van der Keylen P, Zeschick N, Schlenz A, Kühlein T (2022)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2022
Book Volume: 17
Article Number: e0272985
Journal Issue: 8 August
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272985
Background Patient decisions to take preventative treatments for osteoporosis depend on their perceptions of fracture risk, medication effect sizes (ES) of benefits and harms. However, physicians and lay persons may have differing perceptions of risks and medication efficacy. Both tend to overestimate medication benefits. This study surveyed at what risk physicians would prescribe and lay persons would be willing to take bisphosphonates, the minimum ES both groups do demand and the physicians estimates of the actual benefit of bisphosphonates. Design Cross-sectional online questionnaire survey. Methods Respondents were confronted with a case vignette with an osteoporotic patient (10-year femoral fracture risk: 32%). They were asked at what threshold of 10-year-risk of femoral neck fracture they would prescribe or take a drug. They were asked for the minimum ES (absolute risk reduction, ARR) they demand from bisphosphonates to prescribe or take them. Physicians were asked to provide their estimate of the actual ARR of bisphosphonates. Results 114 physicians and 140 lay persons answered (convenience sample/snowball distribution). The 10-year-risk threshold of lay persons (Mdn
APA:
van der Keylen, P., Zeschick, N., Schlenz, A., & Kühlein, T. (2022). Treatment thresholds and minimal clinically important effect sizes of antiosteoporotic medication–Survey among physicians and lay persons in Germany. PLoS ONE, 17(8 August). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272985
MLA:
van der Keylen, Piet, et al. "Treatment thresholds and minimal clinically important effect sizes of antiosteoporotic medication–Survey among physicians and lay persons in Germany." PLoS ONE 17.8 August (2022).
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