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ARTICLE

Slow-Release Sodium Fluoride in the Management of Postmenopausal Osteoporosis

A Randomized Controlled Trial

right arrow Charles Y. C. Pak; Khashayar Sakhaee; Veronica Piziak; Roy D. Peterson; Neil A. Breslau; Peggy Boyd; John R. Poindexter; Jean Herzog; Ann Heard-Sakhaee; Sharon Haynes; Beverley Adams-Huet; and Joan S. Reisch

15 April 1994 | Volume 120 Issue 8 | Pages 625-632

Objective: To test whether intermittent treatment with slow-release sodium fluoride and continuous calcium citrate supplementation inhibits vertebral fractures without causing fluoride complications.

Design: A placebo-controlled, randomized trial.

Setting: Outpatient setting of specialty clinics in Dallas and Temple, Texas.

Interventions: Slow-release sodium fluoride (25 mg twice daily) in repeated 14-month cycles (12 months on treatment followed by 2 months off treatment) compared with placebo. Both groups took calcium citrate (400 mg calcium twice daily) continuously.

Patients: 110 patients with postmenopausal osteoporosis were randomly assigned to two groups. In the slow-release sodium fluoride group, 48 of 54 patients completed more than 1 cycle of treatment (mean, 2.44 cycles/patient), whereas 51 of 56 patients in the placebo group completed at least 1 cycle (mean, 2.14 cycles/patient) in this interim analysis.

Measurements: Vertebral fracture rate and lumbar bone mineral content. Vertebral fractures were quantified from yearly radiographs. Bone mass was determined annually by densitometry.

Results: In the sodium fluoride group, the mean L2 to L4 bone mineral content increased by 4% to 6% in each cycle and the mean femoral neck bone density increased by 4.1% and 2.1% during the first two cycles, but the radial bone density did not change. The placebo group showed no statistical change in bone mass at any site. Compared with the placebo group, the sodium fluoride group had a lower individual new vertebral fracture rate (0.057/patient cycle compared with 0.204/patient cycle, P = 0.017), a higher fracture-free rate (83.3% compared with 64.7%, P = 0.042), and a lower group fracture rate (0.085/patient cycle compared with 0.239/patient cycle, P = 0.006). The side-effect profile was similar for the two groups; no patient developed microfractures, hip fractures, or blood loss anemia.

Conclusions: Intermittent slow-release sodium fluoride plus continuous calcium citrate, administered for about 2.5 years, inhibits new vertebral fractures, increases the mean spinal bone mass without decreasing the radial shaft bone density, and is safe to use.

Author and Article Information
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From the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas.
Requests for Reprints: Charles Y.C. Pak, MD, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75235-8885.
Grant Support: In part by grants R01AR-16061 and M01-RR00633 from the United States Public Health Service and by institutional funds.




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