DISCLOSURES SUNDEEP KHOSLA, M.D. NONE 1 7/5/2017 OVERALL - - PDF document
DISCLOSURES SUNDEEP KHOSLA, M.D. NONE 1 7/5/2017 OVERALL - - PDF document
7/5/2017 ADDRESSING PATIENT CONCERNS REGARDING COMPLICATIONS OF ANTIRESORPTIVE THERAPY Sundeep Khosla, M.D. Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN DISCLOSURES SUNDEEP KHOSLA, M.D. NONE 1 7/5/2017 OVERALL CONCLUSIONS There has been remarkable
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OVERALL CONCLUSIONS
- There has been remarkable progress in our understanding of the
pathogenesis of osteoporosis and new drugs available to treat the disease
- However, despite this remarkable progress in drug development, there
are major challenges to implementing appropriate treatment
APPROVED (US FDA) AND PENDING THERAPIES FOR OSTEOPOROSIS
Anti-resorptive
- Estrogen:
Oral, transdermal
- SERM:
Raloxifene
- Calcitonin:
Salmon, human
- Bisphosphonates:
Alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, zoledronic acid
- RANKL Ab:
Denosumab Anabolic
- PTH:
Teriparatide, Abaloparatide Mixed
- Sclerostin Ab:
Romosozumab
- Cathepsin K inhibitor:
Odanacatib
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OSTEOPOROSIS TREATMENT: REMARKABLE PROGRESS YET PROFOUND CHALLENGES
“Millions of Americans are missing out on a chance to avoid debilitating fractures from weakened bones, researchers say, because they are terrified of exceedingly rare side effects from drugs that can help them.”
US GOOGLE SEARCH ACTIVITY FOR FOSAMAX
Jha et al. JBMR 30:2179, 2015
Lawsuit for ONJ Study on AF link ABC News story on Fosamax and AFF
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PREVALENCE OF BISPHOSPHONATE USE FROM 1996 TO 2012
Jha et al. JBMR 30:2179, 2015
THE PROBLEM FOR THE FIELD OF OSTEOPOROSIS
- Increasingly, patients who clearly need osteoporosis therapy are either
not being offered or choosing not to take bisphosphonates (or other
- steoporosis drugs) due to the fear of Atypical Femur Fractures (AFFs)
- Incidence estimates for AFFs with prolonged bisphosphonate use vary
widely (3.2 to 50-100 in 100,000 person-years) (Shane et al. JBMR 29:1, 2014)
- Nonetheless, best estimates are that with bisphosphonate therapy, 80
to 5,000 fragility fractures would be prevented for every AFF possibly induced by treatment (Black and Rosen, NEJM 374:254, 2016)
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THE PROBLEM FOR THE FIELD OF OSTEOPOROSIS (Cont’d)
- Patient/physician attitudes shaped by
- Media attention to AFFs
- Concern that they may be vastly under-reported
- Clear that simply quoting statistics to patients without
carefully listening and addressing their concerns is not going to work
THE CHALLENGE
- Urgent need to demonstrate to patients that we have heard
their concerns and are addressing them in the short-, intermediate- and long-terms
- Key is to diagnose AFFs before they occur and over the
longer term, better identify those patients at increased risk even before starting osteoporosis medications
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SHORT TERM Education
- Patient education regarding prodromal symptoms, e.g.,
groin and hip pain
- Physician education regarding taking these symptoms
seriously and defining an appropriate, cost-effective evaluation plan to exclude incipient AFF
- Brief, standardized and simple-to administer questionnaires
for common prodromal symptoms of AFF that could be linked to prescription renewals by physicians
SHORT TERM Monitoring
- Agreement from bone density manufacturers to modify
existing DXA scanners to obtain a femur “monitoring scan” that includes the region of the femur where AFFs occur
- Ideally covered by Medicare/insurance – could be done
with or independent of standard BMD testing
- Consider this a part of the cost of therapy, and not to be
confused with BMD monitoring for efficacy – as such, cost
- f this safety monitoring test should be very low
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SHORT TERM Monitoring (Cont’d)
- Hologic currently offers this option – now FDA approved –
but only on its new scanner
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SHORT TERM Monitoring (Cont’d)
- Needs to be made available as a low cost update to all
existing scanners
- “Monitoring scan” analogous to monitoring LFTs for
patients on a statin, renal function on patients started on ACE inhibitors
SHORT TERM Monitoring (Cont’d)
- GE Lunar now offering a similar option as an update to existing
software
- Just approved by FDA
- Quantify focal thickening
- Visualization
- Single scan
- Can retrospectively analyze patient database
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GE LUNAR SOFTWARE FOR AFF DETECTION
McKenna et al. J Clin Densitometry 16:579, 2013
ANY EVIDENCE THAT THIS APPROACH WILL WORK?
