Bone-active medications (BAM) [prescriptions (RxBAM) and supplements(calcium/vitamin D] increase bone mineral density and reduce osteoporotic fracture risk. However, RxBAM utilization rates are low, and it is unclear who is treated with BAMs before/after a hip fracture. This study examined sex differences in BAM use at baseline and predicted the probability of RxBAM use during follow-up(2, 6, and 12-months). The sample included frequency-matched males and females 65 years or older from the Baltimore Hip Studies’ seventh cohort. Differences in baseline characteristics between males and females with complete data(n=313) were assessed using t-tests and chi-square tests. Generalized estimating equations(GEE) predicted the probability of RxBAM use by sex among participants(n=270) with outcome data during follow-up adjusted for baseline characteristics. Prior to fracture, there were sex-differences in BAM use, with fewer men than women taking RxBAMs(9% versus 26%), calcium(18% vs. 57%) and vitamin D (55% vs. 68%). These differences remained over the year post-hip fracture. Only 12(3.5%) participants took RxBAM the entire study period. Of RxBAM users n=70(26%), there were few new-users (n=35), and many participants stopped or never started treatment. Unadjusted GEEs showed that men were less likely to use RxBAM (OR= 0.42; 95% CI:0.22,0.78, p=.007), during the hip fracture recovery period compared to females. However, after controlling for differences in baseline characteristics between males and females, particularly pre-fracture BAM medication use, the observed association (OR=0.62; 95% CI:0.29, 1.31; p= 0.23). RxBAM use was low, especially in men and may contribute to the high rates of preventable subsequent osteoporotic fractures and post-fracture mortality.
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