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Vitamin D does not improve bone density, structure in healthy patients
ORLANDO – after 2 years of daily use, according to data presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
“Participants may have already reached the vitamin D level needed for bone health,” Meryl S. LeBoff, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said in her presentation.
Dr. LeBoff presented results from 771 patients (mean age, 63.8 years) in the Bone Health Subcohort of VITAL (Vitamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL) who were not on any bone active medications and were randomized to receive daily vitamin D3 at a dose of 2,000 IU or placebo. Patients received bone imaging at baseline and at 2 years; areal bone mineral density (aBMD) of the whole body, femoral neck, total hip, and spine was assessed via dual x-ray absorptiometry scan. Total 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) levels were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, and free 25(OH)D levels were measured via the ELISA assay. The baseline characteristics of the vitamin D3 supplementation and placebo groups were similar. Overall, 52% of patients had osteopenia and 10.4% had osteoporosis.
Between baseline and 2 years, the vitamin D group’s total 25(OH)D levels increased from a mean 27.0 ng/mL to 39.5 ng/mL (46%) and the free 25(OH)D levels increased from 5.8 pg/mL to 9.0 pg/mL (55%), whereas levels in the placebo stayed the same. The researchers found no significant absolute percentage changes over 2 years in aBMD of the whole body (P = .60), femoral neck (P = .16), total hip (P = .23) and spine (P = .55), compared with patients in the placebo group.
In a secondary analysis, Dr. LeBoff and colleagues found no benefit to volumetric BMD (vBMD) of the radius and the tibia at 2 years, and the results persisted after they performed a sensitivity analysis. Adverse events, such as hypercalciuria, kidney stones, and gastrointestinal symptoms, were not significantly different in the vitamin D group, compared with the placebo group.
Dr. LeBoff noted among the limitations of the study that it evaluated one dose level of vitamin D and was not designed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation was effective in people with vitamin D insufficiency, and the results are not generalizable to patients with osteoporosis or osteomalacia. Future studies should also examine whether free 25(OH)D levels can be used to detect which patients can benefit from vitamin D supplementation, she added.
Risk of falls
In a separate abstract, which Dr. LeBoff presented in a different session, 12,927 patients who received vitamin D supplementation for 5 years, were studied for risk of falls, compared with 12,994 individuals in a placebo group. At baseline, 33.3% of patients had fallen at least once in the previous year, and overall 6,605 patients reported 13,235 falls. At 5.3 years of follow-up, there were no significant differences in number of falls between groups, falls leading to injury, and falls leading to a doctor or a hospital visit.
There are ongoing parallel studies examining the incidence of fractures between groups in the total population of the VITAL study (25,871 participants); bone turnover markers; bone microarchitecture measurements through high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography; and examining the connection between free 25(OH)D, parathyroid hormone, and vitamin D binding protein, said Dr. LeBoff.
The study was funded in part by grants from the National Cancer Institute, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the Office of Dietary Supplements, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Dr. LeBoff reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Arthritis Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Two authors reported nonfinancial support Pharmavite LLC of Northridge, Calif., Pronova BioPharma of Norway and BASF, and Quest Diagnostics. The remaining authors reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: LeBoff M et al. ASBMR 2019, Abstracts 1046 and 1057.
ORLANDO – after 2 years of daily use, according to data presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
“Participants may have already reached the vitamin D level needed for bone health,” Meryl S. LeBoff, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said in her presentation.
Dr. LeBoff presented results from 771 patients (mean age, 63.8 years) in the Bone Health Subcohort of VITAL (Vitamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL) who were not on any bone active medications and were randomized to receive daily vitamin D3 at a dose of 2,000 IU or placebo. Patients received bone imaging at baseline and at 2 years; areal bone mineral density (aBMD) of the whole body, femoral neck, total hip, and spine was assessed via dual x-ray absorptiometry scan. Total 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) levels were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, and free 25(OH)D levels were measured via the ELISA assay. The baseline characteristics of the vitamin D3 supplementation and placebo groups were similar. Overall, 52% of patients had osteopenia and 10.4% had osteoporosis.
