Medical Department II - The VINFORCE Study Group, St. Vincent Hospital, Vienna, Austria.
Wien Klin Wochenschr. 2009;121(15-16):528-36. doi: 10.1007/s00508-009-1216-5.
The objective of our cross-sectional, not population-based, observational study was to determine the prevalence of patients with osteopenia in relation to bone mineral density (BMD) and vertebral fractures and to identify risk factors for vertebral fractures above the osteoporotic BMD T-score threshold of -2.5. A total of 698 consecutive hospitalized and ambulatory white patients with T-scores between -1.0 and -2.5 were investigated in an academic medical center in Austria between January 2005 and June 2006. Measurements of BMD (T-score at spine and hip) by DXA, spinal X-ray, laboratory data of bone metabolism and vitamin D, and sex-specific data were assessed. A multivariate general linear model was used to calculate vertebral and non-vertebral fractures, age, BMI and lowest T-score at measured anatomic sites. Overall, 218 patients (31.2%) with a mean age of 72.2 years and mean BMI of 26.0 presented with vertebral fractures; in comparison, patients with non-vertebral fractures had a mean age of 62.6 years and BMI 24.6, and patients without fractures had a mean age of 61.3 years and BMI 24.0 (P < 0.001). Serum markers of bone resorption and formation had no influence on fracture occurrence but 73% of the patients had vitamin D deficiency (25.2 +/- 9.8 ng/ml). The lowest T-score in all fracture patients was found at the femoral neck. At this site 64.3% patients with vertebral fractures had a T-score within the range -1.0 to -2.0 (95% CI 57.3-70.8). The prevalence of vertebral fractures increased stepwise (P < 0.05) and at T-scores between -1.5 and -2.0 the increase was linear. We conclude that a significant proportion of non-osteoporotic elderly men and women with mean age 72 years, BMI 26.0 and a threshold T-score above -2.0 are susceptible to osteoporotic vertebral fractures. These patients are not adequately detected by BMD measurements based on WHO thresholds. Early assessment, prior to their first fracture, is important for identifying individuals with clinical risk factors.
我们的这项横断面、非基于人群的观察性研究的目的是确定与骨密度(BMD)和椎体骨折相关的骨质疏松症患者的患病率,并确定骨质疏松症 BMD T 评分阈值为-2.5 以上的椎体骨折的危险因素。2005 年 1 月至 2006 年 6 月,在奥地利的一家学术医疗中心,对 698 名连续住院和门诊的 T 评分在-1.0 至-2.5 之间的白人患者进行了调查。通过 DXA、脊柱 X 射线、骨代谢和维生素 D 的实验室数据以及特定于性别的数据评估了 BMD(脊柱和髋部 T 评分)。使用多元线性模型计算椎体和非椎体骨折、年龄、BMI 和测量解剖部位的最低 T 评分。总的来说,218 名(31.2%)平均年龄为 72.2 岁、平均 BMI 为 26.0 的患者出现了椎体骨折;相比之下,非椎体骨折患者的平均年龄为 62.6 岁、BMI 为 24.6,无骨折患者的平均年龄为 61.3 岁、BMI 为 24.0(P<0.001)。骨吸收和形成的血清标志物对骨折发生没有影响,但 73%的患者存在维生素 D 缺乏症(25.2±9.8ng/ml)。所有骨折患者的最低 T 评分均在股骨颈处发现。在此部位,64.3%的椎体骨折患者 T 评分在-1.0 至-2.0 范围内(95%CI57.3-70.8)。椎体骨折的患病率呈阶梯式增加(P<0.05),在-1.5 至-2.0 的 T 评分之间呈线性增加。我们的结论是,相当一部分平均年龄为 72 岁、BMI 为 26.0、阈值 T 评分高于-2.0 的非骨质疏松老年男女易患骨质疏松性椎体骨折。这些患者不能通过基于 WHO 阈值的 BMD 测量充分检测到。在首次骨折之前,早期评估对于识别具有临床危险因素的个体非常重要。