Oral anticoagulants are putative risk factors for osteoporosis, but observational cross-sectional studies describing their
effects on bone mineral density have reported conflicting results, prospective studies are not available, and randomized trials
are not feasible. To determine the association between exposure to oral anticoagulants and changes in bone density, we systematically
reviewed nine original cross-sectional studies on the effect of long-term exposure to any oral anticoagulant on bone density
in adults. The effect size was assessed by standardized mean difference (SMD, exposed minus unexposed) and pooled by skeletal
site; results are reported in standard deviation units. Bone density was significantly decreased among exposed subjects in
the ultradistal radius (SMD, –0.39; 95% CI, –0.67 to –0.10) but not in the distal radius (SMD, –0.47; 95% CI, –0.97 to 0.04),
lumbar spine (SMD, –0.27; 95% CI, –0.59 to 0.05), femoral neck (SMD, 0.03; 95% CI, –0.22 to 0.29) or femoral trochanter (SMD,
–0.18; 95% CI, –0.48 to 0.11). The evidence should be considered with caution, but it is consistent with a negative association
of oral anticoagulants with bone density in the ultradistal radius, although not in the spine or hip. This suggests that long-term
oral anticoagulation might be associated with no more than a modest increase in osteoporotic fracture risk, but this should
be verigied in future longitudinal studies.
Key words:Anticoagulant – Bone density – Coumarin – Meta-analysis – Osteoporosis – Vitamin K
Received: 22 June 1998 / Accepted: 29 September 1998