| Literature DB >> 27099481 |
Daisuke Inoue1, Reiko Watanabe1, Ryo Okazaki1.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic inflammatory airway disease associated with various systemic comorbidities including osteoporosis. Osteoporosis and its related fractures are common and have significant impacts on quality of life and even respiratory function in patients with COPD. COPD-associated osteoporosis is however extremely undertreated. Recent studies have suggested that both decreased bone mineral density (BMD) and impaired bone quality contribute to bone fragility, causing fractures in COPD patients. Various clinical risk factors of osteoporosis in COPD patients, including older age, emaciation, physical inactivity, and vitamin D deficiency, have also been described. It is critically important for pulmonologists to be aware of the high prevalence of osteoporosis in COPD patients and evaluate them for such fracture risks. Routine screening for osteoporosis will enable physicians to diagnose COPD patients with comorbid osteoporosis at an early stage and give them appropriate treatment to prevent fracture, which may lead to improved quality of life as well as better long-term prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: bone mineral density; bone quality; bone turnover; fracture; vitamin D
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27099481 PMCID: PMC4820217 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S79638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Prevalence of osteoporosis defined by BMD and vertebral fracture evaluated by X-ray exams
| Study | N | Sex (M/F) | Age (years) | BMI (kg/cm2) | FEV1 %pred | Osteopenia by BMD | Osteoporosis by BMD | Vertebral fracture | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graat-Verboom et al | 775 | 67/33 | 63 | 24.9 | 46.7 | 27%–67% | 9%–69% | – | A systematic review of osteoporosis (defined by BMD) in COPD including13 studies |
| Watanabe et al | 136 | 136/0 | 71 | 21.5 | 55.8 | 43% (21/49) | 39% (19/49) | 79% | Patients in a Japanese general hospital, including 17% patients with past oral and/or intravenous corticosteroid use |
| Graat-Verboom et al | 255 | 158/97 | 68 | 27.1 | 64.0 | 46% | 24% | 37% | Clinically stable COPD patients including 23 patients with oral corticosteroids |
| Ferguson et al | 658 | 382/276 | 65 | 26.7 | 44.0 | 42% | 23% | – | Outpatients of TORCH study whose BMD data were available, including191 patients with a history of oral corticosteroid use |
| Graat-Verboom et al | 133 | 80/53 | 69 | 26.8 | 63.4 | 48% | 22% | 32% | Clinically stable outpatients, including 16 patients with chronic oral corticosteroids |
| Silva et al | 95 | 62/33 | 67 | 25.8 | 41.0 | 42% | 42% | – | Outpatients at a general, tertiary-care, university-affiliated hospital, including34 patients with a history of oral corticosteroid use |
| Ogura-Tomomatsu et al | 85 | 78/7 | 75 | – | – | 22% | 24% | 35% | Patients referred to a pulmonary clinic, including nine patients with oral corticosteroid use |
| Hattiholi and Gaude | 102 | 64/38 | 66 | – | – | 20% | 67% | – | Outpatients at a tertiary-care hospital |
| Carter et al | 350 | 350/0 | 68 | – | – | – | – | 52% | Patients with symptomatic COPD episodes. Another radiologist reported a fracture rate of 5.4% |
| Jorgensen et al | 62 | 16/46 | 63 | – | 32.6 | 30% | 41% | 24% (3/15) | Patients with severe airflow limitation aged between 50 and 70 years, including nine patients with continuous oral glucocorticoids treatment |
| McEvoy et al | 312 | 312/0 | 69 | – | 52.7 | – | – | Thoracic/lumbar: 49%/17% | Outpatients using inhaled β-agonists or corticosteroids, including 125 patients with systemic corticosteroids |
| Papaioannou et al | 127 | – | 72 | – | 32.5 | – | – | 27% | Patients admitted to an acute care hospital, including patients with oral(74.7%) or inhaled (86.6%) corticosteroids |
| Nuti et al | 3,030 | 1,778/1,262 | 70 | 27.0 | – | – | – | 41% | Clinically stable outpatients. Only chest X-rays were evaluated |
| Kjensli et al | 465 | 231/234 | 63 | 25.0 | 45.0 | – | – | 31% | Admitted COPD patients attending a 4-week rehabilitation program, including 201 patients with a history of oral corticosteroid use |
| Katsura and Kida | 20 | 0/20 | 72 | 22.0 | 49.9 | – | 50% | 40% | Postmenopausal COPD patients without a history of chronic systemic corticosteroid use |
Notes:
The 13 studies analyzed in the systematic review by Graat-Verboom et al6 have been excluded from the table. (–), not reported in the original paper.
BMD was measured only in 49 subjects.
Fracture was evaluated only in 15 subjects.
Abbreviations: N, the number of subjects; M/F, males/females; BMI, body mass index; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; %pred, percent of the predicted value; BMD, bone mineral density; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; TORCH, TOwards a Revolution in COPD Health.
Bone changes in COPD
| Low BMD |
|---|
| Impaired bone quality |
| Decreased TBS |
| Increased cortical porosity |
| Low bone turnover |
| Suppressed bone formation |
Abbreviations: BMD, bone mineral density; TBS, trabecular bone score.
Risk factors of osteoporosis in COPD
| General/common |
|---|
| Older age |
| Smoking |
| Low BMI |
| Reduced physical activity |
| Disease-specific |
| Systemic inflammation |
| Pulmonary dysfunction |
| Glucocorticoid use |
| Vitamin D insufficiency/deficiency |
Abbreviations: COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BMI, body mass index.
Evaluation of fracture risk
| Routine medical interview |
|---|
| Clinical risk factors for FRAX |
| Severe pulmonary dysfunction |
| Reduced physical activity |
| Height loss |
| Spine X rays (and/or CT) |
| Prevalent vertebral fracture |
| DXA |
| Hip BMD |
Abbreviations: FRAX, fracture assessment tools; CT, computed tomography; DXA, dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; BMD, bone mineral density.
Treatment of osteoporosis in COPD
| Lifestyle modifications |
|---|
| Smoking cessation |
| Exercise/physical training |
| Pharmacological treatment |
| Vitamin D and calcium |
| Bisphosphonate |
| Denosumab |
| Teriparatide |
| SERMs |
Abbreviation: SERMs, selective estrogen receptor modulators.