Between baseline and 2 years, the vitamin D group’s total 25(OH)D levels increased from a mean 27.0 ng/mL to 39.5 ng/mL (46%) and the free 25(OH)D levels increased from 5.8 pg/mL to 9.0 pg/mL (55%), whereas levels in the placebo stayed the same. The researchers found no significant absolute percentage changes over 2 years in aBMD of the whole body (P = .60), femoral neck (P = .16), total hip (P = .23) and spine (P = .55), compared with patients in the placebo group.
In a secondary analysis, Dr. LeBoff and colleagues found no benefit to volumetric BMD (vBMD) of the radius and the tibia at 2 years, and the results persisted after they performed a sensitivity analysis. Adverse events, such as hypercalciuria, kidney stones, and gastrointestinal symptoms, were not significantly different in the vitamin D group, compared with the placebo group.
Dr. LeBoff noted among the limitations of the study that it evaluated one dose level of vitamin D and was not designed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation was effective in people with vitamin D insufficiency, and the results are not generalizable to patients with osteoporosis or osteomalacia. Future studies should also examine whether free 25(OH)D levels can be used to detect which patients can benefit from vitamin D supplementation, she added.
Risk of falls
In a separate abstract, which Dr. LeBoff presented in a different session, 12,927 patients who received vitamin D supplementation for 5 years, were studied for risk of falls, compared with 12,994 individuals in a placebo group. At baseline, 33.3% of patients had fallen at least once in the previous year, and overall 6,605 patients reported 13,235 falls. At 5.3 years of follow-up, there were no significant differences in number of falls between groups, falls leading to injury, and falls leading to a doctor or a hospital visit.
There are ongoing parallel studies examining the incidence of fractures between groups in the total population of the VITAL study (25,871 participants); bone turnover markers; bone microarchitecture measurements through high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography; and examining the connection between free 25(OH)D, parathyroid hormone, and vitamin D binding protein, said Dr. LeBoff.
The study was funded in part by grants from the National Cancer Institute, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the Office of Dietary Supplements, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Dr. LeBoff reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Arthritis Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Two authors reported nonfinancial support Pharmavite LLC of Northridge, Calif., Pronova BioPharma of Norway and BASF, and Quest Diagnostics. The remaining authors reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: LeBoff M et al. ASBMR 2019, Abstracts 1046 and 1057.
ORLANDO – after 2 years of daily use, according to data presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
“Participants may have already reached the vitamin D level needed for bone health,” Meryl S. LeBoff, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said in her presentation.
Dr. LeBoff presented results from 771 patients (mean age, 63.8 years) in the Bone Health Subcohort of VITAL (Vitamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL) who were not on any bone active medications and were randomized to receive daily vitamin D3 at a dose of 2,000 IU or placebo. Patients received bone imaging at baseline and at 2 years; areal bone mineral density (aBMD) of the whole body, femoral neck, total hip, and spine was assessed via dual x-ray absorptiometry scan. Total 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) levels were measured via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, and free 25(OH)D levels were measured via the ELISA assay. The baseline characteristics of the vitamin D3 supplementation and placebo groups were similar. Overall, 52% of patients had osteopenia and 10.4% had osteoporosis.
Between baseline and 2 years, the vitamin D group’s total 25(OH)D levels increased from a mean 27.0 ng/mL to 39.5 ng/mL (46%) and the free 25(OH)D levels increased from 5.8 pg/mL to 9.0 pg/mL (55%), whereas levels in the placebo stayed the same. The researchers found no significant absolute percentage changes over 2 years in aBMD of the whole body (P = .60), femoral neck (P = .16), total hip (P = .23) and spine (P = .55), compared with patients in the placebo group.
In a secondary analysis, Dr. LeBoff and colleagues found no benefit to volumetric BMD (vBMD) of the radius and the tibia at 2 years, and the results persisted after they performed a sensitivity analysis. Adverse events, such as hypercalciuria, kidney stones, and gastrointestinal symptoms, were not significantly different in the vitamin D group, compared with the placebo group.
