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After a Fracture, Patients Often Continue Meds that Boost Fracture Risk

(Reuters Health) - Older people who break a bone are often receiving medications that can increase the risk of a fracture - and even after a fracture, less than 10 percent of them stop taking those drugs, according to a new study.

"One would expect that a significant health event like a fracture would result in some change in the use of prescription drugs that might have contributed to that event," said lead author Dr. Jeffrey C. Munson of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Lebanon, New Hampshire. "In contrast to this expectation, we observed that for the overwhelming majority of patients we studied, a fragility fracture did not lead to any change in medications that have been linked to fracture risk."

The authors used data on 168,000 Medicare beneficiaries, more than 80 percent of whom were women, on average age 80, who had experienced a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture. They compared these records with retail pharmacy claims to identify which patients had been taking medicines that increase the risk of a fall, decrease bone density or are otherwise tied to an increased risk of fracture.

About 75 percent of fracture patients had been taking one of these medications. While seven percent of people stopped taking the medication after their fracture, a similar number started to take a new medication also tied to fracture risk, the authors reported in JAMA Internal Medicine, online August 22.

"Some drugs affect balance and memory, like the sleeping pills, which can lead to a fall," said Dr. Sarah D. Berry of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, Massachusetts, who coauthored a linked editorial.

Blood pressure medications cause changes in blood pressure that could lead to a fall. Other drugs, like prednisone or medications for heartburn, increase bone loss which can lead to a fracture, Berry told Reuters Health by email.

"Fractures are the leading cause of death from injury and one of the main reasons for nursing home placement in persons over the age of 65," she said.

"When a patient has a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture, it is important for healthcare providers to examine all the prescription medications he or she is taking, and carefully assess whether there is an opportunity to eliminate those that might cause a future fracture," Munson told Reuters Health by email.

However, he said, "In many cases, the benefits of a drug may outweigh its risks, even when those risks are significant."

Which drugs can be stopped will vary from case to case, Munson noted.

"For many of the drugs we studied, there are alternative drugs that treat the same conditions but with a lower risk of fracture," he said. "In other cases, it may be possible to eliminate a drug altogether."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2bc6PIN

JAMA Intern Med 2016.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.

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(Reuters Health) - Older people who break a bone are often receiving medications that can increase the risk of a fracture - and even after a fracture, less than 10 percent of them stop taking those drugs, according to a new study.

"One would expect that a significant health event like a fracture would result in some change in the use of prescription drugs that might have contributed to that event," said lead author Dr. Jeffrey C. Munson of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Lebanon, New Hampshire. "In contrast to this expectation, we observed that for the overwhelming majority of patients we studied, a fragility fracture did not lead to any change in medications that have been linked to fracture risk."

The authors used data on 168,000 Medicare beneficiaries, more than 80 percent of whom were women, on average age 80, who had experienced a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture. They compared these records with retail pharmacy claims to identify which patients had been taking medicines that increase the risk of a fall, decrease bone density or are otherwise tied to an increased risk of fracture.

About 75 percent of fracture patients had been taking one of these medications. While seven percent of people stopped taking the medication after their fracture, a similar number started to take a new medication also tied to fracture risk, the authors reported in JAMA Internal Medicine, online August 22.

"Some drugs affect balance and memory, like the sleeping pills, which can lead to a fall," said Dr. Sarah D. Berry of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, Massachusetts, who coauthored a linked editorial.

Blood pressure medications cause changes in blood pressure that could lead to a fall. Other drugs, like prednisone or medications for heartburn, increase bone loss which can lead to a fracture, Berry told Reuters Health by email.

"Fractures are the leading cause of death from injury and one of the main reasons for nursing home placement in persons over the age of 65," she said.

"When a patient has a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture, it is important for healthcare providers to examine all the prescription medications he or she is taking, and carefully assess whether there is an opportunity to eliminate those that might cause a future fracture," Munson told Reuters Health by email.

However, he said, "In many cases, the benefits of a drug may outweigh its risks, even when those risks are significant."

Which drugs can be stopped will vary from case to case, Munson noted.

"For many of the drugs we studied, there are alternative drugs that treat the same conditions but with a lower risk of fracture," he said. "In other cases, it may be possible to eliminate a drug altogether."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2bc6PIN

JAMA Intern Med 2016.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.

(Reuters Health) - Older people who break a bone are often receiving medications that can increase the risk of a fracture - and even after a fracture, less than 10 percent of them stop taking those drugs, according to a new study.

"One would expect that a significant health event like a fracture would result in some change in the use of prescription drugs that might have contributed to that event," said lead author Dr. Jeffrey C. Munson of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Lebanon, New Hampshire. "In contrast to this expectation, we observed that for the overwhelming majority of patients we studied, a fragility fracture did not lead to any change in medications that have been linked to fracture risk."

The authors used data on 168,000 Medicare beneficiaries, more than 80 percent of whom were women, on average age 80, who had experienced a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture. They compared these records with retail pharmacy claims to identify which patients had been taking medicines that increase the risk of a fall, decrease bone density or are otherwise tied to an increased risk of fracture.

About 75 percent of fracture patients had been taking one of these medications. While seven percent of people stopped taking the medication after their fracture, a similar number started to take a new medication also tied to fracture risk, the authors reported in JAMA Internal Medicine, online August 22.

"Some drugs affect balance and memory, like the sleeping pills, which can lead to a fall," said Dr. Sarah D. Berry of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife in Boston, Massachusetts, who coauthored a linked editorial.

Blood pressure medications cause changes in blood pressure that could lead to a fall. Other drugs, like prednisone or medications for heartburn, increase bone loss which can lead to a fracture, Berry told Reuters Health by email.

"Fractures are the leading cause of death from injury and one of the main reasons for nursing home placement in persons over the age of 65," she said.

"When a patient has a hip, shoulder or wrist fracture, it is important for healthcare providers to examine all the prescription medications he or she is taking, and carefully assess whether there is an opportunity to eliminate those that might cause a future fracture," Munson told Reuters Health by email.

However, he said, "In many cases, the benefits of a drug may outweigh its risks, even when those risks are significant."

Which drugs can be stopped will vary from case to case, Munson noted.

"For many of the drugs we studied, there are alternative drugs that treat the same conditions but with a lower risk of fracture," he said. "In other cases, it may be possible to eliminate a drug altogether."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2bc6PIN

JAMA Intern Med 2016.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.

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