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McKenna et al. J Clin Densitometry 16:579, 2013
ANY EVIDENCE THAT THIS APPROACH WILL WORK?
McKenna et al. J Clin Densitometry 16:579, 2013
ANY EVIDENCE THAT THIS APPROACH WILL WORK?
- 257 patients > age 50 yr, on bisphosphonate therapy for >
5 yr
- Extended femur scan at the time of routine DXA
- Abnormal DXA images (e.g., “flaring”, “beaking”) suggested
in 19 (7.4%)
- On x-ray, 7 showed no abnormality, 5 showed an unrelated
radiographic abnormality, and 7 (2.7%) showed evidence
- f incomplete AFF – 5 with periosteal flare and 2 with a
visible fracture line (also had thigh pain)
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McKenna et al. J Clin Densitometry 16:579, 2013
ANY EVIDENCE THAT THIS APPROACH WILL WORK?
- 257 patients > age 50 yr, on bisphosphonate therapy for >
5 yr
- Extended femur scan at the time of routine DXA
- Abnormal DXA images (e.g., “flaring”, “beaking”) suggested
in 19 (7.4%)
- On x-ray, 7 showed no abnormality, 5 showed an unrelated
radiographic abnormality, and 7 (2.7%) showed evidence
- f incomplete AFF – 5 with periosteal flare and 2 with a
visible fracture line (also had thigh pain)
CAVEATS
- Convenience sample of patients, whereas population data on
clinical AFFs indicate a far lower prevalence, at worst in the range of 0.13% to 0.22% (Park-Wyllie et al. JAMA 305:783, 2011)
- In addition, the majority of patients with radiographic changes
consistent with partial or incomplete AFF may not, in fact, progress to clinical AFFs (Min et al. JCEM 102:545, 2016)
- Nonetheless, monitoring patients for such radiographic changes
would clearly identify a potentially high risk sub-group for more extensive imaging and consideration of drug discontinuation as appropriate
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FOLLOW UP STUDY
- May 2013 – Sep 2014: 173 patients on bisphosphonate therapy
for > 5 years
- 0/173 patients had any DXA features of AFF
- Associated with a clear decrease in bisphosphonate
prescriptions in Ireland
McKenna et al. J Endo Soc 1:211, 2017 McKenna et al. J Endo Soc 1:211, 2017
BISPHOSPHONATE USE IN IRELAND
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SHORT TERM Monitoring
- Can be instituted fairly rapidly
- Proactive, makes sense clinically, something we can do
today to begin to address patient concerns
- Guard against false reassurance: Does not imply that
patients or physician ignore symptoms, even if they occur soon after a “negative” monitoring scan
Mahjoub et al. JBMR 31:767, 2016
INTERMEDIATE TERM Identification of higher risk patients
- Compared femur
geometrical data in 56 AFF patients vs 112 controls with traumatic
- r fragility fractures
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Mahjoub et al. JBMR 31:767, 2016
INTERMEDIATE TERM Identification of higher risk patients (Cont’d)
LONG TERM Pharmacogenomics
- Mutations in geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPS1) identified
by whole-exome sequencing in 3 sisters who sustained atypical femoral fractures during treatment with bisphosphonates
- Mutations impaired GGPPS function; GGPPS also inhibited by
bisphosphonates
- Identified other susceptibility variants
- Larger, collaborative pharmacogenomics studies needed
Roca-Ayats et al. NEJM 376:1794, 2017
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ADDITIONAL LONG TERM APPROACHES
- New drug development
- Better coordination of recommendations and guidelines
regarding screening and treatment of osteoporosis
- Enhanced patient engagement strategies
ONGOING AND PLANNED INITIATIVES
- 2 recent perspectives:
- Khosla & Shane, “A Crisis in the Treatment of Osteoporosis”,
JBMR 31:1485, 2016
- Khosla, Cauley, Compston, Kiel, Rosen, Saag, Shane,
“Addressing the Crisis in the Treatment of Osteoporosis: A Path Forward”, JBMR 32:424, 2017
- Special session at the 2016 ASBMR Meeting
- Individual meetings with Hologic and Lunar regarding availability
- f femur monitoring software
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ASBMR Call to Action to Address the Crisis in the Treatment of Osteoporosis
- The 30-year downward trend in hip fractures in the U.S. – a case study for
medical success - has hit a plateau in the last few years.