Dr. LeBoff noted among the limitations of the study that it evaluated one dose level of vitamin D and was not designed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation was effective in people with vitamin D insufficiency, and the results are not generalizable to patients with osteoporosis or osteomalacia. Future studies should also examine whether free 25(OH)D levels can be used to detect which patients can benefit from vitamin D supplementation, she added.
Risk of falls
In a separate abstract, which Dr. LeBoff presented in a different session, 12,927 patients who received vitamin D supplementation for 5 years, were studied for risk of falls, compared with 12,994 individuals in a placebo group. At baseline, 33.3% of patients had fallen at least once in the previous year, and overall 6,605 patients reported 13,235 falls. At 5.3 years of follow-up, there were no significant differences in number of falls between groups, falls leading to injury, and falls leading to a doctor or a hospital visit.
There are ongoing parallel studies examining the incidence of fractures between groups in the total population of the VITAL study (25,871 participants); bone turnover markers; bone microarchitecture measurements through high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography; and examining the connection between free 25(OH)D, parathyroid hormone, and vitamin D binding protein, said Dr. LeBoff.
The study was funded in part by grants from the National Cancer Institute, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the Office of Dietary Supplements, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Dr. LeBoff reported receiving grants from the National Institute of Arthritis Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Two authors reported nonfinancial support Pharmavite LLC of Northridge, Calif., Pronova BioPharma of Norway and BASF, and Quest Diagnostics. The remaining authors reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: LeBoff M et al. ASBMR 2019, Abstracts 1046 and 1057.
REPORTING FROM ASBMR 2019
Project ECHO helps osteoporosis specialists connect with PCPs
ORLANDO – The use of a teleconferencing program to share knowledge about osteoporosis has helped health care professionals learn about the disease and may potentially reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap in underserved communities, according to a speaker at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
The concept, called “technology-enabled collaborative learning,” is intended to address the problem of there being not enough specialists to see patients who need treatment, and the ineffectiveness of educating primary care providers in how to treat complex medical conditions, E. Michael Lewiecki, MD, the director of the New Mexico Clinical Research & Osteoporosis Center said in his presentation.
“Primary care doctors are busy,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “They have limited time taking care of patients. They don’t have the time or often the skills to manage patients who have any questions or concerns about osteoporosis and treatments for osteoporosis.”
One solution, he said, is to find health care professionals in underserved communities who are already interested in and motivated to learn more about osteoporosis, turn them into near-experts on osteoporosis for their patients as well as in their own community.
Dr. Lewiecki proposed the Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO), or Project ECHO, an initiative out of the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, as a potential answer. Project ECHO uses videoconferencing to connect experts in a therapeutic area, with Bone Health TeleECHO focusing on raising knowledge of osteoporosis for its participants. “The idea of ECHO is to be a force multiplier to educate health care professionals, each of whom takes care of many patients, and to have many ECHO programs around the world in convenient time zones and convenient languages for people who are interested in participating,” said Dr. Lewiecki.
The idea began when a gastroenterologist at Dr. Lewiecki’s own center was frustrated that patients were not seeking treatment for hepatitis C because of time or travel issues. In response, a pilot program for Project ECHO was developed through a collaboration between the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico where gastroenterologists at University of New Mexico connected with primary care providers across the state, sharing information about hepatitis C and discussing case studies. The results of the pilot program were published in the New England Journal of Medicine and showed a similar rate of sustained viral response between patients treated at the University of New Mexico clinic (84 of 146 patients; 57.5%) and at 21 ECHO clinics (152 of 261 patients; 58.2%) (Arora S et al. N Eng J Med. 2011. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1009370).
“ECHO expands the capacity to deliver best practice medical care through collegial, interactive, case-based discussions with minimal disruption to the office routine,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “Patients benefit from better care, closer to home, with greater convenience and lower cost than referral to a medical center. And the potential is to reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap by having many ECHOs starting up in many places in the world.”
