Back pain in older men: understanding the specific causes and risks for men over 60
Back pain in a man over 60 that hasn’t been properly investigated?
The myBackPain assessment uses a structured differential approach specifically calibrated for older adults — ensuring the conditions that become more common with age are screened for systematically. Results in minutes.
Constant back pain not relieved by any position • Unexplained weight loss • Fever or feeling systemically unwell • Rapidly worsening leg weakness, bladder or bowel changes — go to A&E • Back pain following a fall or minor trauma • Known cancer history with any new back pain • Urinary symptoms alongside back pain — see your GP this week.
Why back pain is different in men over 60
Three important changes occur as men age that alter the clinical significance of back pain. The baseline risk of serious conditions increases — cancer, vascular disease, osteoporosis, and metabolic bone disease all become more common with age. Multiple conditions frequently coexist — spinal stenosis, facet arthritis, disc degeneration, and hip OA may all be present simultaneously. And the natural history of back pain changes — the self-limiting, rapid recovery typical of younger mechanical back pain is less reliable in older adults.
The differential diagnosis in men over 60
What to do
Any man over 60 with back pain that is persistent, constant, not responding to conservative management, or associated with systemic features should have a thorough assessment that considers the full differential. This should include appropriate blood tests (PSA, inflammatory markers, ALP, calcium, full blood count), imaging guided by clinical findings, and consideration of referral where needed.
The majority of back pain in men over 60 is still mechanical and manageable conservatively. But the minority that is not mechanical is significantly more common than in younger adults — and it matters to identify it promptly.
Back pain as a man over 60 — has it been properly assessed?
The myBackPain assessment uses a structured differential approach for older adults, screening for the conditions that become more common with age.