PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Drug treatment to prevent hip fracture is neither viable nor cost effective

Current strategy is inefficient and associated with considerable harms, say experts

2015-05-27
(Press-News.org) Professor Teppo Järvinen and colleagues say drug treatment "can achieve at best a marginal reduction in hip fractures at the cost of unnecessary harms and considerable waste of monetary resources." The article is part of The BMJ's Too Much Medicine campaign -- to highlight the threat to human health and the waste of resources caused by unnecessary care.

Worldwide, about 1.5 million hip fractures occur each year. They impose an enormous burden on healthcare resources and, with a growing elderly population, their incidence is predicted to rise.

Before the late 1980's, osteoporosis was diagnosed after a bone fracture. But in 1994, a new definition - based on low bone mineral density - was introduced to identify people at increased fracture risk who were likely to benefit from bone building drugs.

Fracture risk calculators now classify 72% of US white women aged over 65 years and 93% of those aged over 75 years as candidates for long term drug treatment. Yet rates of hip fracture have fallen steadily in most Western countries, regardless of access to drugs, say the authors.

Most hip fractures, they say, have little to do with osteoporosis, but rather are caused by falls in frail older adults.

Evidence on cost effectiveness of drug treatment is completely lacking, they add, while the focus on drug treatment means that feasible alternative strategies, such as physical activity, are overlooked.

They also point to the harms from overdiagnosis and treatment, including the psychological burden associated with a disease label, and adverse effects of drug treatment such as nausea, vomiting, and serious bone complications (osteonecrosis of the jaw and drug-induced pathological fractures of the thigh bone).

Recent evidence also challenges the justification for the general use of calcium and vitamin D supplements to prevent fractures, they write.

The dominant approach to hip fracture prevention "is neither viable as a public health strategy nor cost effective," conclude the authors.

"Pharmacotherapy can achieve at best a marginal reduction in hip fractures at the cost of unnecessary psychological harms, serious medical adverse events, and forgone opportunities to have greater impacts on the health of older people," they add. "As such, it is an intellectual fallacy we will live to regret."



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New evidence confirms link between newer contraceptive pills and higher clot risks

2015-05-27
The results show that pills containing one of the newer types of progestogen hormone (drospirenone, desogestrel, gestodene, and cyproterone) are associated with an increased risk of VTE than pills containing older progestogens (levonorgestrel and norethisterone). The researchers, based at the University of Nottingham, say this is "an important clarifying study" that "has sufficient power to provide reliable comparative findings for different formulations of combined oral contraceptives." About 9% of women of reproductive age worldwide use oral contraceptives, rising ...

Psychedelic drugs should be legally reclassified as they may benefit patients

2015-05-27
James Rucker, a psychiatrist and honorary lecturer at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, describes how these drugs "were extensively used and researched in clinical psychiatry" before their prohibition in 1967. He explains that many trials of psychedelics published before prohibition, in the 1950s and 1960s, suggested "beneficial change in many psychiatric disorders". However, research ended after 1967. In the UK psychedelic drugs were legally classified as schedule 1 class A drugs - that is, as having "no accepted medical ...

Penn study links better 'good cholesterol' function with lower risk of later heart disease

2015-05-27
PHILADELPHIA -- HDL is the 'good cholesterol' that helps remove fat from artery walls, reversing the process that leads to heart disease. Yet recent drug trials and genetic studies suggest that simply pushing HDL levels higher doesn't necessarily reduce the risk of heart disease. Now, a team led by scientists from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania has shown in a large, forward-looking epidemiological study that a person's HDL function -- the efficiency of HDL molecules at removing cholesterol -- may be a better measure of coronary heart disease ...

Genetic defect linked to visual impairment in dyslexics

2015-05-27
A risk gene for dyslexia is associated with impairments in visual motion detection, according to a study published May 27 in The Journal of Neuroscience. Mutations in the gene DCDC2 have previously been associated with dyslexia, and this study found that dyslexics with an altered copy of the gene are unable to detect certain types of visual motion. The researchers used a series of visual tests to compare typical readers with two groups of dyslexics -- one with and one without a specific deletion in the DCDC2 gene. The subjects were presented with images of patterned ...

Scientists identify origins of process that is key to diabetes

2015-05-27
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation scientists have pinpointed a cell that begins the process of scarring in fatty tissue. The findings cast new light on a biological process that occurs with obesity and can lead to diabetes. "Scarring can be an important part of the healing process when a person suffers an injury," said OMRF's Lorin Olson, Ph.D., who led the research. "But excessive scarring, or fibrosis, can contribute to many dangerous health conditions." The new research appears in the June 1 issue of the journal Genes & Development. Using experimental models, ...

