AMBULATORY CARE
Findings Cast Doubt on Association of Benzodiazepines with Hip Fractures
Policies Limiting Use of the Sedatives Should Be Reexamined
For more than 15 years, benzodiazepines—often prescribed
for anxiety, sleep, and seizure disorders—have been linked to hip fractures
among the elderly as a result of falls. These breaks may cause disability
and death, particularly for women. Concern about misuse of the sedatives
and their potential for causing injury has led state and national policymakers
to devise regulations limiting their use even though the evidence for such
policies has never been firm. Since January 2006, for example, benzodiazepines
have been excluded from coverage through the Medicare Part D drug benefit.

Photo by Graham Ramsay
A recent study by (from left) Anita Wagner, Stephen Soumerai, Dennis Ross-Degnan, Fang Zhang, and colleagues found no link between benzodiazepine use and risk of hip fractures in the elderly and therefore no basis for policies that limit doctors from prescribing the drugs.
A study in the Jan. 16 Annals of Internal Medicine reports
that these restrictive policies should now be reexamined since the data show
that, among Medicaid patients age 65 and older, decreasing benzodiazepine
use had no effect on the risk for hip fractures.
Steady States
The researchers, including first author Anita Wagner and Stephen Soumerai,
compared hip fracture rates in New York before and after the 1989 start
of a statewide law requiring physicians to use triplicate forms when prescribing
benzodiazepines. The policy resulted in an immediate and sustained 55 percent
drop in benzodiazepine use overall. The investigators also compared the
New York hip fracture rates with concurrent rates in New Jersey, a neighboring,
demographically similar state that does not restrict prescribing and use
of benzodiazepines. The hip fracture rates did not decline in either state.
“The policy drastically decreased use of benzodiazepines
in New York, and we did not see any decline in hip fracture rates compared
to New Jersey; in fact, we seem to see an increase in New York over New Jersey,” said
Wagner, an HMS assistant professor of ambulatory care and prevention at Harvard
Pilgrim Health Care.
Weak Links
There are several possible explanations for the results. Most plausible are
weaknesses in earlier study design that may explain why previous work identified
a relationship between the medications and hip fractures. It is difficult
for researchers to disentangle the effects of the drugs from other causes.
“The challenge of disentangling the effects of benzodiazepines from other causes of hip fractures in the elderly is especially concerning when study results are used to guide policies that restrict access to medicines for huge populations.”
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“There are many reasons why elderly patients break their
hips, and most studies cannot fully examine those,” said Wagner. “Our
study had the best possible design, looking at whether a policy that drastically
decreased the use of the drugs also decreased hip fractures in a large stable
population. We did not find that. It is possible that previous studies attributed
hip fractures to benzodiazepines that were really due to other factors that
we cannot easily measure, such as how much a patient smokes and how dense
his or her bones are. Many elderly who use the drugs have other medical conditions
linked to falls and hip fractures, such as senile dementia.”
“The challenge of disentangling the effects of benzodiazepines
from other causes of hip fractures in the elderly is especially concerning
when study results are used to guide policies that restrict access to medicines
for huge populations,” said Soumerai, senior author of the study and
an HMS professor of ambulatory care and prevention.
The findings are particularly relevant now, since the new Medicare
drug benefit excludes coverage of benzodiazepines even for patients who could
benefit from their use, such as those with bipolar disorder or seizures.
The investigators are currently funded by the National Institute on Aging
to monitor the impact of the Medicare drug benefit, and they believe the
new data may shed additional light on how policies that exclude coverage
for benzodiazepines may or may not affect the rate of hip fractures among
older persons.
—Ann Plasso and Leah Gourley
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