Magallares Berta, Malouf Jorge, Codes-Méndez Helena, Park Hye Sang, Betancourt Jocelyn, Fraga Gloria, Quesada-Masachs Estefanía, López-Corbeto Mireia, Torrent Montserrat, Marín Ana, Herrera Silvia, Gich Ignasi, Boronat Susana, Casademont Jordi, Corominas Hector, Cerdá Dacia
Department of Rheumatology, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain.
Department of Rheumatology, Universitari Dexeus-Grupo Quirón Salud Hospital, Barcelona, Spain.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2025 Apr 9;16:1587382. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1587382. eCollection 2025.
The International Society for Clinical Densitometry recommends adjusting the bone mineral density (BMD) Z-score in children with short stature or growth delay. However, it is not clear whether height-for-age Z-score (HAZ) adjustment is required in all children. The aim of this study was to determine whether HAZ adjustment is necessary by examining variability in unadjusted and adjusted Z-scores for the main regions of interest in a large pediatric cohort.
We evaluated 103 patients ≤ 20 years of age who underwent lumbar spine and whole-body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) at our tertiary care hospital from 2016 to 2018. The formula proposed by Zemel was used to calculate the HAZ.
A total of 103 participants were included (54 females; 52.4%). The mean age was 9.8 years. Height percentiles were ≤ 3 or ≥ 97 in seven (6.8%) and five (4.9%) patients. Diagnostic criteria for low bone mineral density (LBMD; BMD Z-score ≤ -2) were met in 8 lumbar spine scans and 10 whole-body scans. After HAZ adjustment, the prevalence of LBMD decreased from 8.2% (n=8) to 6.4% (n=6) in the lumbar spine scans and from 10.5% (n=10) to 7.2% (n=8) in the whole-body scans. Agreement between the adjusted and non-adjusted HAZ data was 0.498 for the lumbar spine and 0.557 for the whole body. The diagnostic discrepancy rate for LBMD diagnosis was 7%. After HAZ adjustment, 5% patients no longer met LBMD criteria while conversely 2% met LBMD criteria only after adjustment.
The high diagnostic discrepancy rate (7%) for LBMN in this unselected pediatric cohort underscores the value of performing HAZ adjustment of Z-scores to improve diagnostic accuracy. This divergence between adjusted and unadjusted Z-scores suggests that all pediatric patients, not only those with short stature or growth retardation, may benefit from densitometric size adjustment. This is especially true in individuals whose stature is at the upper end of the range, where size may obscure a diagnosis of LBMD.
国际临床骨密度测量学会建议对身材矮小或生长迟缓儿童的骨矿物质密度(BMD)Z评分进行调整。然而,目前尚不清楚是否所有儿童都需要进行年龄别身高Z评分(HAZ)调整。本研究的目的是通过检查一个大型儿科队列中主要感兴趣区域未经调整和调整后的Z评分的变异性,来确定是否需要进行HAZ调整。
我们评估了2016年至2018年在我们三级医疗中心接受腰椎和全身双能X线吸收法(DXA)检查的103例年龄≤20岁的患者。使用Zemel提出的公式计算HAZ。
共纳入103名参与者(54名女性;52.4%)。平均年龄为9.8岁。7名(6.8%)和5名(4.9%)患者的身高百分位数≤3或≥97。8例腰椎扫描和10例全身扫描符合低骨矿物质密度(LBMD;BMD Z评分≤-2)的诊断标准。HAZ调整后,腰椎扫描中LBMD的患病率从8.2%(n = 8)降至6.4%(n = 6),全身扫描中从10.5%(n = 10)降至7.2%(n = 8)。腰椎调整后和未调整的HAZ数据之间的一致性为0.498,全身为0.557。LBMD诊断的诊断差异率为7%。HAZ调整后,5%的患者不再符合LBMD标准,而相反,2%的患者仅在调整后才符合LBMD标准。
在这个未经过筛选的儿科队列中,LBMD的高诊断差异率(7%)强调了对Z评分进行HAZ调整以提高诊断准确性的价值。调整后和未调整的Z评分之间的这种差异表明,所有儿科患者,不仅是身材矮小或生长发育迟缓的患者,都可能从骨密度测量的大小调整中受益。对于那些身高处于范围上限的个体尤其如此,在这些个体中,身材大小可能会掩盖LBMD的诊断。