slide kit - international osteoporosis...

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Slide Kit Title page Annotations Osteoporosis should be recognised as important public health con- cern because of the fractures that arise. For the year 2000, there were an estimated 9 million new oste- oporotic fractures, of which 1.6 million were at the hip, 1.7 million were at the forearm and 1.4 million were clinical vertebral fractures. Europe and the Americas accounted for 51% of all these fractures, while most of the remainder occurred in the Western Pacific region and Southeast Asia. The WHO fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX ® ) identifies those peo- ple at highest risk of fracture and its application can be used in clini- cal settings for informed intervention decisions. Slide 1 The aim of the clinician in managing osteoporosis Annotations An IOF survey, conducted in 11 countries, showed denial of personal risk by postmenopausal women, lack of dialogue about osteoporosis with their doctor, and restricted access to diagnosis and treatment before the first fracture result in underdiagnosis and undertreatment of the disease. The Global Longitudinal study of Osteoporosis in Women (GLOW) indicated that over the age of 55 years, 55% of women with os- teoporosis and 75% of women with osteopenia perceived them- selves to have the same or a lower fracture risk than an age-matched healthy woman. References Johnell O and Kanis JA (2006) Osteoporosis International 17:1726 References Japanese Osteoporosis Foundation and the International Osteoporosis Foundation (2000) How fragile is her future? Survey Report < http://www.iofbonehealth.org/ policy-advocacy/survey-reports.html/ > Cooper C, Siris E, Adachi J, et al. (2009) Osteoporosis International 20 (Suppl.1): S5-S22 Slide 2 Predicting fractures with bone mineral density (BMD) Annotations BMD is a strong predictor of fracture risk. Women with osteoporosis (BMD T-score ≤-2.5) are at high risk of fracture, but there are relatively few such women in the population. The majority of fractures occur in women with BMD above the oste- oporosis threshold (osteopenia). Additional risk factors need to be taken into account. References Siris E, Chen Y-T, Abbott TA, et al. (2004) Archives of Internal Medicine 164:1108

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Page 1: Slide Kit - International Osteoporosis Foundationshare.iofbonehealth.org/FRAX/FRAX-annotations.pdfSlide Kit Title page Annotations • Osteoporosis should be recognised as important

Slide Kit

Title page

Annotations• Osteoporosisshouldberecognisedasimportantpublichealthcon-

cernbecauseofthefracturesthatarise.

• For the year 2000, there were an estimated 9million new oste-oporoticfractures,ofwhich1.6millionwereatthehip,1.7millionwereattheforearmand1.4millionwereclinicalvertebralfractures.EuropeandtheAmericasaccountedfor51%ofallthesefractures,whilemostoftheremainderoccurredintheWesternPacificregionandSoutheastAsia.

• TheWHOfractureriskassessmenttool(FRAX®)identifiesthosepeo-pleathighestriskoffractureanditsapplicationcanbeusedinclini-calsettingsforinformedinterventiondecisions.

Slide1

The aim of the clinician in managing osteoporosis

Annotations• AnIOFsurvey,conductedin11countries,showeddenialofpersonal

riskbypostmenopausalwomen,lackofdialogueaboutosteoporosiswiththeirdoctor,andrestrictedaccesstodiagnosisandtreatmentbeforethefirstfractureresultinunderdiagnosisandundertreatmentofthedisease.

• TheGlobalLongitudinal studyofOsteoporosis inWomen(GLOW)indicated thatover theageof55years,55%ofwomenwithos-teoporosis and 75% ofwomenwith osteopenia perceived them-selvestohavethesameoralowerfractureriskthananage-matchedhealthywoman.

ReferencesJohnellOandKanisJA(2006)Osteoporosis International 17:1726

ReferencesJapaneseOsteoporosisFoundationandtheInternationalOsteoporosisFoundation(2000)Howfragileisherfuture?SurveyReport<http://www.iofbonehealth.org/policy-advocacy/survey-reports.html/>CooperC,SirisE,AdachiJ,etal.(2009)Osteoporosis International20(Suppl.1):S5-S22

Slide2

Predicting fractures with bone mineral density (BMD)

Annotations• BMDisastrongpredictoroffracturerisk.

