Is a dexa every 2 years enough?

Posted by hopefulheart @hopefulheart, May 21 4:16pm

My doctor suggested that a Dexa scan every 2 years is what he uses to monitor Evinity then followed by reclast
I asked about blood turnover markers to see if meds are working along the way
He said he doesn’t use those
Time for a new doctor????

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Osteoporosis & Bone Health Support Group.

@willow5

My understanding is Medicare will pay for one more than every two years if medically necessary. You can call Medicare and ask them.

I never understand why a doctor won’t order something when a patient requests it, even if it is not recommended as protocol.

I quit smoking when I was 35, I’m 71 now. I would like a lung cancer screening. My PCP, who I do like, said my smoking history does not fit the protocol to order a screening. I may discuss with her when I go in for annual

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Medicare will pay for the scans every year provided you are actively being treated for bone loss. I have osteopenia which would normally not be covered (annually) nor would the drug to treat it, but because I am using an AI which can cause bone loss the drug is covered. Because I'm being treated for bone loss, the scan is covered annually.

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@dlmdinia

Medicare will pay for the scans every year provided you are actively being treated for bone loss. I have osteopenia which would normally not be covered (annually) nor would the drug to treat it, but because I am using an AI which can cause bone loss the drug is covered. Because I'm being treated for bone loss, the scan is covered annually.

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Can I ask
What’s an AI?

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@willow5

My understanding is Medicare will pay for one more than every two years if medically necessary. You can call Medicare and ask them.

I never understand why a doctor won’t order something when a patient requests it, even if it is not recommended as protocol.

I quit smoking when I was 35, I’m 71 now. I would like a lung cancer screening. My PCP, who I do like, said my smoking history does not fit the protocol to order a screening. I may discuss with her when I go in for annual

Jump to this post

I thought that same thing when I had 2 MDs refuse to order CTX and P1NP tests. There is a lot I don't know about medicine, but why do they care? Why would they refuse to order a blood test that a patient believes will have a positive impact on their health?

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@hopefulheart

Can I ask
What’s an AI?

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Aromatase Inhibitors such as Anastrozole, Letrozole and Exemestane which are estrogen suppression drugs for those with estrogen based cancers. These drugs can cause bone loss.

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@willow5

My understanding is Medicare will pay for one more than every two years if medically necessary. You can call Medicare and ask them.

I never understand why a doctor won’t order something when a patient requests it, even if it is not recommended as protocol.

I quit smoking when I was 35, I’m 71 now. I would like a lung cancer screening. My PCP, who I do like, said my smoking history does not fit the protocol to order a screening. I may discuss with her when I go in for annual

Jump to this post

Willow5,
Same smoking history here. I asked my GP for a screen and she ordered a chest x-ray as a start.

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@babs10

I thought that same thing when I had 2 MDs refuse to order CTX and P1NP tests. There is a lot I don't know about medicine, but why do they care? Why would they refuse to order a blood test that a patient believes will have a positive impact on their health?

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I had accidentally used the wrong term when requesting one test. As a result, I almost ended up with a bone scan rather than a bone density scan. Why the NP dd not question my request is beyond me.

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@babs10

I thought that same thing when I had 2 MDs refuse to order CTX and P1NP tests. There is a lot I don't know about medicine, but why do they care? Why would they refuse to order a blood test that a patient believes will have a positive impact on their health?

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As a former Medicare fraud investigator i will share my perspective……physicians are under intense scrutiny….if they order non-standard tests they can end up being investigated for abusive billing practices

If you want an atypical test and your dr refuses, you have a couple choices: 1. go to a dr who you know if prescribing it with some level of frequency or 2. offer to pay out of pocket

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@babs10

I thought that same thing when I had 2 MDs refuse to order CTX and P1NP tests. There is a lot I don't know about medicine, but why do they care? Why would they refuse to order a blood test that a patient believes will have a positive impact on their health?

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in order for Medicare to pay with greater frequency, i believe the RX needs to sat “medically necessary” and the record must be well documented as to why its medically necessary

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i think very few places are testing for markers

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@dlmdinia

Medicare will pay for the scans every year provided you are actively being treated for bone loss. I have osteopenia which would normally not be covered (annually) nor would the drug to treat it, but because I am using an AI which can cause bone loss the drug is covered. Because I'm being treated for bone loss, the scan is covered annually.

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Same here in Australia. But I'm thinking of getting a DEXA scan every six months even if I have to pay for it. Might be a tad childish but I want to see concrete results for all this slogging away at the gym twice a week doing a variant of the Onera program. (I'm 76 with osteopenia and taking anastrozole. )

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