Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3271678 | Journal of Clinical Densitometry | 2008 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
A multicenter trial has established the antifracture efficacy of oral daily (2.5Â mg) as well as intermittent (20Â mg every other day for 12 doses every 3Â mo) ibandronate in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis. As diagnostic spinal radiographs for this trial were read at 2 centers, the study protocol included rigorous procedures for diagnosis of morphometric vertebral fractures. These included standardized qualitative and morphometric assessment methods for diagnosing vertebral osteoporotic fractures and consensus cross-validation procedures for maximizing fracture diagnostic accuracy and consistency between the 2 radiographic reading centers. Using these stringent measures, the between-center discrepancy in the diagnosis of prevalent fractures was only 8%. Furthermore, after cross-validation, discrepancy in the final diagnosis of incident fractures between centers was found for only 4 patients, resulting in a net gain of only 2 fractures in the trial. This meticulous methodology provided a highly effective means of identifying vertebral fractures and recruiting the trial population in which to assess the efficacy of ibandronate in postmenopausal osteoporosis.
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Authors
Gabriele Armbrecht, Tilo Blenk, Charles H. III, Jill C. Gardner, Gabriele von Ingersleben, Paul Mahoney, Dieter Felsenberg,