Fractures are a frequent cause of morbidity in older people and some result from a minor impact that would not damage normal bone. These are called fragility fractures and typically involve the wrist, hip, spine, or shoulder. In 2019 to 2020 the annual rate of hip fracture among Canadians aged 65 to 79 years was 169 per 100,000; for those 80 years or older the rate was 1038 per 100,000.1
In May 2023 the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care (CTFPHC) published a new guideline on screening for primary prevention of fragility fractures.2 It states:
We recommend “risk assessment–first” screening for prevention of fragility fractures in females aged 65 years and older, with initial application of the Canadian clinical Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX) without bone mineral density (BMD). The FRAX result should be used to facilitate shared decision-making about the possible benefits and harms of preventive pharmacotherapy. After this discussion, if preventive pharmacotherapy is being considered, clinicians should request BMD measurement using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry … of the femoral neck, and re-estimate fracture risk by adding the BMD T-score into FRAX (conditional recommendation, low-certainty evidence).2
This 2-step process using FRAX is summarized in Figure 1.3
Two-step process for screening to prevent fragility fractures among females aged 65 years or older
Variability in patient preferences for preventive treatment led the CTFPHC to suggest clinicians engage in shared decision making on this topic. In the Prevention in Practice series in Canadian Family Physician, we have previously outlined how to implement shared decision making in the context of preventive health care.4-6
The CTFPHC guideline does not recommend screening for fragility fractures in females younger than 65 years or in males of any age. Although the guideline provides recommendations on screening for and prevention of fragility fractures through pharmacotherapy, the CTFPHC is not ignoring other risk factors. In particular, a separate guideline on fall prevention is under development.
Case description
Patricia, age 58, visits your clinic. You know each other well and benefit from a trusting relationship. Patricia is a White female who takes no medication, has never smoked, has never had a fragility fracture, and is now postmenopausal. She politely asks if it is time for a BMD test of her bones, as some of her friends have been diagnosed with and treated for osteoporosis. Is she like them?
Screening for osteoporosis among female patients aged 50 to 64 years is common in Canada, with data from 2018 to 2019 showing that about one-quarter had undergone at least 1 BMD test.7 Osteoporosis refers to a bone density of 2.5 standard deviations or more below the mean of a “normal” person, meaning the bone density of a healthy young adult at 30 years of age.8 However, the utility of labelling people as being osteoporotic when their bone density drops to an arbitrary level (such as 2.5 standard deviations or more) below the mean is unclear, given how multiple other factors (eg, body weight, age) contribute to the personal risk of fragility fracture. In a cohort of White persons 60 years or older, the relationship between BMD and fracture risk was found to be continuous.9 This finding underscores the point that when we assess a patient, we should incorporate BMD as a continuous variable in fracture risk assessment, rather than classifying patients arbitrarily using terms such as high risk or low risk based on BMD cut-off values.9 We should also understand that BMD improves risk assessment only marginally in comparison with other FRAX predictors.10,11
Appropriateness of routine tests
In 2020 the Prevention in Practice team wrote about the need for changes to clinical preventive care—for example, what testing to resume postpandemic or not, and why.12 In 2023 we think it is timely to return to the following question: are we giving enough thought to the appropriateness of so-called routine tests? Such testing can direct attention away from matters of greater importance to patient health. Others have also called for caution regarding low-value testing, identifying frequent repeat BMD testing as a prime example of this problem in Canadian primary care.13
In 2023 Johansson and colleagues explained how the routine ordering of tests carries an opportunity cost for health care,14 defined as benefit from interventions of proven effectiveness forgone by particular use of resources.15 At the same time, clinicians face a barrage of guideline recommendations that, in total, are impossible to implement. For example, primary care providers in the United States would have to work 27 hours per day just to follow all relevant guidelines.16 One strategy for addressing this problem would be to consider explicitly the time needed to implement each recommended intervention. A structured approach to this, called “time needed to treat,” has been proposed.14 The goal of estimating time needed to treat is to avoid having clinicians and patients spend their limited time together on recommendations of lesser importance and to improve access to care for individuals most in need of medical attention.
Strategies for prevention of fragility fracture
Consider 2 family physicians working in community-based group practices: Dr BMD and Dr FRAX. We estimate the time required for each to screen patients up to the age of 85 for primary prevention of fragility fractures. In so doing, we address the issue of time needed to screen and, for a subset, the time needed to discuss further testing and pharmacotherapy to prevent fragility fractures.
Dr BMD follows the 2010 Osteoporosis Canada recommendation that men and postmenopausal women aged 50 to 64 years with clinical risk factors for fracture (Table 1) and all persons 65 or older should periodically undergo BMD testing.17 For Dr BMD, the time required to screen includes time to order these BMD tests, to deal with their results, and to engage in discussions with patients about preventive treatment.
Risk factors for clinical fragility fractures
Dr FRAX, on the other hand, uses a risk assessment–first strategy for females 65 years or older, as recommended by the CTFPHC.2 After 1 discussion of fracture risk, Dr FRAX does not repeat the process in less than 8 years, given there is no good evidence to conduct risk assessments repeatedly in stable patients. Nevertheless, considering these are female patients 65 or older, Dr FRAX will eventually rediscuss fracture risk with many patients over the next 2 decades until they reach age 85.
