Anyone used prolia?
I am 82. Terrible bone density. Prolia is expensive. Anyone been told how many injections make a difference?
Am questioning if it is worth the money.
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tillymack,
Tymlos abaloparatide and Forteo teriparatide the parathyroid drugs.
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2 ReactionsThank you @gently for your excellent explanation about the dangers of Prolia. Do you know if there is a study that would show us the percentage of people who have mild side effects versus those with severe side effects? I wish they would include those in the pamphlets that come with the meds.
Gently: I took Forteo back in the mid 2000s for 2 years and agree it is a good medication for osteoporosis. I suffered no side effects from it. I recently asked my endocrinologist if I could go back on it b/c my hip score hasn't increased being on Prolia for 5 years, just my spine score. The endo. said Forteo works mainly on the spine and I've already improved there with Prolia. But my real question for you, as you seem to read a lot about osteoporosis, is that I happened across and article that suggests that maybe those of us who have had breast cancer should not take Forteo b/c it could awaken dormant cancer cells in the bones. Have you read anything of this nature?
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1 Reactionnjhornung: Yes, it does decrease one's immunity and has a long half life. After a month, 50% of it is still in your body.
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1 ReactionYes, getting better , more bone density . But it has been a long journey with tiny increases .
Also , my dentist said if I had to have any dental work done , Prolia does weaken your jaw, so to let your dentist know you’re taking Prolia
There is now a generic brand of Prolia that is cheaper and some insurance plans will only cover this version now. My sister has been on Prolia for 10 years! Took her out of osteoporosis and into osteopenia. No side effects for her.
Hi, shelldct1.
There is this from the FDA's adverse reporting system. ://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10441037/#:~:text=Discussion%20APRs%20are%20common%20among%20people%20who,after%20the%20first%20compared%20to%20subsequent%20infusions.
University of Kansas https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK535388/
Clinical trials all contain this information, but usually it is a fairly select group in clinical trials.
https://fis.fda.gov/sense/app/95239e26-e0be-42d9-a960-9a5f7f1c25ee/sheet/59a37af8-d2bb-4dee-90bf-6620b1d5542f/state/analysis
Looking for specific information is a bit of a struggle. It seems that none of the reporting services or studies are powered for the specific information I want. Shelldct1, if this isn't helpful enough, let me know.
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2 Reactionsshelldct: On Prolia's own website it states 1 in 11 women taking it will get a bladder infection. For women over 70, a bladder infection is the number one reason for being diagnosed with sepsis. I was put on the wrong medicine for a uti and by the time the urine culture came back to indicate which antibiotic was best, was contacted after the pharmacy closed and had to wait another day, I was admitted to the hospital with sepsis. And, anecdotally, my endocrinologist, when asked, what was the main side effect she saw in her practice she responded "bladder infections." I think I remember coming across a more detailed breakdown of side effects, and the percentage of people experiencing them, on studies posted on the National Institutes of Health website.
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1 Reactionbroken13: It's actually not a generic, but rather called a biosimilar. But still, semantics don't really matter; it's a copy-cat drug of Prolia. And after 5 successful years on Prolia I got really sick on this copy-cat drug, (called Jubbonti) after being injected with it last month. It's only been on the market for 3 months. The company that has marketed Jubbonti seems to specialize in marketing biosimilars and generics after the patents for the original drugs expire. I am hoping to get an exception approved to only receive Prolia injections, again, in the future. I am glad to hear your sister has been on Prolia twice as long as I have and is doing well with no side effects. Thank you for posting.
Lots of good answers here, just want to stress if you do decide on Prolia, know you cannot quit taking it without relaying with a biphosphonate like reclast, or you have a high chance of spontaneous vertebral fractures. Your doctor should know this and if not, find another one.
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