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Poorer health outcomes for at-risk patients with fractures

Patients with complex medical conditions at high fracture risk are vastly undertreated for fracture prevention yet at higher risk of further fracture.

People at high risk of fracture who also have complex or multiple chronic medical conditions are less likely to receive treatment for the underlying osteoporosis and also have poorer health outcomes, according to a new study from the Garvan Institute of Medical Research.

These patients have an increased risk of further fractures, but they are less likely to have the underlying cause of the fracture investigated, compared with those at high risk but who have no additional chronic conditions.

“No matter the fracture site, we believe fracture is under-prioritised in the clinical setting in a complex patient,” says lead author Dr Dana Bliuc, Senior Research Officer in the Clinical Studies and Epidemiology Lab at Garvan.

“People with complex diseases not only fare worse, but they are less likely to receive treatment, which is a double whammy. We think this is because fractures are viewed as less serious than other medical conditions present in patients, and thus not the focus of intervention,” says Dr Bliuc. “But fracture itself will affect quality of life and contributes to mortality.”

The findings will help inform new guidelines for how fractures in patients with complex medical conditions are investigated and treated by clinicians.

The new study is published in the journal .

Fracture treatment should be more holistic

Fractures from falls and mishaps, rather than traumas like car accidents, occur in about one in three women, and one in five men over the age of 50.

To investigate the outcomes and the kind of medical treatment people with these fractures receive, the researchers studied prescriptions, Medicare claims and hospital admission data from more than 10,500 Australian patients aged over 45, identified as being at high-risk for a future fracture.

They found that in patients in the high-risk group, more than 80% of people were not treated for osteoporosis to prevent future fractures, when they should have been, and this dipped even lower for patients with complex medical conditions.

“We need to start changing our paradigm of how we think about disease and treatment to be less about a “single disease-single treatment one”, to treating the person as a whole,” says Professor Jacqueline Center, Head of the Clinical Studies and Epidemiology Lab at Garvan.

“Our aim is to improve health in older people, so that people are living well, rather than just living.”

This research was supported by an Amgen Competitive Grant and an NHMRC / MRFF Next Generation Clinical Researchers Program Practitioner Fellowship.

Professor Jacqueline Center is a Conjoint Professor at St Vincent’s Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney. Dr Dana Bliuc is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Population Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney.

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