| Literature DB >> 27585578 |
C H Vala1, A Odén2, M Lorentzon1,3, V Sundh1, H Johansson1, M Karlsson4, B Rosengren4, C Ohlsson3, B Johansson5, J Kanis6, D Mellström7,8.
Abstract
Spouses tend to share habits and therefore have an increased risk of same diseases. We followed all married couples in Sweden, born 1902 to 1942, in hospital records from 1987 to 2002, and found that individuals whose spouse had a hip fracture had an increased risk of hip fracture.Entities:
Keywords: Assortative mating; Hip fracture; Homogamy; Osteoporosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27585578 PMCID: PMC5206252 DOI: 10.1007/s00198-016-3738-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteoporos Int ISSN: 0937-941X Impact factor: 4.507
Number of hip fractures in husband (column) and wife (row) at different ages
| <60 | 60–<70 | 70–<80 | 80–<90 | 90–<100 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <60 | 5 | 13 | 8 | 1 | 0 | 27 |
| 60–<70 | 5 | 46 | 131 | 84 | 4 | 270 |
| 70–<80 | 2 | 65 | 550 | 765 | 72 | 1454 |
| 80–<90 | 0 | 15 | 401 | 1477 | 291 | 2184 |
| 90–<100 | 0 | 0 | 22 | 190 | 65 | 277 |
| Total | 12 | 139 | 1112 | 2517 | 432 | 4212 |
Fig. 1Hazard ratio for hip fracture after hip fracture in spouse for women and men aged 60 to 95 years compared to married women and men with a spouse with no hip fracture. Adjusted for age and calendar year
Hazard ratio (HR) for hip fracture when spouse also has sustained a hip fracture
| Women | Men | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age interval | Number of fractures | HR (95 % CI) | Number of fractures | HR (95 % CI) |
| Adjusted for age and calendar year | ||||
| 60–70 | 7173 | 1.29 (1.01–1.66)* | 3402 | 1.18 (0.80–1.75) |
| 70–80 | 21,970 | 1.26 (1.16–1.37)* | 11,899 | 1.34 (1.20–1.49)* |
| 80–90 | 24,577 | 1.07 (1.01–1.13)* | 16,075 | 1.25 (1.18–1.33)* |
| Adjusted for age, calendar year, latitude, urbanisation, education and income | ||||
| 60–70 | 7082 | 1.42 (1.11–1.80)* | 3278 | 1.22 (0.84–1.78) |
| 70–80 | 20,440 | 1.27 (1.17–1.38)* | 10,697 | 1.33 (1.19–1.48)* |
| 80–90 | 16,587 | 1.08 (1.01–1.15)* | 9364 | 1.31 (1.22–1.41)* |
*p < 0.05
Covariates’ risk for hip fracture
| Women | Men | |
|---|---|---|
| Covariates | HR (95 % CI) | HR (95 % CI) |
| Age per year (60–91) | 1.16 (1.15–1.16)* | 1.17 (1.16–1.17)* |
| Low education (yes/no) | 1.02 (1.00–1.04) | 0.98 (0.95–1.01) |
| Income (low to high) | 0.94 (0.94–0.95)* | 0.90 (0.89–0.91)* |
| Latitude (south to north) | 1.06 (1.05–1.07)* | 1.08 (1.07–1.10)* |
| Urbanisation (urban to rural) | 0.98 (0.97–0.98)* | 0.95 (0.94–0.96)* |
Hazard ratio (HR) per one step in each variable
*p < 0.05
Fig. 2Family effect on hip fracture by age based on siblings and married people born 1932 to 1942. Adjusted for age and calendar year