Department of Medicine III, University-Hospital Jena, Jena, Germany.
Diabet Med. 2011 Jul;28(7):872-5. doi: 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2011.03286.x.
There are conflicting data regarding the risk of osteoporosis in patients with Type 1 diabetes. We investigated an association between diabetes, bone mineral density and prevalent fractures.
A single-centre, cross-sectional study of men and pre-menopausal women with Type 1 diabetes (n = 128) and a matched control group (n = 77) was conducted. The primary outcome measure was bone mineral density and secondary measures were markers of bone metabolism and prevalent fractures.
Hip and total body bone mineral densities were significantly lower in women with diabetes compared with control subjects. In men, no difference in bone mineral density was found. A multivariate regression analysis in women with diabetes revealed higher BMI as the strongest predictor of higher total hip, femoral neck and total body bone mineral density, whereas previous fractures were inversely associated with total hip bone mineral density and C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen with total body bone mineral density. Poor long-term glycaemic control was not associated with low bone mineral density. Fracture frequency was higher in patients with diabetes compared with control subjects (1.64 vs. 0.62 per 100 patient-years; P < 0.05). In a multivariable model, long-term HbA(1c) control was associated with increased clinical fracture prevalence (OR 1.92; 95% CI 1.09-2.75) in those with diabetes.
Type 1 diabetes contributes to low bone mineral density in women. Previous fractures and low BMI were strong predictors of impaired bone mineral density and should therefore be considered in risk estimation. Fractures are more frequent in Type 1 diabetes. Long-term hyperglycaemia may account for impaired bone strength, independently from bone mineral density.
关于 1 型糖尿病患者骨质疏松症的风险存在相互矛盾的数据。我们研究了糖尿病、骨密度和骨折患病率之间的关系。
对 128 名 1 型糖尿病(T1DM)男性和绝经前女性患者(n = 128)和 77 名匹配对照组进行了单中心、横断面研究。主要观察指标为骨密度,次要观察指标为骨代谢标志物和骨折患病率。
与对照组相比,糖尿病女性的髋部和全身骨密度明显较低。在男性中,骨密度没有差异。对糖尿病女性的多元回归分析显示,较高的 BMI 是全髋、股骨颈和全身骨密度较高的最强预测因素,而既往骨折与全髋骨密度呈负相关,I 型胶原 C 端肽与全身骨密度呈负相关。长期血糖控制不佳与骨密度降低无关。与对照组相比,糖尿病患者的骨折频率更高(1.64 比 0.62 每 100 患者年;P < 0.05)。在多变量模型中,长期 HbA1c 控制与糖尿病患者临床骨折患病率增加相关(OR 1.92;95%CI 1.09-2.75)。
1 型糖尿病导致女性骨密度降低。既往骨折和低 BMI 是骨密度受损的强预测因素,因此应在风险评估中考虑。1 型糖尿病骨折更常见。长期高血糖可能导致骨强度受损,独立于骨密度。