• Womenwithosteoporosis (BMDT-score≤-2.5) areathigh riskoffracture,buttherearerelativelyfewsuchwomeninthepopulation.

• ThemajorityoffracturesoccurinwomenwithBMDabovetheoste-oporosisthreshold(osteopenia).

• Additionalriskfactorsneedtobetakenintoaccount.

ReferencesSirisE,ChenY-T,AbbottTA,etal.(2004)Archives of Internal Medicine164:1108

Page 2: Slide Kit - International Osteoporosis Foundationshare.iofbonehealth.org/FRAX/FRAX-annotations.pdfSlide Kit Title page Annotations • Osteoporosis should be recognised as important

Slide4

Fracture probability is age- and BMD-specific

Annotations• The combination of age and BMD improves the estimation of

fractureprobabilities.

• An80yearoldwiththesameT-scoreasa50yearoldhasamuchhigher10-yearprobabilityoffracture.

• Notethata50-yearoldwomanwithosteoporosishasa lower10-yearhipfractureprobabilitycomparedtoa70-yearoldwithosteopenia.

Slide5

Fracture probability is dependent on body mass index (BMI)

Annotations• A lowBMI isa significant risk factor forosteoporotic fractures,

particularlyhipfractures.

• The impactofBMIonosteoporosisfracturerisk is largelymedi-atedthroughitseffectonBMD.

• Forhipfractures,lowBMIremainsasignificantBMD-independentriskfactor.

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenA,etal.(2001)Osteoporosis International12:989

ReferencesDeLaetC,KanisJA,OdenA,etal.(2005)Osteoporosis International 16:1330

Slide3

Fracture probability is age- and gender-specific

Annotations• Ageisanimportantindependentriskfactor.

• Theprobabilityof fracture increases steadilyup to80-85years,andthereafterdecreasessincetheincreaseinmortalityriskwithageexceedstheincreaseinhipfracturerisk.

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenAetal.(2000)Osteoporosis International 11:669

Page 3: Slide Kit - International Osteoporosis Foundationshare.iofbonehealth.org/FRAX/FRAX-annotations.pdfSlide Kit Title page Annotations • Osteoporosis should be recognised as important

Slide7

Accumulation of risk factors increases fracture probability

Annotations• AstheclinicalriskfactorsusedinFRAX®actindependently,the

accumulationofriskfactorsincreasesfractureprobabilityinbothwomenandmen.

• Fractureprobability isdependentonthenumberofclinicalriskfactors.

• Cumulativeeffectsareseeninbothwomenandmen,withhigh-erfractureprobabilitiesinwomenforthesameBMDT-score.

Slide8

Fracture probability is country-specific

Annotations• Theriskofosteoporoticfracturesdiffersbyupto10-foldfrom

countrytocountry.

• Mortalityratesalsodiffersignificantlybetweencountries.

• Bothratesneedtobeknownforacountry-specificmodeltobeincludedinFRAX®.

• Ethnicity is not taken into account,with the exception of theUnitedStateswherethereissufficientepidemiologicalinforma-tiontomaketheappropriateadjustments.

• FRAX®willexpandtoothercountriesaspopulation-basedepide-miologicdatabecomeavailable

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenA,etal.(2008)Osteoporosis International 19:385

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenA,etal.(2002)JournalofBoneandMineralResearch17(7):1237ElfforsI,AllanderE,KanisJA,etal.(1994)Osteoporosis International 4:253

Slide6

FRAX® makes use of independent risk factors

Annotations• Theriskfactorslistedinthegraph,usedbyFRAX®,aresignificant

contributors toosteoporotic fracture risk, over andabove thatprovidedbyBMDandage.

