented in a copy of the radiology report, surgical report, or discharge summary, excluding skull, facial, mandible, cervical vertebrae, thoracic vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae, metacarpus, finger phalanges, and toe phalanges. In addition, fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Nonvertebral Fracture Through Month 24 | A nonvertebral fracture was defined as a fracture present on a copy of radiographs or other diagnostic images such as computerized tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging confirming the fracture within 14 days of reported fracture image date as recorded by the study site, and/or documented in a copy of the radiology report, surgical report, or discharge summary, excluding skull, facial, mandible, cervical vertebrae, thoracic vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae, metacarpus, finger phalanges, and toe phalanges. In addition, fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Clinical Fracture Through Month 24 | Clinical fractures included clinical vertebral and nonvertebral fractures (excluding skull, facial, mandible, cervical vertebrae, thoracic vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae, metacarpus, finger phalanges, and toe phalanges) that were associated with signs and/or symptoms indicative of a fracture. Clinical vertebral fractures were included regardless of trauma severity or pathologic fractures; nonvertebral fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Major Nonvertebral Fracture Through Month 12 | A major nonvertebral fracture was a subset of nonvertebral fractures including pelvis, distal femur (ie, femur excluding hip), proximal tibia (ie, tibia excluding ankle), ribs, proximal humerus (ie, humerus excluding elbow), forearm, and hip. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Major Nonvertebral Fracture Through Month 24 | A major nonvertebral fracture was a subset of nonvertebral fractures including pelvis, distal femur (ie, femur excluding hip), proximal tibia (ie, tibia excluding ankle), ribs, proximal humerus (ie, humerus excluding elbow), forearm, and hip. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a New or Worsening Vertebral Fracture Through Month 12 | A new or worsening vertebral fracture was identified when there was a = 1 grade increase from the previous grade in any vertebra from T4 to L4. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a New or Worsening Vertebral Fracture Through Month 24 | A new or worsening vertebral fracture was identified when there was a = 1 grade increase from the previous grade in any vertebra from T4 to L4. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Hip Fracture Through Month 12 | Hip fractures were defined as a subset of nonvertebral fractures including fractures of the femur neck, femur intertrochanter, and femur subtrochanter. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Hip Fracture Through Month 24 | Hip fractures were defined as a subset of nonvertebral fractures including fractures of the femur neck, femur intertrochanter, and femur subtrochanter. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Major Osteoporotic Fracture Through Month 12 | Major osteoporotic fractures included clinical vertebral fractures and fractures of the hip, forearm and humerus. Fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With a Major Osteoporotic Fracture Through Month 24 | Major osteoporotic fractures included clinical vertebral fractures and fractures of the hip, forearm and humerus. Fractures associated with high trauma severity or pathologic fractures were excluded. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With Multiple New or Worsening Vertebral Fractures Through Month 12 | A new or worsening vertebral fracture was identified when there was a = 1 grade increase from the previous grade in any vertebra from T4 to L4. A participant had multiple new or worsening vertebral fractures when there were = 2 vertebrae from T4 to L4 with = 1 grade increase from the previous grade. The multiple new or worsening vertebral fractures need not have occurred at the same visit. | 12 Months | |
Secondary | Percentage of Participants With Multiple New or Worsening Vertebral Fractures Through Month 24 | A new or worsening vertebral fracture was identified when there was a = 1 grade increase from the previous grade in any vertebra from T4 to L4. A participant had multiple new or worsening vertebral fractures when there were = 2 vertebrae from T4 to L4 with = 1 grade increase from the previous grade. The multiple new or worsening vertebral fractures need not have occurred at the same visit. | 24 Months | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density at the Lumbar Spine at Month 12 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 12 | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline In Bone Mineral Density at the Lumbar Spine at Month 24 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 24 | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density of the Total Hip at Month 12 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 12 | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density of the Total Hip at Month 24 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 24 | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density of the Femoral Neck at Month 12 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 12 | |
Secondary | Percent Change From Baseline in Bone Mineral Density of the Femoral Neck at Month 24 | Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). DXA scans were analyzed by a central imaging center. | Baseline and Month 24 |
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Phase 1 | |
Completed |
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Phase 3 | |
Active, not recruiting |
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G56W1 in Women With Postmenopausal Osteoporosis
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Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Completed |
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Observational Study of Denosumab (Prolia®) in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis
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N/A | |
Completed |
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A Study to Compare SB16 (Proposed Denosumab Biosimilar) to Prolia® in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis
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Phase 3 |