Fosamax is often prescribed to fight the effects of osteoperosis, a condition that affects 10 million Americans, with an additional 34 million suffering from low bone mass. Bisphosphonates aid in the slowing of bone loss and are among the nation's top sellers in the face of an aging population. Annual sales, according to the 3/11/10 issue of USA Today, exceed $3.5 billion.
It appears, however, that while bisphosphonates such as Fosamax help for a period of time, they can become a liability after long-term use.
Last week two studies presented at the Conference of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons demonstrated that the bones of some postmenopausal women who take bisphosphonates such as Fosamax can stop rejuvenating and become brittle.
Joseph Lane, chief of metabolic bone disease service at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, studied bone biopsies of women who had atypical hip fractures of the femur and found the quality of the bone diminished after long-term bisphosphonate use. "Normally, bone is a distribution of young bone, middle-age bone and old bone," he told USA Today. "When we look at these bones, it's old bone."
According to Lane, the drugs are initially effective at slowing bone loss. However, the effect seems to be reversed when the drugs are taken for an extended period of time.
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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is reportedly reviewing long-term use of bisphosphonates, but has yet to see the studies. In the meantime, Lane recommends that patients talk to their doctors if they have been on bisphosphonates for longer than four years. Routine bone scans are also recommended.
Ron Rogers, a spokesman for Merck, the manufacturer of Fosamax, said that causal association has yet to be established between Fosamax and femur fractures, together with fractures occurring in non-bisphosphonate cases. Rogers said Merck is funding studies "to further investigate the issue."
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