Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Expert opinions differ on treatment

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Dear Dr. Roach: I’m a 50-year-old post-menopausal woman, and my first bone density test (DEXA) came back showing osteoporos­is in a portion ofmy spine and osteopenia in an area of my neck. I did a FRAXscore, and it indicatedm­y risk for a major osteoporot­ic fracture is 4.5 percent in 10 years. I’m reading a lot of conflictin­g informatio­n about the safety and efficacy of various medication­s, as well as whether or not lifestyle changes can improve bone density or just keep it from declining further.

I’m also at high risk of breast cancer, so my doctor is suggesting I consider raloxifene. I’m not opposed to medication, but I hate the idea of side effects and having to take ANYTHING long term.— A.G.

Answer: Exactly when to begin medication treatment for osteoporos­is remains controvers­ial, and different experts in different countries have come to different conclusion­s. In the U.S., cost-effectiven­ess analysis has shown that treatment is effective when the 10-year risk for a major osteoporot­ic fracture exceeds 20 percent. In the U.K., pharmacolo­gic treatment was found to be cost effective with a risk of 7 percent. In Canada, treatment is recommende­d if over 20 percent, but those between 10 percent and 20 percent should have an individual­ized treatment.

Givenyour preference not to take medicine and your low risk of fracture, medication for your osteoporos­is wouldn’t be recommende­d at this time. If your breast cancer riskwere so high that raloxifene is recommende­d solely to reduce your risk of breast cancer, then I would see that making sense.

You should be doing the following: getting calcium through food and supplement­s, and having your vitaminDle­vel checked; not smoking; exercising regularly ; and avoiding excess alcohol.

Write to Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@ med.cornell.edu or mail to 628 VirginiaDr., Orlando, FL 32803.

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