Abstract

Long-term daily administration of oral bisphosphonates has been effective in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis, but the duration, mode and cost of the therapy may sometimes affect patient compliance. In Italy, the bisphosphonate clodronate is also available via the intramuscular (i.m.) route of administration, and the present study was performed to test its efficacy in postmenopausal osteoporosis. Ninety osteoporotic postmenopausal women were enrolled in a randomized, controlled 3 year study. The diet of all patients was adjusted to provide 1200–1300 mg of calcium daily, eventually by administration of supplements. Patients were randomly assigned to no therapy (30 patients) or to receive clodronate 100 mg i.m. either every 2 weeks (30 patients) or 1 week (30 patients). The i.m. injection caused substantial pain at the site of injection, which led to treatment withdrawal in almost 50% of the patients receiving weekly dosing. In control patients, a progressive, slow decline in spine and femoral bone mineral density (BMD), which became statistically significant at the end of the second year of observation, was observed. In the patients given weekly i.m. clodronate, spinal BMD rose by 3.8% (±7.3 SD) within 6 months. A slight, nonsignificant increase was observed thereafter, such that, at the completion of 3 years of observation, the mean gain was 4.5% (±6.3). In the patients treated with injections of 100 mg of clodronate every two weeks the increase in BMD was somewhat lower and slower, becoming significant only at month 24 (2.9 ± 4.6%). In none of the two active groups was the femoral neck BMD changed significantly during the 3 years of the study. A significant increase in trochanter and Ward’s triangle BMD was observed at month 12 only in the patients on the highest dose of clodronate. In both groups treated, the hip BMD changes were significantly different from those observed in control patients. The biochemical markers of bone turnover were suppressed in both clodronate groups. These results indicate that intermittent i.m. clodronate administration can provide clinically relevant benefits to skeletal bone density in osteoporotic postmenopausal women, but the in situ pain may limit its extensive use.

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