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Research

INSUFFICIENCY FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR IN PATIENTS TREATED WITH BISPHOSPHONATES DUE TO OSTEOPOROSIS

Yokohama, Japan, November 2009 meeting



Abstract

Introduction

Long-term use of bisphosphonates has been known to induce femoral insufficiency fracture in osteoporotic patients. We followed patients who had femoral insufficiency fractures after a long-term use of bisphosphonates.

Methods

Eleven patients (14 hips) were diagnosed as having an insufficiency fracture of the femur after long-term (> 4 years) use of bisphosphonate to treat osteoporosis between January 2002 and December 2008. All patients were women who had a mean age of 68 years (range, 57 to 82 years). The fracture site was located in the subtrochanteric area in 6 hips and the femoral shaft in 8 hips. Three patients had bilateral involvement. These patients were followed-up for a mean of 27 months (range, 12 to 60 months).

Results

Five hips in five patients displaced during the follow-up period. The mean period from the diagnosis of insufficiency fracture to the displacement was 10 months (range, 1 to 19 months). Five hips (five patients) underwent internal fixation due to persistent pain. Thus, during the follow-up of 27 months, operation was necessary in 71% (10 hips) of 14 insufficiency fractures. Four hips (four patients) that did not undergo any operation had persistent pain at the latest follow-up.

Conclusion

The insufficiency fractures after prolonged bisphosphonate therapy seldom healed spontaneously and most of them required operation due to fracture displacement or persistent pain. We recommend preventive surgery to prevent further fracture displacement and persistent pain.