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Aclasta and Back Pain

This page shows results related to Aclasta and Back Pain from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (AERS).

Click here to learn about all Aclasta adverse events.

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Aclasta and Back Pain

Age

>60 Years
104
50-59 Years
28
40-49 Years
6

Gender

Male: 12%
Female: 85%
Gender Unknown: 3%

Outcome

What were the most common outcomes of those reporting Back Pain?

Other
142
Hospitalization
50
Disability
11
Life Threatening
7
Death
5

Reporter

Who most commonly reported Back Pain?

Physician
70
Consumer
62
Other
10
Pharmacist
1

Therapy

Of those reporting Back Pain, why were they taking Aclasta?

Osteoporosis
125
Osteoporosis Postmenopausal
5
Spinal Fracture
4
Bone Disorder
2
Osteoporosis Prophylaxis
1

Other Medications

Which medications reported to the FDA are most commonly associated with Back Pain?

Fosamax
6015
Zometa
4129
Vioxx
3933
Forteo
3693
Enbrel
2705
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Aredia
2518
Humira
2510
Tysabri
2103
Avonex
1944
Accutane
1807
Remicade
1324
Mirena
1268
Seroquel
1192
Boniva
940
Lipitor
938
Definity
916
Crestor
868
Yaz
828
Lyrica
780
Yasmin
761
Sandostatin Lar
720
Fosamax Plus D
707
Byetta
690
Chantix
689
Alendronate Sodium
674
Oxycontin
633
Digoxin
633
Aleve (caplet)
569
Rebif
550
Soliris
542
Revlimid
541
Exjade
532
Gilenya
526
Reclast
524
Prolia
518
Duragesic-100
518
Nexium
515
Cialis
510
Nuvaring
470
Actonel
460
Celebrex
443
Neurontin
426
Pegasys
381
Suboxone
348
Levaquin
330
Simcor
329
Niaspan
316
Betaseron
294
Peg-intron
292
Ribavirin
290
Arimidex
287

Is the adverse drug reaction you’re experiencing actually due to the drug you took?

The Naranjo Scale is a questionnaire for determining the likelihood of whether an adverse drug reaction is actually due to the drug or caused by other factors. Probability is assigned via a score termed definite, probable, possible or doubtful.*

YESNOUNKOWN
Are there previous conclusive reports on this reaction?
Did the adverse event appear after the suspected drug was administered?
Did the adverse reaction improve when the drug was discontinued or a specific antagonist was administered?
Did the adverse reaction reappear when the drug was readministered?
Are there alternative causes (other than the drug) that could on their own have caused the reaction?
Did the reaction reappear when a placebo was given?
Was the drug detected in the blood (or other fluids) in concentrations known to be toxic?
Was the reaction more severe when the dose was increased, or less severe when the dose was decreased?
Did the patient have a similar reaction to the same or similar drugs in any previous exposure?
Was the adverse event confirmed by any objective evidence?
Probability of an Adverse Event
Doubtful
Possible
Probable
Definite

*Naranjo, et al. "A method for estimating the probability of adverse drug reactions." Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1981 Aug;30(2):239-45.

To learn more about all adverse events for Aclasta, view the complete Aclasta adverse event report.

Scientific Publications on Back Pain

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