Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9104402 | Bone | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
With the base case (£350 per year; 35% efficacy) treatment in women was cost-effective with a 10-year hip fracture probability that ranged from 1.1% at the age of 50 years to 9.0% at the age of 85 years. Intervention thresholds were sensitive to the assumed costs and offset time. The exclusion of osteoporotic fractures other than hip fracture significantly increased the cost-effectiveness ratio because of the substantial morbidity from such other fractures, particularly at younger ages. Cost-effective scenarios were found for women at the threshold for osteoporosis from the age of 60 years. Treatment of established osteoporosis was cost-effective irrespective of age. We conclude that the inclusion of all osteoporotic fractures has a marked effect on intervention thresholds, that these vary with age and that available treatments can be targeted cost-effectively to individuals from the UK at moderately increased fracture risk.
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Authors
John A. Kanis, Frederik Borgstrom, Niklas Zethraeus, Olof Johnell, Anders Oden, Bengt Jönsson,