Strategies to Treat Osteoporosis Following a Fragility Fracture (OPTIMUS)
Osteoporosis, Fractures
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Osteoporosis focused on measuring Osteoporosis, Fragility fractures, Fracture clinics, Orthopedic surgeons
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Over 50 years of age
- Fragility fracture
- Consulting an orthopedic surgeon at the CHUS for treatment of the fracture
Exclusion Criteria:
- No Primary Care Practitioner
- Severe co-morbidity requiring specialized care
- Failure to consent
Sites / Locations
- Centre hospitalier universitaire de Sherbrooke
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Placebo Comparator
Active Comparator
Experimental
Group 1
Group 2
Group 3
CONTROL GROUP (first year only; maximum 300 patients): patients seen by CHUS orthopedists at the Hotel-Dieu site, where no nurse coordinator is available for inclusion. This is random but not randomized.
MINIMAL INTERVENTION GROUP: 1/2 of patients, randomly selected. INTERVENTION: A nurse coordinator will identify patients with fragility fractures and inform the patient about osteoporosis as the cause of the fracture, the benefit of treatment, and the options of treatment adapted to the individual patient. Written information will be sent to his/her family physician containing a presumed osteoporosis diagnosis, investigation to be performed, correct interpretation of any osteodensitometry results in the context of a fragility fracture, the options of treatment, and alternatives if the first prescriptions are not tolerated or stopped. Intervention
INTENSIVE INTERVENTION GROUP: 1/2 of patients, randomly selected Multiple layers of intervention will be added: results of the basic blood investigation for osteoporosis will be transmitted to the family physician with a personal letter explaining the importance of seeing the patient rapidly and indicating the urgency of initiating a treatment and indicating detailed instructions of treatment. The patient will be called at 4, 8, 12,16 and 24 months to monitor drug adherence, correct inadequate intake, and try to improve adherence. If the patient is not taking an adequate treatment at 4, 8 or 12 months, a letter will be sent again to the family physician asking to treat the patient according to recommendations.