Barriers and solutions for global access to osteoporosis management: a Position Paper from the International Osteoporosis Foundation

国际骨质疏松症基金会关于全球骨质疏松症管理服务可及性的立场文件:障碍与解决方案

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Abstract

Our ability to optimally manage bone health across the lifecourse, and so minimise the risk of fractures, has advanced substantially in recent decades. Whilst fractures and osteoporosis in older age were historically viewed simply as inherent in normal ageing, they are now recognised as manifestations of age-related disease. Key to advancing the field was the development of conceptual (relating to impaired bone mass and microarchitecture with increased propensity to fracture), and subsequent World Health Organization densitometric definitions of osteoporosis, cementing the role of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in bone health management. However, whilst low bone mineral density is a strong risk factor for fracture, many individuals who do fracture have normal or only modestly reduced bone mineral density. Furthermore, the existence of two definitions constituting a condition called "osteoporosis", one based on a measurement, and the other conceptual, has led to uncertainty in clinical practice. The field is therefore moving towards calculation of an individual's absolute fracture risk, based on clinical risk factors, with the option to incorporate bone mineral density (if available) as a risk factor rather than as an indication for treatment. Uptake of this new direction has been variable internationally, with many parts of the world, particularly low- and middle-income countries, still predicating treatment (where osteoporosis services exist) on bone mineral density, despite poor availability of densitometry in many such settings. In this Position Paper, on behalf of the International Osteoporosis Foundation, we review the current barriers which prevent equitable access to optimal bone health management worldwide and recommend potential solutions which might be implemented to overcome them.

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