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Drugs for
pre-osteoporosis: prevention or
disease-mongering?
Newswise — A series of recent scientific
publications have exaggerated the benefits
and underplayed the harms of drugs to treat
pre-osteoporosis or “osteopenia” potentially
encouraging treatment in millions of low
risk women, warn experts in this week’s BMJ.
The authors believe that this represents a
classic case of disease-mongering: a risk
factor being transformed into a medical
disease in order to sell tests and drugs to
relatively healthy people.
Osteopenia or “pre-osteoporosis” is said to
affect around half of all older women and,
in at least one country, drug companies have
already begun to market their drugs to women
with osteopenia, based on re-analyses of
four osteoporosis drug trials.
But the authors of this week’s BMJ paper
argue that this move raises serious
questions about the benefit-risk ratio for
low risk individuals, and about the costs of
medicalising and potentially treating an
enormous group of healthy people.
These reanalyses tend to exaggerate the
benefits of drug therapy, they say. For
example, the authors of one reanalysis cite
a 75% relative risk reduction, though this
translates into only a 0.9% reduction in
absolute risk.
In other words, up to 270 women with
pre-osteoporosis might need to be treated
with drugs for three years so that one of
them could avoid a single vertebral
fracture.
Most of the reanalyses also play down the
harms of drug therapy, they add. For
example, the reanalysis of data for the drug
raloxifene focuses solely on the potential
benefits, with no mention of an increased
risk of blood clots.
Finally, like much of the published
literature on osteoporosis, these analyses
have potential conflicts of interest, they
write. For instance, all of the original
drug trials being re-analysed were funded by
industry and, in three out of four cases,
drug company employees were part of the team
conducting the reanalyses.
The World Health Organisation is currently
developing guidance on how to deal with
women categorised as having osteopenia.
Whether this will stop industry efforts to
encourage treatment in low risk women is,
however, questionable, they say.
“We need to ask whether the coming wave of
marketing targeting those women with
pre-osteoporosis will result in the sound
effective prevention of fractures or the
unnecessary and wasteful treatment of
millions more healthy women,” they conclude.