Aug. 8, 2007

Osteoporosis Testing Good For Men, Too

Study Backs Osteoporosis Screening And Treatment For Certain Groups Of Men

  • It may be cost-effective to screen and treat osteoporosis in men age 65 and older who've had fractures and all men age 80-85, doctors note in a new study.

    It may be cost-effective to screen and treat osteoporosis in men age 65 and older who've had fractures and all men age 80-85, doctors note in a new study.  (CBS/AP)

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(WebMD)  A study in tomorrow's edition of The Journal of the American Medical Association sheds new light on an often overlooked problem: osteoporosis in men.

The study shows that it may be cost-effective to screen and treat osteoporosis in men aged 65 and older who had a history of a fracture and in all men aged 80-85.

In osteoporosis, bones become dangerously thin, making fractures more likely. Osteoporosis becomes more common with age.

Due to menopause, women tend to develop osteoporosis at a younger age than men. But osteoporosis in men isn't uncommon, note the researchers, who included John Schousboe, M.D., of Park Nicollet Health Services in Minneapolis.

By the time a white man is 60 years old, he has a 29% chance of fracturing a bone due to osteoporosis during his remaining years. Fracture rates are lower in African-American and Hispanic men, according to Schousboe's team.

Schousboe and colleagues calculated the cost-effectiveness of giving men bone density scans to check for osteoporosis and to give men with osteoporosis the osteoporosis drug Fosamax for five years.

The researchers based their calculations on bone density test costs, Fosamax costs, and costs associated with bone fractures.

Based on certain costs, Schousboe's team concluded that osteoporosis screening and Fosamax treatment would be cost-effective for men aged 65 and older who have a history of fractures and for all men aged 80-85.

In the journal, the researchers note financial ties to various drug companies, including Merck, which makes Fosamax. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health.




By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
© 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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by godofredo29 August 8, 2007 6:34 PM EDT
Jesus, what a moron this writer is. They should give these stories to a male writer. Men a lot younger than 65 get osteoporosis all the time and it shows up in fragility fractures of the rib and the heel bone among other places. Want to test men for osteoporosis more cheaply? Test their testosterone! I don't know why doctors are so slow to do such a simple and inexpensive test. If his testosterone is low, he will have osteoporosis sooner or later. If his level is low then give him a bone scan. (Why am I having to tell everybody all this!) Screw Fosamax! That stuff is corrosive. Testosterone replacement along with calcitonin and calcium supplements will do just fine in men. You know, all this information is already available on the Men's Osteoporosis page of the National Osteoporosis Foundation's webpage (www.nof.org). This writer has no clue!
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