Atypical femur (thigh bone) fractures (AFFs) are uncommon low-trauma fractures which often occur without warning, are highly debilitating, and are slow to heal. As physicians learn more about them, AFFs are increasingly being identified prior to a total break. However, there's no evidence on the best way to treat these non-displaced AFFs. One option is teriparatide, an osteoporosis medication that can build new bone. Investigators will conduct a double blind randomized placebo controlled trial to examine whether teriparatide use in AFF patients with an incomplete break will help accelerate fracture healing and prevent surgical intervention. Co-primary outcomes include change in WOMAC scores from baseline to 12 months and number of participants requiring surgical intervention at 12 months. Investigators will recruit 60 women and men over the age of 30 who have experienced an incomplete AFF. Participants will be randomly assigned to either teriparatide (20 mcg/day) or placebo (using an identical injection pen) for up to 2 years. As AFFs are highly debilitating, a trial examining the use of Teriparatide in this population is urgently needed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
34
Teriparatide 20 mcg injection pen
Placebo 20 mcg injection pen
University Health Network
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Change in the modified The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC)of the affected limb (the femur that has the incomplete AFF)
Time frame: baseline to 12 months
The proportion of patients requiring surgical intervention
Time frame: baseline to 12 months
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