• Thedifferent contributionof these clinical risk factors is takenintoaccount incalculating the10-year fractureprobabilities inFRAX®.

ReferencesKanisJA,BorgströmF,DeLaetC,etal.(2005)Osteoporosis International16:581

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Slide10

Limitations of FRAX®

Annotations• FRAX®iswellvalidated,butnomodelisperfect.

• Furtherriskfactorsmaybeincorporatedinthefuture.

• FRAX®shouldnotbeseenasasubstitutefortheneedtoimproveeducationaboutosteoporosismanagement.

Slide11

Stratification of major osteoporotic fracture risk

Annotations• The stratification of fracture risk helps understand how the

FRAX®toolmayapplyinindividualpatient-basedscenariosandclinicalpractice.

• Thisslideisanexampleofwhatgenerallyhappensinclinicalset-tingstoidentifyapatientatriskofosteoporoticfracture.

• Although the calculationof 10-year fractureprobabilities doesnot replaceclinical judgment, theclinician isprovided throughFRAX®withcomputedprobabilitiesderivedfromevidence-basedepidemiologicaldata.

• InthisspecificUKexample,awomenwithratherthanwithoutrheumatoidarthritis,inthepresenceofapriorfractureandglu-cocorticoiduse,hada33%increaseinfractureprobability(35%insteadof26%).

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenA,etal.(2008)Osteoporosis International 19:385

ReferencesKanisJA,JohnellO,OdenA,etal.(2008)Osteoporosis International19:385

Slide9

WHO fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX®)

Annotations• Reasonsforriskfactorselection:

-Dataavailability

-Internationallyvalidated

-Easilyascertainable

- Evidence that the identified risk ismodifiableby subsequenttreatment

-GoodintuitivevalueReferenceshttp://www.shef.ac.uk/FRAX/index.htm

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Slide13

Management of osteoporosis using fracture probabilities

Annotations• ThisUKexampledemonstrateshowfractureprobabilities,com-

putedfromFRAX®,havebeenusedinthedevelopmentonna-tionalguidelinesforthemanagementofosteoporosis.

• Therighthandpanelshowstheinterventionthresholdsetatafractureprobabilityequivalenttoawomanwithapreviousfragil-ityfracture.BMDtestingisrecommendedinindividualsinwhomfractureprobabilities(assessedfromclinicalriskfactorsalone)isclosetotheinterventionthreshold(lefthandpanel).

• Thisminimisestheriskofmisclassifyingahighriskpatientaslowriskandviceversa.

• Thisapproachmaynotbeapplicable toothercountrieswherebonemineraldensitytestingmaybemoreorlessavailable,wherefractureprobabilitiesandthecostoffractureortreatmentdifferfromtheUK.

• AssessmentandinterventionthresholdsshouldbesetnationallytodetermineatwhichlevelthefractureprobabilityisacceptablyhighenoughtorecommendBMDevaluationorpharmaceuticaltreatment.

ReferencesKanisJA,McCloskeyEV,JohanssonH,etal.(2009)Osteoporosis International 20:449;Erratumto(2008)Osteoporo-sis International19:1395

Slide12

WHO Case finding strategies

Annotations• InMemberStateswithnoaccesstoBMDtesting,treatmentcan

be allocatedon thebasis of fractureprobability only, assessedfromapatient’sclinicalriskfactors.

• InMemberStateswhereBMDtesting is recommended in seg-mentsofthepopulation,BMDtestingcanbeperformedalong-sidetheassessmentoffractureprobabilityusingclinicalriskfac-tors.

• MemberStateswithlimitedaccesstoBMDtestingliesomewhereinbetweenandBMDtesting isdependentonclinicalpractice,availability,affordabilityorhealtheconomiccriteria.

ReferencesKanisJAonbehalfoftheWorldHealthOrganizationScientificGroup(2008)Assessmentofosteoporosisattheprimaryhealthcarelevel.TechnicalReport.WHOCollaboratingCentre,UniversityofSheffield,UK.