Postmenopausal breast cancer survivors may have increased risk for non-hip fractures compared with other women of similar age
Postmenopausal breast cancer survivors may
be at increased risk for non-hip fractures compared with women of
similar age, according to an article in the March 14th issue of
Archives of Internal Medicine.
Previous small studies have found low bone density in this patient
population as well as accelerated bone loss after chemotherapy,
suggesting an increased risk for fractures among breast cancer survivors.
Previous studies on the risk of fractures have been inconsistent.
Zhao Chen, PhD, MPH, and her American colleagues, using data from
the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study (WHI-OS), compared
the occurrence of bone fractures over the course of 5.1 years in
5,298 women who reported a history of breast cancer with a reference
group of 80,848 women who had no cancer history. Women reported
annually in questionnaires on fractures that had been diagnosed
by a physician; fractures were categorized into four groups: hip;
forearm/wrist; clinical vertebral (spine or back); and other clinical
fractures.
“Using the age distribution of the entire WHI-OS cohort, we computed
age-standardized fracture rates per 10,000 person-years for breast
cancer survivors and the reference group,” the authors wrote. “Except
for the hip fracture rate, fracture rates were higher in the breast
cancer survivors than in the reference group. Overall, breast cancer
survivors may sustain 68.6 excess fractures per 10,000 person-years
compared with other women in the same age group.”
The increased risk for total fractures among breast cancer survivors
persisted even after adjustment for other risk factors, including
fracture history lifestyle, medication use and use of hormonal replacement
therapy, the researchers found. Other factors, including age, ethnicity
and depression, were associated with increased risk of fractures
among breast cancer survivors. “An increased risk for total fractures
was observed in all ages of breast cancer survivors in this study
regardless of the time of the breast cancer diagnosis,” the researchers
stated.
The authors concluded, “If our study results are confirmed by
others, the excess number of fractures may be as high as 13,000
per year for the two million postmenopausal breast cancer survivors
in the United States. Clearly, more research is needed to understand
the fracture risk in this special population and to develop strategies
to reduce the number of fractures among breast cancer survivors.”
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