My Experience on Evenity for Treating Osteoporosis
Thought I would share for those considering or on Evenity for osteoporosis:
Afer much research and discussions with my GP and Cardiologist, I have decided to start my treatment with Evenity injections. As with all drugs, there are many side effects. My biggest concerns were stroke and heart attack. However, considering that I do no have any history for either, for me personally, the benefits outweigh the risks. As my GP said to me, "if everyone only thought about the side effects of the drugs, no one would be taking them".
I had my first injections (subcutaneously in the back of each arm) on June 30th. The nurse that administered the injections discussed the drug in depth, along with all the possibilities that may occur. She also mentioned that for all the patients that she has seen, none has had any side effects.
The injections are once a month for only one year, so I'm hoping that this works well for me and I can improve my bone density, especially in my spine, where I need it the most.
My endocronologist has also prescribed Hydrochlorthiazide for my idiopathic hypocalcemia. I have an appointment with an allergist this month to confirm whether I still have an allergy to sulfa drugs, since this drug contains sulfa. Apart from this I take D3 orally and try to obtain additional calcium through foods not supplements. Trying to walk 3-4 times a week and will begin with a few weight bearing exercises.
My journey began September, 2019 when I was diagnosed with severe osteoporosis. After waiting to see three doctors, receiving three denials from insurance company for Evenity, which took several months, I am hopefully on my way for a favorful outcome.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Osteoporosis & Bone Health Support Group.
Hello,
How soon after 12th Evenity did you receive Reclast infusion?
Doctor recommended Prolia, so I reached out to prior doctor in another state for his insight.
After reviewing by labs and DEXA, he had a preference for Reclast. After a bit of procrastination on my part, and a message through the patient portal, I am on track for Reclast. Just couldn’t get beyond the bone resorption of Prolia, should it need to be discontinued.
Now I want to get some info on timeframe for infusion. Hydration and Tylenol seem to be mentioned quite a bit on this site.
Thank you for any info you can provide.
I hope that weights work for you. I am still trying to avoid Evenity altogether ( much to my doctor’s dismay) because I can’t see a future free of various dental procedures & the jaw necrosis risk plus the black box about the heart attacks just freaked me out. So I most of the time do some weights, maybe not enough but I am good about wearing a weighted vest while walking or other exercises. I think mine is the NYK one. It at least gives hope. I hate that they want us to take all these drugs.
@betsee sounds like the doctor in another state is a good doc! I wonder what that doc says about the timing. Dr. McCormick says, in his book "Great Bones" (page 559) to follow Evenity with either Prolia or Reclast immediately to avoid bone "resorption rebound."
That’s so funny, well not haha but ironic - the first thing about this that I hated was skiing and roller blading being taken away, ice skating too but I only did that once a year or so. Not t mention ever getting back on a horse. At first an ortho said I could ski because it wasn’t that bad, then two years later it was worse. He says ‘ you can ski just don’t fall.” And this guy got thru med school. But to me the worse tho g is from a PT, who says if you ski you shouldn’t twist, just long backed turns. My goal has always been perfect short turns. But the irony is my doctor’s last attempt to get me on Evenity was “so you can ski again.” So far I’ve just been too scared, the black box and dental risks just too great. What I hate tho is that not skiing doesn’t cure osteoporosis, we could still twist the wrong way and break something anyhow.
@sal462 have you tried Tymlos or Forteo?
How soon did you start Reclast after last Evenity injection?
Any advice beyond hydration & Tylenol?
@betsee I have not done Evenity. Dr. McCormick in "Great Bones" writes to do Reclast immediately after the year on Evenity is up. So that sounds like a month after the last injection but ask your doc.
Hydration, Tylenol and a slow infusion. The doc can order a slow infusion but he told me to remind them. My doc is doing a 20% dose as a test dose because I am so sensitive to everything and my kidneys aren't great.
Yikes, immediately might be difficult. Amgen website says Prolia one month +/- 7 days, so I assumed Reclast was the same.
Infusion center likely needs to get insurance approval, but I’ll push them to get me in ASAP.
I have some bloodwork to do prior to infusion.
Reclast protocol:
1. Reclast injection must be administered as an intravenous infusion over no less than 15 minutes. I’ll ask them to do a SLOW infusion. Thank you for the suggestion.
2. Intravenous infusion should be followed by a 10 mL normal saline flush of the intravenous line.
3. Somewhere I read ‘infuse 0.9% sodium chloride at 500 mL/he for 15 minutes’ prior AND after infusion. This seems to be equivalent to 8 ounces of fluid prior and after infusion.
Not sure if I can make it through Good Bones, as this is happening quickly. I did watch a lecture you posted with a Mass General (?) physician. This led me away from Prolia due to consequences of discontinuation - FREEDOM study & vertebral fractures.
Thanks so much for the wealth of knowledge you have shared with me and others.
Just to clarify- sorry for being unclear- McCormick says to do Reclast immediately after the year on Evenity so I guess this would be one month after the last injection. Check with your doc on this!
I asked about getting IV hydration before the Reclast infusion and my doc said drinking was just as effective.
Glad you watched Dr. Leder's video! It covers the same ground as Dr. McCormick's book so you're good!
I had my infusion a couple of weeks after finishing Evenity. The person who administered it said nothing about hydration. It seems the Reclast triggered a flare of my autoimmune disease (a very rare form of colitis) and I am still trying to get my gut back in balance after almost 2 months. I am going to work hard with weights and exercise to prevent loss of the new bone; no more Reclast for me.