Literature DB >> 16155732

Ten-year prediction of osteoporosis from baseline bone mineral density: development of prognostic thresholds in healthy postmenopausal women. The Danish Osteoporosis Prevention Study.

Bo Abrahamsen1, Lars Rejnmark, Stig Pors Nielsen, Bo Rud, Nis Nissen, Leif Mosekilde, Olaf Bärenholdt, Jens-Erik Beck Jensen.   

Abstract

Osteopenia is common in healthy women examined in the first year or two following menopause. Short-term fracture risk is low, but we lack algorithms to assess long-term risk of osteoporosis. Because bone loss proceeds at only a few percent per year, we speculated that baseline bone mineral density (BMD) would predict a large proportion of 10-year BMD and be useful for deriving predictive thresholds. We aimed to identify prognostic thresholds associated with less than 10% risk of osteoporosis by 10 years in the individual participant, in order to allow rational osteodensitometry and intervention. We analyzed dual energy X-ray absorptometry (DXA) of the lumbar spine (LS) and femoral neck (FN) from 872 women, who participated in the non-HRT arms of the Danish Osteoporosis Prevention Study and had remained on no HRT, bisphosphonates or raloxifene since inclusion 10 years ago. We defined development of a T -score below -2.5 at the LS and/or FN or incident fracture as end-point, and we derived prognostic thresholds for baseline BMD, defining 90% NPV (negative predictive value) and 90% sensitivity, respectively. Seventy-six percent of the variation in BMD of the LS at 10 years was predicted by baseline BMD. In an individual participant, a baseline BMD T -score above -1.4 (FN or LS, whichever was lower) was associated with a 10-year risk of less than 10% of developing osteoporotic BMD or fracture. This covered 69% of the population. By contrast, participants with T -scores below -1.4 had a 56% risk of fracture or low BMD within 10 years. At the population level, baseline T -score cutoffs below 0 at the LS (68% of the population), 0 at the FN (72%) or -0.6 (62%) at the lower of the two sites capture 90% of the population that developed osteoporosis during the following 10 years. A BMD measurement, performed in the first two years following menopause, is a strong long-term predictor of BMD in healthy women. The association is strong enough to provide robust prognostic thresholds, which can be used to divide the population into two prognostic classes at menopause.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16155732     DOI: 10.1007/s00198-005-1989-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Osteoporos Int        ISSN: 0937-941X            Impact factor:   4.507


  16 in total

1.  Characterization of perimenopausal bone loss: a prospective study.

Authors:  R Recker; J Lappe; K Davies; R Heaney
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 6.741

2.  The burden of osteoporotic fractures: a method for setting intervention thresholds.

Authors:  J A Kanis; A Oden; O Johnell; B Jonsson; C de Laet; A Dawson
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 4.507

3.  A prospective study of bone loss in menopausal Australian-born women.

Authors:  J R Guthrie; P R Ebeling; J L Hopper; E Barrett-Connor; L Dennerstein; E C Dudley; H G Burger; J D Wark
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 4.507

4.  Low BMD is less predictive than reported falls for future limb fractures in women across Europe: results from the European Prospective Osteoporosis Study.

Authors:  S Kaptoge; L I Benevolenskaya; A K Bhalla; J B Cannata; S Boonen; J A Falch; D Felsenberg; J D Finn; R Nuti; K Hoszowski; R Lorenc; T Miazgowski; I Jajic; G Lyritis; P Masaryk; M Naves-Diaz; G Poor; D M Reid; C Scheidt-Nave; J J Stepan; C J Todd; K Weber; A D Woolf; D K Roy; M Lunt; S R Pye; T W O'neill; A J Silman; J Reeve
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 4.398

5.  Cross calibration of QDR-2000 and QDR-1000 dual-energy X-ray densitometers for bone mineral and soft-tissue measurements.

Authors:  B Abrahamsen; J Gram; T B Hansen; H Beck-Nielsen
Journal:  Bone       Date:  1995-03       Impact factor: 4.398

6.  A single bone density measurement can predict fractures over 25 years.

Authors:  H Duppe; P Gardsell; B Nilsson; O Johnell
Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 4.333

7.  Discordance between changes in bone mineral density measured at different skeletal sites in perimenopausal women--implications for assessment of bone loss and response to therapy: The Danish Osteoporosis Prevention Study.

Authors:  B Abrahamsen; L S Stilgren; A P Hermann; C L Tofteng; O Bärenholdt; P Vestergaard; C Brot; S P Nielsen
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2001-07       Impact factor: 6.741

8.  Long-term precision of DXA scanning assessed over seven years in forty postmenopausal women.

Authors:  R Patel; G M Blake; J Rymer; I Fogelman
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 4.507

9.  Long-term prediction of incident hip fracture risk in elderly white women: study of osteoporotic fractures.

Authors:  Brent C Taylor; Pamela J Schreiner; Katie L Stone; Howard A Fink; Steven R Cummings; Michael C Nevitt; Paula J Bowman; Kristine E Ensrud
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 5.562

10.  Fall-related factors and risk of hip fracture: the EPIDOS prospective study.

Authors:  P Dargent-Molina; F Favier; H Grandjean; C Baudoin; A M Schott; E Hausherr; P J Meunier; G Bréart
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1996-07-20       Impact factor: 79.321

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  3 in total

1.  Development and validation of a tool for identifying women with low bone mineral density and low-impact fractures: the São Paulo Osteoporosis Risk Index (SAPORI).

Authors:  M M Pinheiro; E T Reis Neto; F S Machado; F Omura; J Szejnfeld; V L Szejnfeld
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2011-07-19       Impact factor: 4.507

2.  Clinical risk factors for osteoporotic fractures in Brazilian women and men: the Brazilian Osteoporosis Study (BRAZOS).

Authors:  M M Pinheiro; R M Ciconelli; L A Martini; M B Ferraz
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2008-07-03       Impact factor: 4.507

3.  Bone mineral density and blood metals in premenopausal women.

Authors:  A Z Pollack; S L Mumford; J Wactawski-Wende; E Yeung; P Mendola; D R Mattison; E F Schisterman
Journal:  Environ Res       Date:  2012-11-02       Impact factor: 6.498

  3 in total

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