The quick answer without knowing what the doctor has to say: I never had side effects or adverse reactions to any of them. My observations at this time will be limited to administration and what happened (in the vaguest terms).
Boniva: The drug was delivered to my house. Once received, I went to my PCP on a quarterly schedule to have it injected. It did what it was supposed to do.
Forteo: I gave myself a daily injection and the FDA has limited its use to a maximum of two years. I had good results with this. It has to be kept refrigerated. My doctor gave me the "user kit" which was an insulated bag smaller than a kid's lunch bag. It was supposed to be given at roughly the same time of day. It came with an ice pack if I was going for a day trip. We stayed at a fancy-smancy hotel that lent us a small dorm like fridge for the duration of the stay.
Then I did no prescription drugs for two years, which in hind-sight wasn't my best decision. It was done with purpose of giving my body a break. With the rapid increase of bone disintegration and my family history, two years was one too many.
Prolia: Easiest administration. One simple injection in the doctor's office, every six months. Yes, I have to go to Nashville to see him, yet that is an opportunity for Big City Shopping and a wider variety of dining. The only reason I'm concerned about the drastic change from -11.3 to a 4.7 is that there is a normal range with a low threshold and a high threshold. Am I over the high-end of the range? I don't know and that's what I hope to learn on the 14th.
I still believe that everyone has to make their own decision, insurance limitations not withstanding. Now I have to decide how to deal with several options for treating my toenail fungus.