Introduction
Older patients with fragility fractures are not commonly tested or treated for osteoporosis. Compared to usual care, a previously
reported intervention led to 30% absolute increases in osteoporosis treatment within 6 months of wrist fracture. Our objective
was to examine longer-term outcomes, reproducibility, and cost-effectiveness of this intervention.
Methods
We conducted an extended analysis of a non-randomized controlled trial with blinded ascertainment of outcomes that compared
a multifaceted intervention to usual care controls. Patients >50 years with a wrist fracture treated in two Emergency Departments
in the province of Alberta, Canada were included; those already treated for osteoporosis were excluded. Overall, 102 patients
participated in this study (55 intervention and 47 controls; median age: 66 years; 78% were women). The interventions consisted
of faxed physician reminders that contained osteoporosis treatment guidelines endorsed by opinion leaders and patient counseling.
Controls received usual care; at 6-months post-fracture, when the original trial was completed, all controls were crossed-over
to intervention. The main outcomes were rates of osteoporosis testing and treatment within 6 months (original study) and 1 year
(delayed intervention) of fracture, and 1-year persistence with treatments started. From the perspective of the healthcare
payer, the cost-effectiveness (using a Markov decision-analytic model) of the intervention was compared with usual care over
a lifetime horizon.
Results
Overall, 40% of the intervention patients (vs. 10% of the controls) started treatment within 6 months post-fracture, and 82%
(95%CI: 67–96%) had persisted with it at 1-year post-fracture. Delaying the intervention to controls for 6 months still led
to equivalent rates of bone mineral density (BMD) testing (64 vs. 60% in the original study; p = 0.72) and osteoporosis treatment (43 vs. 40%; p = 0.77) as previously reported. Compared with usual care, the intervention strategy was dominant – per patient, it led to
a $13 Canadian (U.S. $13 Canadian (U.S. 9) cost savings and a gain of 0.012 quality-adjusted life years. Base-case results were most sensitive
to assumptions about treatment cost; for example, a 50% increase in the price of osteoporosis medication led to an incremental
cost-effectiveness ratio of $24,250 Canadian (U.S. $24,250 Canadian (U.S. 17,218) per quality-adjusted life year gained.
Conclusions
A pragmatic intervention directed at patients and physicians led to substantial improvements in osteoporosis treatment, even
when delivered 6-months post-fracture. From the healthcare payer’s perspective, the intervention appears to have led to both
cost-savings and gains in life expectancy.
Keywords Cost-effectiveness - Fragility fractures - Interventions - Outcomes - Quality improvement - Trials
Role of the funding sources: The study was funded by peer-reviewed grants from the Alberta Medical Association, Alberta Health
and Wellness, and the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research. The funding sources had no role in the design and
conduct of the study, the collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data, or the decision to submit the manuscript for
publication.
Trial Registry: NCT00175214