Today, the ECHO program is in 37 countries, with 322 ECHO hubs and 677 ECHO programs. The top three specialties are endocrinology, orthopedics, and rheumatology; 51% of ECHO participants are primary care providers, 24% are advanced care providers, and 19% are health care providers such as nutritionists, physical therapists, and other providers that have an interest in bone health.
In survey results adapted from a 2017 study from his own group, Dr. Lewiecki showed that 263 health care professionals who participated in Bone Health TeleECHO rated themselves as more confident in 20 different domains of osteoporosis treatment, such as secondary osteoporosis and anabolic therapy, after 21 months of using the ECHO program (Lewiecki EM et al. J Endocr Soc. 2017. doi: 10.1210/js.2017-00361). However, he admitted that showing fracture prevention outcomes at these ECHO centers has proven more difficult.
“Of course, we’re all interested in outcomes. The ultimate outcome here is preventing fractures, but it is extraordinarily difficult to design a study to actually show that we’re reducing fractures, but certainly self-confidence in managing osteoporosis has improved,” he said.
There have also been some misconceptions of the Project ECHO. The program is not only for beginners or primary care providers, said Dr. Lewiecki. It is also not limited to providers in rural areas, as the program has many participants at urban centers, he added.
“We are a virtual community of practice. It’s a collegial relationship,” he said. “It’s really recapitulating the way that we learned during our postgraduate training: When we see a patient, we present the case to our attending, the attending pontificates a little bit, we bounce things off of one another, and we go back and then we do some different things with our patients. And that’s exactly what we do with Echo. It makes learning fun again.”
Dr. Lewiecki challenged the attendees in the room who are already experts in osteoporosis to help share their knowledge of the disease to help other health care professionals learn more about how to better care for their patients. “If you have a passion for teaching, if you want to share knowledge and you’re willing to devote a little bit of your time to doing that and reaching out to more people, this is the way that you can do it.”
Dr. Lewiecki reports research grant support from Amgen, consulting fees from Alexion, Amgen, Radius, Shire, and Ultragenyx, speaking fees from Alexion, Radius, and Shire, and is an advisory board member with the National Osteoporosis Foundation, International Society for Clinical Densitometry, and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico.
SOURCE: Lewiecki ME. ASBMR 2019. Symposia: Cutting Edge Concepts: Novel Approaches to Reducing Fractures. Bone Health TeleECHO.
ORLANDO – The use of a teleconferencing program to share knowledge about osteoporosis has helped health care professionals learn about the disease and may potentially reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap in underserved communities, according to a speaker at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
The concept, called “technology-enabled collaborative learning,” is intended to address the problem of there being not enough specialists to see patients who need treatment, and the ineffectiveness of educating primary care providers in how to treat complex medical conditions, E. Michael Lewiecki, MD, the director of the New Mexico Clinical Research & Osteoporosis Center said in his presentation.
“Primary care doctors are busy,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “They have limited time taking care of patients. They don’t have the time or often the skills to manage patients who have any questions or concerns about osteoporosis and treatments for osteoporosis.”
One solution, he said, is to find health care professionals in underserved communities who are already interested in and motivated to learn more about osteoporosis, turn them into near-experts on osteoporosis for their patients as well as in their own community.
Dr. Lewiecki proposed the Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO), or Project ECHO, an initiative out of the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, as a potential answer. Project ECHO uses videoconferencing to connect experts in a therapeutic area, with Bone Health TeleECHO focusing on raising knowledge of osteoporosis for its participants. “The idea of ECHO is to be a force multiplier to educate health care professionals, each of whom takes care of many patients, and to have many ECHO programs around the world in convenient time zones and convenient languages for people who are interested in participating,” said Dr. Lewiecki.
