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Osteoporosis Drugs, Like Fosamax May Increase Risk of Broken Bones in Some Women

Posted by Leslie Carol Botha

ABC World News

Long-term Use of Popular Class of Osteoporosis Drugs May Have Opposite Effect for Some Women, Experts Say

By CHRISTINE ROMO and LARA SALAHI
March 8, 2010
Sandy Potter, 59, of Queens, N.Y., was jumping rope with neighborhood children when she felt her thigh bone snap.

“I went up in the air and I came straight down to the ground,” Potter said. “The pain was excruciating.”

Potter, who was diagnosed with osteoporosis at age 48, had been taking the popular osteoporosis drug Fosamax for eight years before breaking her femur.

Fosamax, one in a class of drugs called bisphosphonates, is supposed to make bones stronger, and for many women, it is safe and effective. But now there’s mounting evidence that, for some women, taking these medications for more than five years could cause spontaneous fractures.

“We are seeing people just walking, walking down the steps, patients who are doing low-energy exercise,” said Dr. Kenneth Egol, professor of orthopedic surgery at NYU Langone Medical Center. “Very unusual, the femur is one of the strongest bones in the body.”

Egol said X-rays of some of his patients look more like injuries from car accidents than from an otherwise-minimal fall.

“Over the last 18 months, we are seeing this more frequently,” he said.

Sue Heller, 60, of Castle Rock, Colo., had been on Fosamax for almost 10 years. She broke both of her femur bones.

“I’m sure there are a lot of women who have brittle bones right now that maybe are ready to break, and they’re not aware of it,” said Heller. “And my heart aches for them.”

Sales of the popular drug increased when doctors began prescribing it, not only to women with osteoporosis, but to others who were osteopenic — with reduced bone density that might lead to the disease. Now some doctors worry that staying on the drug for more than five years can cause some women’s bones to become more brittle.

MORE…

Another Merck miracle drug gone bad.

“After 16 months, Merck added patients’ reports of femur fractures to the list of possible side effects included in the drug’s package insert. “It took Merck an entire year to respond,” said ABC News senior health and medical editor Dr. Richard Besser.”

Sound familiar?

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2 Comments so far (Add 1 more)

  1. Thank you for your fabulous comment. Appreciate your visiting my blog – and taking the time to share your knowledge and expertise.

    1. Leslie Carol Botha on March 15th, 2010 at 7:07 pm
  2. The Fosamax (Alendronate) study done for FDA approval failed to show any benefit for the majority of the worried well, which is the osteopenia group defined as T score greater than -2.5. This Osteopenia Group actually had higher fracture rates than placebo. This was published by Cummings in JAMA in 1998.

    Bisphosphonate drugs like Fosamax have severe adverse side effects of jaw necrosis (OJN), spontaneous mid-femur fracture, heart rhythm disturbances, and severe bone and joint pain.

    The spontaneous mid femur fractures are especially troubling, since these are spontaneous fractures without any trauma. Subtrochanteric fractures are pathological fractures, indicating the underlying bone matrix is abnormal. This anormal weakening and brittleness is directly caused by the bisphosphonate drug.

    Bottom Line: These are BAD drugs that actually make the bones weaker not stronger, and they should be banned by the FDA . However, knowing the FDA which is in the pocket of the drug companies, no action will be taken until many more women victims suffer from these drugs, and many more cases work their way through drug litigation court..

    http://www.drdach.com/Fosamax.html

    jeffrey dach md

    2. jeffrey dach md on March 15th, 2010 at 6:56 am

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