My doctor did not prescribe any other medication after Prolia

Posted by thinkpirate44 @thinkpirate44, Jun 3 11:21am

I am a 24 year old male. I have been taking prolia for 3.5 years due to osteoporosis. After 7 doses of prolia, my doctor stopped my medication and did not replace it with anything else. She only prescribed calcium supplements. When I told my doctor about the rebound effect, she said that this is not a problem in young people. However, I am still worried. Is it safe to stop prolia and not replace it with anything else, even though my bone formation rate is high at this age? Can I overcome this without taking medication by using exercise, d3+k2, calcium, magnesium supplements?

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

Your doctor is misinformed: by now the rebound effect of stopping Prolia is well known. You are at risk of vertebral fractures if you don’t follow up with another bone drug .

REPLY

I am 72 and had been taking Prolia for about 3 yrs when I needed a lumbar fusion. The surgeon wanted me to take a faster bone building drug before and after surgery. I had the surgery August 2024. Fast forward, I was on Tymlos 4 mos, quit due to side effects and switched to Evenity for the past 7 mos. My recent Dexa was very disappointing. Loss of 19% in left hip and 3% in Right hip but gain of 10% in lumbar spine- helped in part from bone growth material inserted during surgery. Endo is planning to return me to Prolia next I believe. Does this sound appropriate? I have just lost confidence in these medicines.

REPLY
@thinkpirate44

I can get it, I talked to my pharmacist.

Jump to this post

Please make the time for yourself....see an endocrinologist and don't self-medicate.

REPLY
@kallettla

I put the question about Prolia follow up meds into ChatGPT. It isn’t always 100% correct, but I always find it's a great place to start researching. Best wishes.

Yes, after stopping Prolia (denosumab), everyone is at risk for "rebound bone loss" and vertebral fractures—regardless of age. That’s why it’s generally recommended that another osteoporosis medication be started immediately after Prolia is stopped, unless there is a strong reason not to.

Why This Matters:

Prolia suppresses bone turnover very effectively, but once it's stopped, bone resorption can rapidly increase—often faster than before treatment, leading to a high risk of fractures, especially multiple vertebral fractures.

This rebound effect is not limited to older adults. It has been seen in younger people as well, including premenopausal women and men who were on Prolia for certain conditions (e.g., cancer-related bone loss, glucocorticoid use).

---

What to Take After Prolia:

The typical follow-up medication is a bisphosphonate like:

Alendronate (Fosamax)

Risedronate (Actonel)

Zoledronic acid (Reclast) – a once-yearly IV option

These help “lock in” the bone density gains from Prolia and blunt the rebound effect.

---

Are There Exceptions?

There are very few. A younger person may be at lower absolute risk of fracture due to higher baseline bone density, but if they were prescribed Prolia, it usually means their bone health was significantly compromised to begin with. In such cases, stopping Prolia without follow-up medication is still considered risky.

---

What You Should Do:

Plan for a transition: If someone is considering stopping Prolia, work with a doctor (usually an endocrinologist or rheumatologist) to schedule follow-up treatment.

Timing is critical: The next medication should usually be started within 6 months of the last Prolia injection—sometimes sooner.

Jump to this post

Very good and sound advice.

REPLY
@4deborahrb

I am 72 and had been taking Prolia for about 3 yrs when I needed a lumbar fusion. The surgeon wanted me to take a faster bone building drug before and after surgery. I had the surgery August 2024. Fast forward, I was on Tymlos 4 mos, quit due to side effects and switched to Evenity for the past 7 mos. My recent Dexa was very disappointing. Loss of 19% in left hip and 3% in Right hip but gain of 10% in lumbar spine- helped in part from bone growth material inserted during surgery. Endo is planning to return me to Prolia next I believe. Does this sound appropriate? I have just lost confidence in these medicines.

Jump to this post

You have to have calcium intake of about 1200 mg daily while on any of these drugs or they don’t work

REPLY
@sungaltoo

You have to have calcium intake of about 1200 mg daily while on any of these drugs or they don’t work

Jump to this post

That is absolutely untrue.

REPLY

With astrozole
Can just calcium increase work as well as prolia

REPLY

I don’t want to take prolia shore
Maybe skip anzoprolol

REPLY

it should be compulsary to be told how difficult it is to ge off this drug before your started on it

REPLY
@green1

With astrozole
Can just calcium increase work as well as prolia

Jump to this post

No. Unfortunately, it's not that simple. The bone building process involves a lot more than calcium. Otherwise, we could all take calcium supplements and be cured.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.