Cocaine addiction, craving and relapse

2015-05-27
One of the major challenges of cocaine addiction is the high rate of relapse after periods of withdrawal and abstinence. But new research reveals that changes in our DNA during drug withdrawal may offer promising ways of developing more effective treatments for addiction. Withdrawal from drug use results in reprogramming of the genes in the brain that lead to addictive personality, say researchers from McGill University and Bar Ilan University in a new study published in the Journal of Neuroscience. "We inherit our genes from our parents and these genes remain fixed ...

One step closer to a single-molecule device

One step closer to a single-molecule device
2015-05-26
New York, NY--May 25, 2015--Under the direction of Latha Venkataraman, associate professor of applied physics at Columbia Engineering, researchers have designed a new technique to create a single-molecule diode, and, in doing so, they have developed molecular diodes that perform 50 times better than all prior designs. Venkataraman's group is the first to develop a single-molecule diode that may have real-world technological applications for nanoscale devices. Their paper, "Single-Molecule Diodes with High On-Off Ratios through Environmental Control," is published May 25 ...

Moderate drinking in later years may damage heart

2015-05-26
DALLAS, May 26, 2015 -- Drinking two or more alcoholic beverages daily may damage the heart of elderly people, according to research in the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Imaging. The study correlated weekly alcohol consumption among 4,466 people -- average age 76 -- to the size, structure and motion of various parts of the heart. Researchers found: The more people drank, the greater the subtle changes to the heart's structure and function. Among men, drinking more than 14 alcoholic beverages weekly (heavy drinking) was linked with ...

Future vaccine may help lower blood pressure long-term

2015-05-26
DALLAS, May 26, 2015 - A vaccine may one day help lower blood pressure for up to six months, according to new research in the American Heart Association's journal Hypertension. The study in rats may eventually provide a novel alternative to treat high blood pressure in people, who would not need to take a pill everyday. "The potential of a vaccine for hypertension offers an innovative treatment that could be very effective for the control of non-compliance which is one of the major problems in the management of hypertensive patients," said Hironori Nakagami M.D., ...

World first as viral immunotherapy for skin cancer shows patient benefit in phase III trial

2015-05-26
A genetically engineered herpes virus can halt the progression of skin cancer by killing cancer cells and sparking the immune system into action against tumours, a landmark clinical trial has shown. It is the first time that a phase III trial of viral immunotherapy has definitively shown benefit for patients with cancer. The trial was led in the UK by researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, and involved 64 research centres worldwide including the University of Oxford. Researchers randomised 436 patients ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Stay active – or get active – to boost quality of life while aging, study suggests to middle-aged women

*FREE* Friendship-nomination approach identifies key villagers to diffuse health messages

Chromosomal 22q11.2 deletion confers risk for severe spina bifida

Circadian clocks in the brain and muscles coordinate to support daily muscle function

*FREE* The effectiveness of early childhood education programs is scientifically uncertain

Twisting and binding matter waves with photons in a cavity

Sugar-based catalyst upcycles carbon dioxide

Deeper understanding of malaria parasite sexual development unlocks opportunities to block disease spread

Breaking ground: Investigating the long-term effects of early childhood education

Synchronization between the central circadian clock and the circadian clocks of tissues preserves their functioning and prevents ageing

Physicists arrange atoms in extremely close proximity

Scientists track ‘doubling’ in origin of cancer cells

Human activity is causing toxic thallium to enter the Baltic sea, according to new study

NREL proof of concept shows path to easier recycling of solar modules

NREL invites robots to help make wind turbine blades

Scent sells – but the right picture titillates both eyes and nose, research finds

Low intensity light to fight the effects of chronic stress

Wildfires in wet African forests have doubled in recent decades

Dietary changes may treat pulmonary hypertension

UTA scientists test for quantum nature of gravity

SCAI announces recipients of 2024 early career research grants

AI can tell if a patient battling cancer needs mental health support

ISSCR announces Hong Kong, SAR as location for its 2025 Annual Meeting

Zoology: First report of wound treatment by a wild animal using a medicinal plant

Longer interval between first colonoscopy with negative findings for colorectal cancer and repeat colonoscopy

Smoking cessation after initial treatment failure with varenicline or nicotine replacement

How the brain’s arousal center helps control visual attention too

Increasing doses of varenicline or nicotine replacement helps persistent smokers quit

Artificial intelligence yields promising results for advancing coronary angiography

Non-fasting pre-procedural strategy for cardiac catheterization significantly improved patient well-being and satisfaction

[Press-News.org] Drug treatment to prevent hip fracture is neither viable nor cost effective
Current strategy is inefficient and associated with considerable harms, say experts