Some people who could benefit from a common screening test for osteoporosis aren’t getting them, according to new research. And others are getting them unnecessarily.
The study finds that screening rates increased sharply among women at age 50, despite guidelines suggesting screening at age 65 unless risk factors are present. The presence of risk factors only had a modest influence on screening decisions.
Osteoporosis causes bone density to diminish and fracture risk to increase. Because sex and age are factors most associated with the disease, the US Preventive Services Task Force recommends screening for women who are age 65 and older.
Younger women with certain risk factors—such as a small body frame, a history of fractures, or taking medication that thins the bones—should also be screened.
51,000 women
As part of a University of California, Davis, research fellowship, physician Anna Lee Amarnath assessed the electronic health records of nearly 51,000 women who were between the ages of 40 and 85 and received health care in the Sacramento region. Her evaluation included osteoporosis risk factors and whether or not the women received a screening technique called dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), which measures bone mineral density.
Over a seven-year period, more than 42 percent of eligible women between the ages of 65 and 74 years were not screened, nor were nearly 57 percent of those older than 75, despite the favorable cost-effectiveness of screening in these age groups. In turn, nearly 46 percent of low-risk women between the ages of 50 and 59 were screened, as were 59 percent of those aged 60 to 64 years without risk factors.
“DXA screening was underused in women at increased fracture risk, including women aged 65 years and older. Meanwhile, it was common among women at low fracture risk, such as younger women without osteoporosis risk factors,” Amarnath says of the findings.
Time for electronic health records?
Amarnath and the study team believe they have identified a common problem, since health care providers can be uncertain or doubtful about current screening recommendations. Doctors tend to think about age-related bone loss when women enter menopause around age 50, triggering consideration of DXA without also considering overall facture risk.
Technology-based solutions could help, according to study senior author Joshua Fenton.
“Health systems should invest in developing electronic health records systems that prompt providers at the point-of-care when screening is needed and when it can be postponed,” says Fenton, a UC Davis associate professor of family and community medicine.
The National Institutes of Health supported the work, which appears in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Source: UC Davis