skip to content
Dovepress - Open Access to Scientific and Medical Research
View our mobile site

8847

Bisphosphonates in the management of postmenopausal osteoporosis – optimizing efficacy in clinical practice

Review

(3166) Views  (1017) Full article downloads

Authors: Oliver Bock, Dieter Felsenberg

Published Date June 2008 Volume 2008:3(2) Pages 279 - 297
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S2134

Oliver Bock, Dieter Felsenberg

Center for Muscle and Bone Research, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Charité – University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Abstract: Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates are potent inhibitors of osteoclastic bone resorption. With their individually proven efficacy to significantly reduce the incidence of vertebral and/or non-vertebral fractures and with their overall beneficial safety profile, alendronate, ibandronate, risedronate, and zoledronate are considered today a treatment of first choice in postmenopausal osteoporosis. However, treatment effects in an individual patient and cost-effectiveness in public health perspective are vitally dependent on the long-term patient adherence as well as on compliance and persistence. As compliance and persistence with daily oral bisphosphonates are shown to be suboptimal in many patients, leading to an increased fracture incidence in non-compliant patients, there is a need to improve overall adherence for bisphosphonate treatment in order to achieve maximum treatment effects. One option is to extend dosing intervals to weekly (alendronate, risedronate) or monthly (ibandronate) oral regimens. Less frequent oral regimens are generally preferred by majority of patients. Another alternative is intravenous, instead of oral application (ibandronate, zoledronate). Treatment acceptance could be further improved by IV bisphosphonates with their benefit of only quarterly, or even once-yearly, application. Treatment decisions should be based on anti-fracture efficacy data first. In addition, to ensure best possible patient adherence and maximum treatment benefits, physicians should consider individual patient conditions affecting compliance and persistence as well as patient preferences.

Keywords: postmenopausal osteoporosis, bisphosphonates, fracture risk reduction, adherence, dosing frequencies, patient considerations








Readers of this article also read:

Risedronate once monthly: a potential new regimen for the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis
Clinical challenges in the management of osteoporosis
Optimizing dosing frequencies for bisphosphonates in the management of postmenopausal osteoporosis: patient considerations
Evidence-based decision-making within the context of globalization: A “Why–What–How” for leaders and managers of health care organizations
Once-yearly zoledronic acid in hip fracture prevention
Management of glucocorticoids-induced osteoporosis: role of teriparatide
Efficacy and safety of risedronate 150 mg once a month in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis
Emerging treatments for postmenopausal osteoporosis – focus on denosumab
Health literacy and health seeking behavior among older men in a middle-income nation
Improvement of adenoviral vector-mediated gene transfer to airway epithelia by folate-modified anionic liposomes