- Worldwide osteoporosis causes more than 8.9 million fractures/year.
- By 2050, the worldwide incidence of hip fracture is projected to increase by
310% in men and 240% in women compared to rates from 1990.
- Allowing these patients to go untested and untreated frequently leads to
debilitating fractures that cause disability, loss of independence and even death.
- Thirty-seven organizations have come together to sign this call to action
pledging to intensify their current efforts to increase the screening, diagnosis and treatment of high-risk individuals to prevent fractures.
37 Organizations Have Pledged to Increase Efforts for the Call to Action
- American Society for Bone and Mineral Research
- American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
- American Academy of Physician Assistants
- American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists
- American Bone Health
- American College of Rheumatology
- American Medical Society for Sports Medicine
- American Orthopaedic Association
- American Osteopathic Academy of Orthopedics
- American Society for Surgery of the Hand
- Australia New Zealand Bone and Mineral Society
- Bulgarian Society of Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis
- Czech Society for Metabolic Bone Diseases
- Dutch Society of Cancer and Bone Metabolism
- European Calcified Tissue Society
- European Union Geriatric Medicine Society
- Finnish Osteoporosis Association
- Georgian Association of Skeletal Metabolism Diseases
- Hellenic Osteoporosis Foundation
- International Geriatric Fracture Society, Inc.
- International Osteoporosis Foundation
- International Society for Clinical Densitometry
- Michigan Consortium for Osteoporosis
- National Bone Health Alliance (US)
- National Osteoporosis Foundation (US)
- National Osteoporosis Society (UK)
- Northern California Institute for Bone Health, Inc.
- Orthopaedic Research and Education Foundation
- Orthopedic Research Society
- Orthopedic Trauma Association (US)
- Osteoporosis Australia
- Osteoporosis Canada
- Osteoporosis New Zealand
- Syrian National Osteoporosis Society
- University of Rochester Department of Orthopaedics and
Rehabilitation
- U.S. Bone and Joint Initiative
- 4BoneHealth
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MULTI-STAKEHOLDER INITIATIVE BY ASBMR AND CENTER FOR MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY POLICY (CMTP)
- Identify and prioritize key barriers to appropriate rates of
- steoporosis screening, diagnosis, and treatment to prevent
fractures, incorporating the attitudes, values, and preferences
- f key stakeholders
- Collaborate with ASBMR and key stakeholders to develop
strategic options for addressing identified barriers
- Develop a plan for disseminating and implementing the
strategy
NIH OFFICE OF DISEASE PREVENTION (ODP): FRACTURES
- Objective, external review of current state-of-the-science related to fracture
prevention and important gaps in knowledge
- Effort involving multiple NIH Institutes (led by NIAMS and NIA, partnering
with NIDDK, NCATS, NCCIH, NIDCR, Office of Research on Women’s Health)
- ODP will work with AHRQ to solicit proposals from Evidence-Based
Practice Centers to prepare an evidence report addressing the key questions being posed
- Followed in ~2 years from now by a conference