The idea began when a gastroenterologist at Dr. Lewiecki’s own center was frustrated that patients were not seeking treatment for hepatitis C because of time or travel issues. In response, a pilot program for Project ECHO was developed through a collaboration between the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico where gastroenterologists at University of New Mexico connected with primary care providers across the state, sharing information about hepatitis C and discussing case studies. The results of the pilot program were published in the New England Journal of Medicine and showed a similar rate of sustained viral response between patients treated at the University of New Mexico clinic (84 of 146 patients; 57.5%) and at 21 ECHO clinics (152 of 261 patients; 58.2%) (Arora S et al. N Eng J Med. 2011. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1009370).
“ECHO expands the capacity to deliver best practice medical care through collegial, interactive, case-based discussions with minimal disruption to the office routine,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “Patients benefit from better care, closer to home, with greater convenience and lower cost than referral to a medical center. And the potential is to reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap by having many ECHOs starting up in many places in the world.”
Today, the ECHO program is in 37 countries, with 322 ECHO hubs and 677 ECHO programs. The top three specialties are endocrinology, orthopedics, and rheumatology; 51% of ECHO participants are primary care providers, 24% are advanced care providers, and 19% are health care providers such as nutritionists, physical therapists, and other providers that have an interest in bone health.
In survey results adapted from a 2017 study from his own group, Dr. Lewiecki showed that 263 health care professionals who participated in Bone Health TeleECHO rated themselves as more confident in 20 different domains of osteoporosis treatment, such as secondary osteoporosis and anabolic therapy, after 21 months of using the ECHO program (Lewiecki EM et al. J Endocr Soc. 2017. doi: 10.1210/js.2017-00361). However, he admitted that showing fracture prevention outcomes at these ECHO centers has proven more difficult.
“Of course, we’re all interested in outcomes. The ultimate outcome here is preventing fractures, but it is extraordinarily difficult to design a study to actually show that we’re reducing fractures, but certainly self-confidence in managing osteoporosis has improved,” he said.
There have also been some misconceptions of the Project ECHO. The program is not only for beginners or primary care providers, said Dr. Lewiecki. It is also not limited to providers in rural areas, as the program has many participants at urban centers, he added.
“We are a virtual community of practice. It’s a collegial relationship,” he said. “It’s really recapitulating the way that we learned during our postgraduate training: When we see a patient, we present the case to our attending, the attending pontificates a little bit, we bounce things off of one another, and we go back and then we do some different things with our patients. And that’s exactly what we do with Echo. It makes learning fun again.”
Dr. Lewiecki challenged the attendees in the room who are already experts in osteoporosis to help share their knowledge of the disease to help other health care professionals learn more about how to better care for their patients. “If you have a passion for teaching, if you want to share knowledge and you’re willing to devote a little bit of your time to doing that and reaching out to more people, this is the way that you can do it.”
Dr. Lewiecki reports research grant support from Amgen, consulting fees from Alexion, Amgen, Radius, Shire, and Ultragenyx, speaking fees from Alexion, Radius, and Shire, and is an advisory board member with the National Osteoporosis Foundation, International Society for Clinical Densitometry, and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico.
SOURCE: Lewiecki ME. ASBMR 2019. Symposia: Cutting Edge Concepts: Novel Approaches to Reducing Fractures. Bone Health TeleECHO.
ORLANDO – The use of a teleconferencing program to share knowledge about osteoporosis has helped health care professionals learn about the disease and may potentially reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap in underserved communities, according to a speaker at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
The concept, called “technology-enabled collaborative learning,” is intended to address the problem of there being not enough specialists to see patients who need treatment, and the ineffectiveness of educating primary care providers in how to treat complex medical conditions, E. Michael Lewiecki, MD, the director of the New Mexico Clinical Research & Osteoporosis Center said in his presentation.
“Primary care doctors are busy,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “They have limited time taking care of patients. They don’t have the time or often the skills to manage patients who have any questions or concerns about osteoporosis and treatments for osteoporosis.”
One solution, he said, is to find health care professionals in underserved communities who are already interested in and motivated to learn more about osteoporosis, turn them into near-experts on osteoporosis for their patients as well as in their own community.
