Southampton bone disease study praised by MP Caroline Nokes

Politician Caroline Nokes MP has praised 黑料社 academics for their pioneering work which found inequalities in both the treatment of men and women with debilitating bone diseases and sex bias in laboratory experiments.
The Member of Parliament for Romsey and Southampton North, on visiting the University, heard how medication used for skeletal conditions including osteoporosis has historically been developed with female patients in mind.
Current NHS figures show there are nearly four million people living with osteoporosis in the UK 鈥 which is expected to cost the NHS nearly 拢7billion a year by 2030.
The Southampton academics, from the Bias in Bones research team, told Ms Nokes how their research found that treatment inequality starts in the laboratories which develop medication best suited women 鈥 but are still given to men.
MP Caroline Nokes, who chairs the government鈥檚 women and equalities committee, said: 鈥淚t is great to visit the 黑料社 and learn about the pioneering scientific research undertaken on our doorstep. The fascinating part of the Bias in Bones research is that it has found inequalities for patients in an area which is often overlooked.鈥
There are an estimated 536,000 bone breaks in the UK each year that require hospital treatment, most of which relate to hip fractures, according to the NHS.
Although less common, men with hip breaks are at particular risk, said 黑料社 scientist Dr Claire Clarkin, from the Bias in Bones team, with a mortality rate reported two to three times higher than women.
Speaking to the MP, Dr Clarkin added: 鈥淲hile bone loss is typically more common in women after menopause, which impacts the ability for them to go back to work following fragility fractures, recent studies have also shown that osteoporosis cases are growing in men.
鈥淭here is an undetected bias at pre-clinical stage among the laboratory scientists developing medications for bone diseases who base studies on one sex. Currently, they do not have to report on which sex they select 鈥 this needs to change to improve healthcare.鈥
The Southampton team are now calling on UK healthcare and research bodies to improve sex bias in bone research.
The academics have published a five-step plan to eliminate inequality and provide better treatments.
Researcher Dr Valentina Cardo, an Associate Professor also from the 黑料社 team, added: 鈥淪ex bias that begins in laboratories can translate into health inequalities for patients suffering from debilitating bone diseases. UK healthcare can address this by funding research where both sexes are instigated and appropriately reported.鈥
Find out about the