Back to Search Start Over

Assessing the feasibility of the Effectiveness of Discontinuing Bisphosphonates trial: a pilot study

Authors :
Nicole C. Wright
Amy S. Mudano
Joshua Melnick
Phillip J. Foster
Maria I. Danila
E. M. Lewiecki
David T. Redden
Gary Cutter
Jeffrey R. Curtis
Kenneth G. Saag
Meredith L. Kilgore
William Shergy
Sarah L. Morgan
Amy H. Warriner
E. C. Lewis
Source :
Osteoporosis International. 28:2495-2503
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

The Effectiveness of Discontinuing Bisphosphonates (EDGE) study is a planned pragmatic clinical trial to guide “drug holiday” clinical decision making. This pilot study assessed work flow and feasibility of such a study. While participant recruitment and treatment adherence were suboptimal, administrative procedures were generally feasible and minimally disrupted clinic flow. The comparative effectiveness of continuing or discontinuing long-term alendronate (ALN) on fractures is unknown. A large pragmatic ALN discontinuation study has potential to answer this question. We conducted a 6-month pilot study of the planned the EDGE study among current long-term ALN users (women aged ≥65 with ≥3 years of ALN use) to determine study work flow and feasibility including evaluating the administrative aspects of trial conduct (e.g., time to contract, institutional review board (IRB) approval), assessing rates of site and participant recruitment, and evaluating post-randomization outcomes, including adherence, bisphosphonate-associated adverse events, and participant and site satisfaction. We assessed outcomes 1 and 6 months after randomization. Nine sites participated, including seven community-based medical practices and two academic medical centers. On average (SD), contract execution took 3.4 (2.3) months and IRB approval took 13.9 (4.1) days. Sites recruited 27 participants (13 to continue ALN and 14 to discontinue ALN). Over follow-up, 22% of participants did not adhere to their randomization assignment: 30.8% in the continuation arm and 14.3% in the discontinuation arm. No fractures or adverse events were reported. Sites reported no issues regarding work flow, and participants were highly satisfied with the study. Administrative procedures of the EDGE study were generally feasible, with minimal disruption to clinic flow. In this convenience sample, participant recruitment was suboptimal across most practice sites. Accounting for low treatment arm adherence, a comprehensive recruitment approach will be needed to effectively achieve the scientific goals of the EDGE study.

Details

ISSN :
14332965 and 0937941X
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Osteoporosis International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c35ab89c7061fc62ee7f14489ae29a70