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    Osteoporosis treatment with denosumab in routine clinical practice in Poland

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    Introduction: The receptor activator for nuclear factor k B ligand (RANKL) inhibitor denosumab is approved for the treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women and men at increased fracture risk. The objectives were to describe the characteristics of patients with osteoporosis initiating denosumab in Polish clinical practice and their clinical management during the first 12 months of denosumab treatment. Material and methods: This prospective, observational study enrolled denosumab-naïve women and men in Poland with osteoporosis, who had received at least one denosumab injection in the 8 weeks prior to enrolment. Patients were enrolled from specialist osteoporosis treatment centres, and orthopaedic, rheumatological, and family doctor centres. Outcomes included patient characteristics, denosumab treatment patterns, bone mineral density (BMD), and fracture; all analyses were descriptive. Results: The study enrolled 463 patients; most (96%) were women, aged ≥ 65 years (84%), with prior fractures (88%). Approximately two-thirds of the women had received prior osteoporosis therapy, with the main reasons for discontinuation being adverse events (75%) and lack of effect (73%). Across all patients, the most common reasons for prescribing denosumab were low bone mineral density (BMD/T-score) (93%) and history of osteoporotic fracture (78%). Mean BMD at denosumab initiation ranged from T-score –3.00 (lumbar spine) to T-score –2.6 (total hip), and BMD increased by 2.8–6.2% at month 12. Most patients completed follow-up (86%) and were due to receive a third denosumab injection (81%). Conclusion: The article presents detailed sociodemographic and disease-related characteristics of patients who routinely implemented denosumab therapy. Most of them continued denosumab for at least 12 months, with increased BMD T-scores
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