© 1997 Oxford University Press
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Effect of intermittent cyclical disodium etidronate therapy on bone mineral density in men with vertebral fractures
Freeman Hospital High Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne NE7 7DN, UK
1Department of Medical Statistics, Medical School Framlington Place, Newcastle upon Tyne NEI 2DH, UK
2Regional Medical Physics Department, Newcastle General Hospital Westgate Road, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 6BE, UK
Address for correspondence: F. H. Anderson, Department of Geriatric Medicine, Southampton General Hospital, Tremona Road, Southampton SO 16 6YD, UK. Fax: (+44) 1703 796134
Objectives: to investigate the effects of oral intermittent cyclical etidronate therapy on bone mineral density (BMD) in men with idiopathic vertebral osteoporosis.
Design: consecutive case series.
Setting: regional specialist clinic for metabolic bone disease.
Subjects: 42 men aged 3581 (median 60.5) with established vertebral crush fractures and back pain, in whom secondary causes of osteoporosis had been excluded.
Intervention: repeated cycles of treatment with oral disodium etidronate 400 mg daily for 14 days followed by oral calcium 500 mg as citrate daily for 76 days.
Outcome measures: BMD measurement of the lumbar spine and femoral neck by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry at 6 12-month intervals; bone biochemistry (serum calcium, phosphate, alkaline phosphatase and urine calcium/ creatinine and hydroxyproline/creatinine ratios) at 6-month intervals.
Results: all 42 men have been treated for more than 18 months, and 35 of them for more than 24 months. Median follow-up for the group as a whole is 31 months (range 1845). The treatment was well tolerated. BMD at the lumbar spine increased by a mean of 0.024 g/cm2 per year of follow-up (95% confidence interval 0.0170.032 g/ cm2). This is equivalent to an average annual rate of change of 3.2% of baseline values. There was a small, nonsignificant rise in mean BMD at the hip equivalent to 0.7% of baseline values per year. Serum alkaline phosphatase tended to fall in the first 6 months of treatment, returning to baseline values at 2 years. Serum calcium and phosphate were unchanged and no decrease in urinary calcium/creatinine ratio or hydroxyproline/creatinine ratio was seen.
Conclusions: intermittent cyclical etidronate therapy increased lumbar spine BMD over a 2-year period in an unselected group of men with osteoporotic vertebral fractures. This treatment warrants further evaluation in a randomized controlled trial.
Keywords: bone mineral density, etidronate, male, osteoporosis, vertebral fracture
Received October 2, 1996;
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