1. Teriparatide for treatment of patients with bisphosphonate-associated atypical fracture of the femur.
- Author
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Greenspan, S. L., Vujevich, K., Britton, C., Herradura, A., Gruen, G., Tarkin, I., Siska, P., Hamlin, B., and Perera, S.
- Subjects
TERIPARATIDE ,DIPHOSPHONATES ,FEMUR injuries ,BONE fractures ,HIP joint ,COMPLICATIONS of prosthesis ,RADIAL bone ,SPINE ,TIME ,PILOT projects ,BONE density ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ADVERSE health care events ,TREATMENT delay (Medicine) ,FRACTURE healing ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Summary: The Fracture Improvement with Teriparatide (Fix-IT) study randomized 13 women with an atypical femur fracture to immediate vs delayed teriparatide therapy; all were followed for 12 months. Results suggested a trend for superior healing and lesser bone mineral density declines in the immediate vs delayed group with no differences in adverse events.Purpose: Little clinical data are available on the use of teriparatide for the treatment of bisphosphonate-associated atypical femur fractures (AFF). The goal of the Fix-IT study was to determine if immediate therapy with teriparatide was superior for fracture healing after an AFF compared to a 6-month delay in teriparatide therapy.Methods: This randomized pilot clinical trial included 13 women with an AFF who were randomized to immediate teriparatide vs a delay of 6 months. All were followed for 12 months on teriparatide. The primary outcomes included individual and composite measures of radiologic bone healing (scored 1 point [no healing] to 4 points [complete healing]) at 6 and 12 months. Secondary outcomes included bone mineral density of the unfractured contralateral hip, spine, 1/3 distal radius, and adverse events.Results: We found there was a trend for superior healing with the composite score (12.6 vs 11.2 at 6 months and 15.4 vs 13.2 at 12 months), and lesser bone mineral density declines at the 1/3 distal radius (12-month change − 1.9 vs − 6.1%) in the immediate vs the delayed group. There were no differences in adverse events. There was one implant failure in the delayed group.Conclusions: There is a preliminary signal for greater improvements with immediate teriparatide therapy vs delayed therapy. However, because an AFF is a rare event, and only a small number of patients were included, the results must be interpreted with caution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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