Dr. Lewiecki proposed the Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO), or Project ECHO, an initiative out of the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, as a potential answer. Project ECHO uses videoconferencing to connect experts in a therapeutic area, with Bone Health TeleECHO focusing on raising knowledge of osteoporosis for its participants. “The idea of ECHO is to be a force multiplier to educate health care professionals, each of whom takes care of many patients, and to have many ECHO programs around the world in convenient time zones and convenient languages for people who are interested in participating,” said Dr. Lewiecki.
The idea began when a gastroenterologist at Dr. Lewiecki’s own center was frustrated that patients were not seeking treatment for hepatitis C because of time or travel issues. In response, a pilot program for Project ECHO was developed through a collaboration between the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico where gastroenterologists at University of New Mexico connected with primary care providers across the state, sharing information about hepatitis C and discussing case studies. The results of the pilot program were published in the New England Journal of Medicine and showed a similar rate of sustained viral response between patients treated at the University of New Mexico clinic (84 of 146 patients; 57.5%) and at 21 ECHO clinics (152 of 261 patients; 58.2%) (Arora S et al. N Eng J Med. 2011. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1009370).
“ECHO expands the capacity to deliver best practice medical care through collegial, interactive, case-based discussions with minimal disruption to the office routine,” said Dr. Lewiecki. “Patients benefit from better care, closer to home, with greater convenience and lower cost than referral to a medical center. And the potential is to reduce the osteoporosis treatment gap by having many ECHOs starting up in many places in the world.”
Today, the ECHO program is in 37 countries, with 322 ECHO hubs and 677 ECHO programs. The top three specialties are endocrinology, orthopedics, and rheumatology; 51% of ECHO participants are primary care providers, 24% are advanced care providers, and 19% are health care providers such as nutritionists, physical therapists, and other providers that have an interest in bone health.
In survey results adapted from a 2017 study from his own group, Dr. Lewiecki showed that 263 health care professionals who participated in Bone Health TeleECHO rated themselves as more confident in 20 different domains of osteoporosis treatment, such as secondary osteoporosis and anabolic therapy, after 21 months of using the ECHO program (Lewiecki EM et al. J Endocr Soc. 2017. doi: 10.1210/js.2017-00361). However, he admitted that showing fracture prevention outcomes at these ECHO centers has proven more difficult.
“Of course, we’re all interested in outcomes. The ultimate outcome here is preventing fractures, but it is extraordinarily difficult to design a study to actually show that we’re reducing fractures, but certainly self-confidence in managing osteoporosis has improved,” he said.
There have also been some misconceptions of the Project ECHO. The program is not only for beginners or primary care providers, said Dr. Lewiecki. It is also not limited to providers in rural areas, as the program has many participants at urban centers, he added.
“We are a virtual community of practice. It’s a collegial relationship,” he said. “It’s really recapitulating the way that we learned during our postgraduate training: When we see a patient, we present the case to our attending, the attending pontificates a little bit, we bounce things off of one another, and we go back and then we do some different things with our patients. And that’s exactly what we do with Echo. It makes learning fun again.”
Dr. Lewiecki challenged the attendees in the room who are already experts in osteoporosis to help share their knowledge of the disease to help other health care professionals learn more about how to better care for their patients. “If you have a passion for teaching, if you want to share knowledge and you’re willing to devote a little bit of your time to doing that and reaching out to more people, this is the way that you can do it.”
Dr. Lewiecki reports research grant support from Amgen, consulting fees from Alexion, Amgen, Radius, Shire, and Ultragenyx, speaking fees from Alexion, Radius, and Shire, and is an advisory board member with the National Osteoporosis Foundation, International Society for Clinical Densitometry, and the Osteoporosis Foundation of New Mexico.
SOURCE: Lewiecki ME. ASBMR 2019. Symposia: Cutting Edge Concepts: Novel Approaches to Reducing Fractures. Bone Health TeleECHO.
FROM ASBMR 2019