Which doctor spends more time trying to prevent fragility fractures? A risk assessment–first strategy using FRAX is less demanding of clinician time than a BMD-first strategy (Figure 2).18 Based on screening trials, we know that risk assessment–first strategies are effective.19 However, we have no high-quality evidence that directly compares BMD-first versus risk assessment–first strategies in terms of fracture prevention.
Clinician time required to implement screening strategies to prevent fragility fractures for a sample practice population over 25 years: Estimates assume a practice population of 1200 adult patients. The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care estimated screening times based on data from a convenience survey it distributed in April 2023.
Detailed information on how the time estimates in Figure 2 were calculated are available online.18,20 Time required for a BMD-first strategy for females and males aged 50 to 64 years could not be estimated as—smoking aside—the prevalence of clinical risk factors of fracture outlined in Table 1 are unknown.17
Case resolution
Let us assume Patricia is seeing Dr FRAX. When Patricia asks about BMD testing, Dr FRAX informs her of the CTFPHC guideline recommendation against screening in her age group.2 Then, to explain this briefly, Dr FRAX uses the new decision aid mentioned in the guideline.21 At 58 years of age, 6 female patients out of 100 like Patricia will sustain a fracture in the next 10 years, 1 being a hip fracture. By taking a bisphosphonate medication for 5 years, just 1 of these female patients will avoid a fracture (not of the hip).
Given such a small probability of benefit, as well as potential adverse effects of treatment, Patricia is not interested in preventive treatment at this time. Consequently, no BMD test is ordered. As Dr FRAX provides continuity of care, they will revisit this question together after Patricia turns 65. If this reassessment were to be done when she is 68, for example, at that time approximately 10 female patients out of 100 like Patricia would each sustain a fracture over the next 10 years, 2 of them being hip fractures. At that level of fracture risk, Patricia would be willing to consider preventive treatment. Thus, a BMD test would be done and follow-up would be scheduled to re-estimate fracture risk using the T-score at the femoral neck. This information would guide Patricia’s final decision on treatment initiation.
Figures 3 and 4 illustrate the probability of clinical fragility fracture (also called major osteoporotic fracture) and hip fracture per 100 female patients like Patricia between the ages of 55 to 80.21 These figures also reveal the magnitude of benefit one can expect from preventive treatment. Patricia weighs 65.5 kg, her height is 170 cm, and both variables remain stable over time. She has no clinical risk factors for fragility fracture. Before age 65, Patricia can expect almost no benefit from bisphosphonate treatment in terms of preventing clinical fragility fracture. For preventing hip fracture in female patients like Patricia, benefit is possible, but only after age 70.
Effect of treatment versus no treatment on 10-year rates of clinical fragility fractures for females like Patricia between ages 55 and 80: Note that evidence on treatment effects for females younger than 55 or older than 80 years is limited and uncertain.
Effect of treatment versus no treatment on 10-year rates of hip fracture for females like Patricia between ages 55 and 80: Note that evidence on treatment effects for females younger than 55 or older than 80 years is limited and uncertain.
In our clinical scenario, Patricia raised the question of BMD testing. As such, Dr FRAX elicited her preference for preventive treatment in a patient-centred way. Using a decision aid, they were able to come to an understanding of what can be accomplished in terms of preventing fragility fractures. At age 58, Patricia decided against BMD testing as the benefit of preventive treatment was close to 0 (and harms were present). After patients are 65 years old, adopting a risk assessment–first strategy makes sense both for doctors and for their patients. First, the time saved through this strategy can be used to address issues of greatest importance to patients. Second, a risk assessment–first strategy will avoid labelling female patients as having osteoporosis, which may paradoxically lower quality of life and lead some to reduce their physical activity.22,23
Conclusion
At the population level, screening 1000 Canadian females after age 65 using a risk assessment–first strategy is expected to prevent 4 hip fractures and 12 clinical fragility fractures over 3 to 5 years of follow-up.19 Thus, if you have 250 females aged 65 to 85 in your practice, screening them at least once via a risk assessment–first strategy could prevent 1 hip fracture and 3 clinical fragility fractures.
Notes
Key points
▸ When screening females aged 65 years or older for prevention of fragility fractures, the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care (CTFPHC) recommends a “risk assessment–first” strategy based on the Canadian clinical Fracture Risk Assessment Tool.
▸ The CTFPHC recommends against screening females aged 40 to 64 years or males of any age.
▸ If implemented, these CTFPHC recommendations should lead to less bone mineral density testing, which may help redirect health care resources to matters of greater value to patients.
▸ A risk assessment–first strategy can promote shared decision making more effectively between patients and providers and will also require less clinician time.
Suggested reading
Johansson M, Guyatt G, Montori V. Guidelines should consider clinicians’ time needed to treat. BMJ 2023;380:e072953.
Thériault G, Limburg H, Klarenbach S, Reynolds DL, Riva JJ, Thombs BD, et al. Recommendations on screening for primary prevention of fragility fractures. CMAJ 2023;195(18):E639-49.
Footnotes
Competing interests
None declared
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La traduction en français de cet article se trouve à https://www.cfp.ca dans la table des matières du numéro d’août 2023 à la page e165.
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