1. Maintenance of antifracture efficacy over 10 years with strontium ranelate in postmenopausal osteoporosis.
- Author
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Reginster, J-Y., Kaufman, J-M., Goemaere, S., Devogelaer, J., Benhamou, C., Felsenberg, D., Diaz-Curiel, M., Brandi, M-L., Badurski, J., Wark, J., Balogh, A., Bruyère, O., and Roux, C.
- Subjects
BONE fracture prevention ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL cooperation ,ORGANOMETALLIC compounds ,OSTEOPOROSIS ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,RESEARCH ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,DATA analysis ,BONE density ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,POSTMENOPAUSE ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Summary: In an open-label extension study, BMD increased continuously with strontium ranelate over 10 years in osteoporotic women ( P < 0.01). Vertebral and nonvertebral fracture incidence was lower between 5 and 10 years than in a matched placebo group over 5 years ( P < 0.05). Strontium ranelate's antifracture efficacy appears to be maintained long term. Introduction: Strontium ranelate has proven efficacy against vertebral and nonvertebral fractures, including hip, over 5 years in postmenopausal osteoporosis. We explored long-term efficacy and safety of strontium ranelate over 10 years. Methods: Postmenopausal osteoporotic women participating in the double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 studies SOTI and TROPOS to 5 years were invited to enter a 5-year open-label extension, during which they received strontium ranelate 2 g/day ( n = 237, 10-year population). Bone mineral density (BMD) and fracture incidence were recorded, and FRAX® scores were calculated. The effect of strontium ranelate on fracture incidence was evaluated by comparison with a FRAX®-matched placebo group identified in the TROPOS placebo arm. Results: The patients in the 10-year population had baseline characteristics comparable to those of the total SOTI/TROPOS population. Over 10 years, lumbar BMD increased continuously and significantly ( P < 0.01 versus previous year) with 34.5 ± 20.2% relative change from baseline to 10 years. The incidence of vertebral and nonvertebral fracture with strontium ranelate in the 10-year population in years 6 to 10 was comparable to the incidence between years 0 and 5, but was significantly lower than the incidence observed in the FRAX®-matched placebo group over 5 years ( P < 0.05); relative risk reductions for vertebral and nonvertebral fractures were 35% and 38%, respectively. Strontium ranelate was safe and well tolerated over 10 years. Conclusions: Long-term treatment with strontium ranelate is associated with sustained increases in BMD over 10 years, with a good safety profile. Our results also support the maintenance of antifracture efficacy over 10 years with strontium ranelate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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