The management of osteoporotic fractures has recently changed with the emergence of new programs dedicated to the diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis. For example, the Fracture Network of the Paris Saint-Joseph Hospital Group, created in 2015, identifies and ensures the care of patients who have consulted emergency rooms for osteoporotic fractures. Within this sector, the vertebral fracture (VF) appears to be the most frequent (22.4%) ahead of other fracture sites, confirming the results of other studies that consider VF as a real public health problem. Osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVF) have certain specificities compared to other osteoporotic fractures, encouraging particular interest.
A. Particularities of OVF management * Pain intensity caused by OVF justifies specific analgesic management. Analgesic management is sometimes complicated by co-morbidities and patients age, with poor analgesics tolerance, in particular opioids. * OVF is responsible for a change in patients' quality of life, often with a loss of autonomy. * VF is considered as severe fracture that warrants anti-osteoporotic drug therapy (if osteoporotic origin has been confirmed), in order to avoid risk of a new osteoporotic fracture. * Progressive profil of pain associated with OVF and importance vertebral extent collapse may justify the use of specific "vertebral augmentation" procedures on vertebra, such as cementoplasty or kyphoplasty. These interventions are aimed at disappearance / reduction of pain related to OVF, improvement of life quality or correction or elimination of a static spinal disorder related to fracture. B. Current rheumatology OVF management at the GHPSJ Patients management with OVF can be either outpatient or inpatient, depending on the extent of pain, fracture context, and co-morbidities. \- Rheumatology department of the GHPSJ has set up an outpatient patient path dedicated to osteoporotic vertebral fracture, making it possible to optimize patients concerned management. This route has follow characteristics : Patients with OVF are seen by rheumatologist during a consultation dedicated to OVF (Vertebral Fracture Consultation), and benefit the same day from spinal radiographs, bone densitometry and a biological assessment of fragile osteopathy on the GHPSJ site. During consultation, fracture history, risk factors for falls, bone history, an assessment of the patient's pain, functional abilities and life quality are performed. A spinal orthosis can be made if necessary. Then patients are seen again 15 days later by the same rheumatologist with all results of the assessment During this 2nd consultation, depending on results of the additional examinations and patient's clinical progress, analgesic treatment is adapted. In addition, anti-osteoporotic treatment may be prescribed. * For patients with OVF requiring hospital management in the rheumatology department, additional examinations are also carried out with the same anamnestic and clinical elements as for the above-mentioned outpatient management. Nevertheless, intensity of pain may initially prevent certain additional examinations, such as bone densitometry, from being carried out, which in this case are deferred until the patient's state of health allows them. * During outpatient or inpatient journey, depending on results of additional examinations and patient's clinical progress, intervention therapy can be decided and carried out as soon as possible (cementoplasty). Patients for whom cementoplasty is performed are hyperalgia patients with rapid loss of autonomy due to vertebral fracture and a general condition compatible with general anesthesia. Following cementoplasty, patients are seen again in consultation for 1 month for a clinical examination.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
39
As part of this research, 2 additional consultations at 12 months and 24 months will be carried out by one of the rheumatologists in the department. At the consultation 12 months after his inclusion, the patient will have a clinical examination, a quality of life questionnaire to complete and additional images (x-rays). For the 24-month consultation, the patient will have a clinical examination, a quality of life questionnaire to complete and the patient may have an additional X-ray of the spine if there is height loss \> 2 cm and/or pain.
Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph
Paris, Île-de-France Region, France
Assess life quality of patients with osteoporotic VF 12 months after symptomatic vertebral fracture diagnosis: Quality of life questionnaires (QUALEFFO-41)
Quality of life questionnaires (QUALEFFO-41)
Time frame: 1 year
Assess pain related to vertebral fracture at D0, M12 and M24 after diagnosis: Analogical visual scale
Analogical visual scale on the pain and taking painkillers (yes/no)
Time frame: Day 0 - 1 year - 2 years
Assess life quality: Quality of life questionnaires (QUALEFFO-41)
Quality of life questionnaires (QUALEFFO-41)
Time frame: 2 years
Measurement of the walking perimeter
the maximum distance that the person can travel without stopping (in meters)
Time frame: Day 0 - 1 year - 2 years
Number of new osteoporotic fractures (vertebral or nonvertebral)
Fractures that have been confirmed by an imaging examination (X-ray, +- MRI or CT)
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
Number of new fall(s)
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
Number of hospitalizations for all causes
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
Spinal statics
Height in centimeters
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
Management of osteoporosis
prescription completed (yes/no) antiosteoporotic treatment taken (yes/no)
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
Analogical visual scale of patient satisfaction
(scale of 0 to 10) following the information meeting with a nurse on osteoporosis
Time frame: 1 year - 2 years
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