What is your take-away from the article you referenced? It's very long and I noted a couple things: (Please correct me if any of this is incorrect.)
1). "HRT was an inclusion criterion and recommended for osteoporosis according to the guidelines at that time." So, everyone in the study had HRT? That too would affect the study results vs how many people taking Forteo today also take HRT.
2). People in the study had at least one vertebral compression fracture. But I didn't find any info on what their DEXA scores were before and after the study.
3). A limitation to the study results "is the lack of X-ray verification of possible silent vertebral fractures in the teriparatide treated group." This also affects determining the percentage of fractures that might have been prevented with Forteo treatment.
4). Of note is that after taking Forteo, "80% received bone specific agents after teriparatide. Four patients without any new fracture had low fall risk and a normal DXA were not prescribed bone specific treatment after the teriparatide treatment. "
5). The percentages of improvements are not stated as relative risk vs absolute risk. From Better Bones website: "Tymlos is marketed as a better version of Forteo, boasting that it reduces the relative risk of non-vertebral fractures by 43%. But, relative risk can be a deceivingly inflated statistic. In actuality, for both drugs there was just a 2-4% reduction in absolute risk of non-vertebral fractures."
I have osteoporosis and am not on any drugs, but my endo Dr wants me to take Prolia. My last two DEXA scans taken 2 yrs apart showed my scores were stable. I get my next scan in a few months.
I visited an orthopedic dr who has an osteoporosis clinic. Wanted his opinion about trying Prolia per my GP recommendation. Was leery about Prolia because of jaw bone warnings. He said they have learned that after 5-6 years you should stop Prolia for a year to avoid that complication. My mom tried an oral osteoporosis med and it aggravated her stomach too much and she quit it. She lived with me for 15 years and was in good health but at 94 she fell one morning and broke several bones and only lived 4 weeks. I took care of her with hospice help. She had so much pain it broke my heart. I am willing to try an osteoporosis med after watching her. I’m 77 and active. I go to the Y and walk the padded indoor track with a weighted backpack to help bone density and then use other exercises to strengthen my core.
I have 4 neighbors who are on different osteoporosis meds and doing well.