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Practice Guideline
. 2025 May 19;222(9):472-480.
doi: 10.5694/mja2.52637. Epub 2025 Mar 25.

2024 Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and Healthy Bones Australia guideline for osteoporosis management and fracture prevention in postmenopausal women and men over 50 years of age

Affiliations
Practice Guideline

2024 Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and Healthy Bones Australia guideline for osteoporosis management and fracture prevention in postmenopausal women and men over 50 years of age

Peter Wong et al. Med J Aust. .

Abstract

Introduction: This updated guideline replaces the previous Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and Osteoporosis Australia (now, Healthy Bones Australia) guideline from 2017. The accumulation of high quality evidence supporting improvements in clinical practice over the past five years, need for expert consensus and opinion, and new developments in pharmacological management of osteoporosis, especially the role of osteoanabolic therapies, prompted this update. The aim was to provide clear, evidence-based recommendations to assist Australian general practitioners in managing patients over 50 years of age with poor bone health. However, it is useful for any health care professional caring for people with poor bone health and for health administrators and bureaucrats responsible for resource provision and allocation.

Main recommendations: Earlier recognition of poor bone health using clinical risk factors, and use of an absolute fracture risk assessment tool, particularly FRAX (https://fraxplus.org/), is encouraged. Widespread population-based osteoporosis screening is not recommended in Australia due to lack of supporting evidence. It is important to recognise patients with "imminent" or "very high" fracture risk, as this is a group in whom to consider early osteoanabolic therapy. Calcium and vitamin D supplementation are more effective in reducing fracture risk when given to individuals who have calcium and vitamin D deficiency (not to healthy non-institutionalised individuals). CHANGES IN ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT AS A RESULT OF THE GUIDELINE: This guideline provides recommendations for the use of fracture risk assessment tools, particularly FRAX, for risk stratification, addresses the risk of rebound vertebral fracture following denosumab cessation, discusses removal of strontium as a therapy, clarifies "imminent" or "very high" fracture risk in patients and highlights the importance of calcium and vitamin D status, and the early use of osteoanabolic therapies. The full guideline is freely available at https://www.racgp.org.au/clinical-resources/clinical-guidelines/key-racgp-guidelines/view-all-racgp-guidelines/osteoporosis/executive-summary.

Keywords: Fractures; General practice; Guidelines as topic; Osteoporosis; bone.

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Conflict of interest statement

Consultation and endorsement by the

Due to resource and time restrictions, consultation was focused on Healthy Bones Australia, stakeholders and review by the intended guideline users, namely general practitioners. The Guideline Review Committee was particularly aware of the importance of clear and pragmatic advice for busy general practitioners in everyday clinical practice. This guide was reviewed by general practice subject matter experts (DE, MR, JT) on the Guideline Review Committee and the RACGP's Expert Committee – Quality Care and endorsed by the RACGP Board.

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