3 Months of Romosozumab in Postmenopausal Osteoporosis Save
This 12-month, prospective, open-label, randomised, controlled, non-inferiority trial of 50 postmenopausal (mean age 69 yrs) women (at high risk of fracture), treated women with either 3 months of ROMO (210 mg by subcutaneous injection, monthly) followed by 9 months of denosumab (60 mg by subcutaneous injection, every 6 months) or ROMO given monthly for 12 months. The primary endpoint was the percentage change in total hip BMD. The non-inferiority threshold was set at 2%.
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How does this translate to vertebral density? More spine fractures occur in postmenopausal women than in the hip.
If you read the paper it says that the primary endpoint was total hip areal BMD assessed by DEXA. But Secondary endpoints were BMD of the femoral neck and lumbar spine . The non-inferiority threshold was set at 2%. - The BMD difference in the LS spine was 1.8% so this was also noninferior. But these are BMD results and not long term Fx results that you may be wanting. Its still encouraging.
Not sure that measuring BMD at the end of 12 mos of Romo accurately reflects the true future bone density. Better is to wait after at least one antiresorptive treatment. There may be a mineralization delay which I have seen several times.



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