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"Bartley, Joan"
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Clinical practice guideline for management of osteoporosis and fracture prevention in Canada: 2023 update
by
Cadarette, Suzanne M.
,
Jaglal, Susan B.
,
Dunn, Sheila
in
Aged
,
Aged patients
,
Biotechnology industry
2023
In Canada, more than 2 million people live with osteoporosis, a disease that increases the risk for fractures, which result in excess mortality and morbidity, decreased quality of life and loss of autonomy. This guideline update is intended to assist Canadian health care professionals in the delivery of care to optimize skeletal health and prevent fractures in postmenopausal females and in males aged 50 years and older.
This guideline is an update of the 2010 Osteoporosis Canada clinical practice guideline on the diagnosis and management of osteoporosis in Canada. We followed the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) framework and quality assurance as per Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE II) quality and reporting standards. Primary care physicians and patient partners were represented at all levels of the guideline committees and groups, and participated throughout the entire process to ensure relevance to target users. The process for managing competing interests was developed before and continued throughout the guideline development, informed by the Guideline International Network principles. We considered benefits and harms, patient values and preferences, resources, equity, acceptability and feasibility when developing recommendations; the strength of each recommendation was assigned according to the GRADE framework.
The 25 recommendations and 10 good practice statements are grouped under the sections of exercise, nutrition, fracture risk assessment and treatment initiation, pharmacologic interventions, duration and sequence of therapy, and monitoring. The management of osteoporosis should be guided by the patient’s risk of fracture, based on clinical assessment and using a validated fracture risk assessment tool. Exercise, nutrition and pharmacotherapy are key elements of the management strategy for fracture prevention and should be individualized.
The aim of this guideline is to empower health care professionals and patients to have meaningful discussions on the importance of skeletal health and fracture risk throughout older adulthood. Identification and appropriate management of skeletal fragility can reduce fractures, and preserve mobility, autonomy and quality of life.
Journal Article
Actualisation 2023 des lignes directrices de pratique clinique pour la prise en charge de l’ostéoporose et la prévention des fractures au Canada
by
Cadarette, Suzanne M.
,
Jaglal, Susan B.
,
Dunn, Sheila
in
Biotechnology industry
,
Care and treatment
,
Denosumab
2023
Au Canada, plus de 2 millions de personnes vivent avec l’ostéoporose, une maladie qui accroît le risque de fracture, ce qui fait augmenter la morbidité et la mortalité, et entraîne une perte de qualité de vie et d’autonomie. La présente actualisation des lignes directrices vise à accompagner les professionnelles et professionnels de la santé au Canada dans la prestation de soins visant à optimiser la santé osseuse et à prévenir les fractures chez les femmes ménopausées et les hommes de 50 ans et plus.
Le présent document fournit une actualisation des lignes directrices de pratique clinique de 2010 d’Ostéoporose Canada sur le diagnostic et la prise en charge de l’ostéoporose au pays. Nous avons utilisé l’approche GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) et effectué l’assurance de la qualité conformément aux normes de qualité et de présentation des rapports de la grille AGREE II (Appraisal of Guidelines for Research & Evaluation). Les médecins de premier recours et les patientes et patients partenaires ont été représentés à tous les niveaux des comités et des groupes ayant participé à l’élaboration des lignes directrices, et ont participé à toutes les étapes du processus pour garantir la pertinence des informations pour les futurs utilisateurs et utilisatrices. Le processus de gestion des intérêts concurrents a été entamé avant l’élaboration des lignes directrices et s’est poursuivi sur toute sa durée, selon les principes du Réseau international en matière de lignes directrices. Dans la formulation des recommandations, nous avons tenu compte des avantages et des risques, des valeurs et préférences de la patientèle, des ressources, de l’équité, de l’acceptabilité et de la faisabilité; la force de chacune des recommandations a été déterminée en fonction du cadre GRADE.
Les 25 recommandations et les 10 énoncés de bonne pratique sont répartis en sections : activité physique, alimentation, évaluation du risque de fracture, instauration du traitement, interventions pharmacologiques, durée et séquence du traitement, et monitorage. La prise en charge de l’ostéoporose devrait se fonder sur le risque de fracture, établi au moyen d’une évaluation clinique réalisée avec un outil d’évaluation du risque de fracture validé. L’activité physique, l’alimentation et la pharmacothérapie sont des éléments essentiels à la stratégie de prévention des fractures, qui devraient être personnalisés.
Les présentes lignes directrices ont pour but d’outiller les professionnelles et professionnels de la santé et la patientèle afin qu’ensemble ils puissent parler de l’importance de la santé osseuse et du risque de fracture tout au long de la vie adulte avancée. La détection et la prise en charge efficace de la fragilité osseuse peuvent contribuer à réduire les fractures et à préserver la mobilité, l’autonomie et la qualité de vie.
