Muschitz C, Kocijan R, Baierl A, Dormann R, Feichtinger X, Haschka J, Szivak M, Muschitz G K, Schanda J, Pietschmann P, Resch H, Dimai H P
St. Vincent Hospital Vienna, Medical Department II-Metabolic Bone Diseases Unit, VINFORCE, Academic Teaching Hospital of the Medical University of Vienna, Stumpergasse 13, 1060, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Statistics and Operations Research, The University of Vienna, Oskar-Morgenstern-Platz 1, 1090, Vienna, Austria.
Osteoporos Int. 2017 May;28(5):1609-1618. doi: 10.1007/s00198-017-3925-3. Epub 2017 Jan 30.
This study investigated the implication of a preceding high-trauma fracture on subsequent high- and low-trauma fractures at different skeletal sites in postmenopausal women and similarly aged men at an age range of 54 to 70 years. A preceding high-trauma fracture increases the risk of future low-trauma non-vertebral fractures including hip.
Little is known about the impact of the skeletal fracture site in conjunction with the severity of a past fracture (high- or low-trauma preceding fracture) and its effect on future fracture risk.
Patients with de novo high- and low-trauma fractures admitted to seven large trauma centers across Austria between 2000 and 2012 were stratified into sex and different age groups. Kaplan-Meier estimates, Cox proportional hazards regression models (HR), and likelihood calculations estimated effects of age, sex, and the anatomic region on the probability of a subsequent fracture in the same patient.
Included in the study were 433,499 female and male patients at an age range of 0 to 100 years with 575,772 de novo high- and low-trauma fractures. In the age range of 54-70 years, subsequent fractures were observed in 16% of females and 12.1% of males. A preceding high-trauma fracture was associated with 12.9% of subsequent fractures, thereof 6.5% of high- and 6.4% of low-trauma in origin, usually at the hip, humerus, or pelvis. The highest effect sizes were observed for femur, humerus, and thorax fractures with hazard ratios (HR) of 1.26, 1.18, and 1.14. After splitting into high-trauma preceding and subsequent low-trauma fractures, the femoral neck (HR = 1.59), the female sex (HR = 2.02), and age (HR = 1.03) were discriminators for increased future fracture risk.
Preceding high-trauma fractures increase the risk of future low-trauma non-vertebral fractures including hip. For each patient with a fracture, regardless of the severity of the trauma, osteoporosis should be taken into clinical consideration.
本研究调查了绝经后女性和年龄相仿的男性(年龄范围为54至70岁)先前发生的高创伤性骨折对不同骨骼部位随后发生的高创伤性和低创伤性骨折的影响。先前的高创伤性骨折会增加未来低创伤性非椎体骨折(包括髋部骨折)的风险。
关于骨折部位与既往骨折严重程度(先前骨折为高创伤性或低创伤性)的联合影响及其对未来骨折风险的作用,人们了解甚少。
2000年至2012年间入住奥地利七个大型创伤中心的新发高创伤性和低创伤性骨折患者按性别和不同年龄组进行分层。采用Kaplan-Meier估计法、Cox比例风险回归模型(HR)和似然计算来估计年龄、性别和解剖区域对同一患者随后发生骨折概率的影响。
纳入研究的有年龄在0至100岁的433,499名女性和男性患者,发生了575,772例新发高创伤性和低创伤性骨折。在54至70岁年龄范围内,16%的女性和12.1%的男性发生了随后的骨折。先前的高创伤性骨折与12.9%的随后骨折相关,其中6.5%为高创伤性骨折,6.4%为低创伤性骨折,通常发生在髋部、肱骨或骨盆。股骨、肱骨和胸部骨折的效应量最高,风险比(HR)分别为1.26、1.18和1.14。在分为先前高创伤性骨折和随后低创伤性骨折后,股骨颈(HR = 1.59)、女性性别(HR = 2.02)和年龄(HR = 1.03)是未来骨折风险增加的判别因素。
先前的高创伤性骨折会增加未来低创伤性非椎体骨折(包括髋部骨折)的风险。对于每一位骨折患者,无论创伤严重程度如何,临床都应考虑骨质疏松症。