Journal Article
Physical Activity and Acute Care Utilization in Older Adults Living with Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia in the Upper Midwest of the United States
2024
Background People living with dementia have high rates of emergency department (ED) use and hospitalizations. Identifying factors that influence acute care utilization is important. We examined the influence of physical activity levels on risk of hospitalization and emergency department (ED) use in a population of older people living with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia. Methods We included people with a diagnosis of MCI or dementia followed in Community Internal Medicine at Mayo Clinic, age 55 years and older, who had a clinic visit between June 1, 2019 and June 30, 2021 and had completed a social determinants of health questionnaire about physical activity levels. Physical activity was classified based on responses to questions about time spent exercising per week and rated as sufficiently active (≥150 minutes per week), insufficiently active (10‐140 minutes) or physically inactive (0 minutes). The risk of hospitalization and ED visits across physical activity levels was examined using quasi‐Poisson regression and presented as rate ratios (95% confidence interval (CI)), with adjustment for demographics, Charlson Comorbidity Index, marital status, living arrangement and body mass index. Results A total of 3090 persons living with MCI (n = 1308) or dementia (n = 1782) were included. People who were physically inactive were more likely to be older, female, not married, obese, have higher comorbid burden and a dementia diagnosis (p<0.001). Hospitalization and ED visit rates in those who were physically inactive were approximately double the rates for the sufficiently active group (p<0.001). Compared with those who were sufficiently active, people who were physically inactive had a significantly higher risk of hospitalization (rate ratio 1.73, 95% CI 1.30‐2.31) and ED visits (rate ratio 1.59, 95% CI 1.26‐2.01). Conclusions Physical inactivity in older people living with MCI or dementia is associated with an increased risk of ED visits and hospitalization. Targeted physical activity interventions could potentially impact on acute care utilization in this population. Our findings emphasize an area for public health promotion in people living with MCI or dementia.
Journal Article
Inference of symbiotic adaptations in nature using experimental evolution
by
Larsen, Tyler
,
Queller, David C.
,
Bartley, Anthony
in
Adaptation
,
Amoeba
,
Artificial environments
2021
Microbes must adapt to the presence of other species, but it can be difficult to recreate the natural context for these interactions in the laboratory. We describe a method for inferring the existence of symbiotic adaptations by experimentally evolving microbes that would normally interact in an artificial environment without access to other species. By looking for changes in the fitness effects microbes adapted to isolation have on their partners, we can infer the existence of ancestral adaptations that were lost during experimental evolution. The direction and magnitude of trait changes can offer useful insight as to whether the microbes have historically been selected to help or harm one another in nature. We apply our method to the complex symbiosis between the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and two intracellular bacterial endosymbionts, Paraburkholderia agricolaris and Paraburkholderia hayleyella. Our results suggest P. hayleyella—but not P. agricolaris—has generally been selected to attenuate its virulence in nature, and that D. discoideum has evolved to antagonistically limit the growth of Paraburkholderia. The approach demonstrated here can be a powerful tool for studying adaptations in microbes, particularly when the specific natural context in which the adaptations evolved is unknown or hard to reproduce.
Journal Article
Social Isolation and Healthcare Utilization in Older Adults Living With Dementia and Mild Cognitive Impairment in the United States
by
Bartley, Mairead M
,
St. Sauver, Jennifer L
,
Khera, Nandita
in
Aged
,
Cognitive ability
,
Dementia
2024
Abstract
Background and Objectives
Social isolation is commonly experienced by older people and is associated with adverse health outcomes. Little is known about the influence of social isolation on the risk of acute care utilization among people living with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia. Our objective was to investigate the impact of social isolation on the risk of death, hospitalization, and emergency department (ED) use among people living with MCI or dementia who are followed in our Community Internal Medicine practice at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
Research Design and Methods
We included people living with MCI or dementia, 55 years and older, who had a clinic visit between June 1, 2019, and June 30, 2021, and who had completed questions about social connections. The risk of death, hospitalization, and ED use was examined by levels of social connection (socially isolated, moderately isolated, moderately integrated, or socially integrated).
Results
Of 2,320 people included (1,010 with MCI and 1,310 with dementia), 455 (19.6%) were classified as socially isolated and 591 (25.5%) were moderately isolated. Compared with those who were socially integrated, people who were socially isolated were at higher risk of death, hospitalization, and ED visits (p < .001).
Discussion and Implications
Social isolation is associated with an increased risk of acute health care utilization and death in people living with MCI or dementia. Interventions to address social isolation in this population are needed.
Journal Article
Experimental evolution of symbiotic microbes without their partners can imply the presence of cooperative or antagonistic adaptations
2023
Microbes adapt to the presence of other species, but the fitness consequences of specific interactions are difficult to study in their natural context. We experimentally evolved symbiotic microbes in an artificial environment without access to the partners with whom they interact in nature. As organisms will tend to lose adaptations that they do not need due to drift or pleiotropic tradeoffs, we expect normally symbiotic microbes evolved in isolation to lose adaptations to help or harm their natural partners. The direction and magnitude of such changes can suggest whether the microbes had historically been selected to help or harm one another. We apply this method to the symbiosis between the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and three intracellular bacterial endosymbionts, Paraburkholderia agricolaris, P. hayleyella, and P. bonniea. A minority of strains of Paraburkholderia and D. discoideum evolved differences in their effects on one another’s fitnesses, implying the existence of adaptations to one another that were lost when no longer relevant. Our results suggest that the degree to which D. discoideum and Paraburkholderia have adapted to help or harm one another can differ substantially between strains within each species, with some strains appearing to have a historically adversarial relationship, some strains a more benign relationship, and many strains no clear adaptations to one another at all. Our results underscore the complexity of microbial interactions in nature and suggest experimental evolution under relaxed selection is a potentially useful approach for studying adaptation in microbes.