| Literature DB >> 35342458 |
Giovanni Adami1, Angelo Fassio2, Davide Gatti2, Ombretta Viapiana2, Camilla Benini2, Maria I Danila3, Kenneth G Saag3, Maurizio Rossini2.
Abstract
Patients living with osteoporosis are projected to increase dramatically in the next decade. Alongside the forecasted increased societal and economic burden, we will live a crisis of fractures. However, we will have novel pharmacological treatment to face this crisis and, more importantly, new optimized treatment strategies. Fracture liaison services will be probably implemented on a large scale worldwide, helping to prevent additional fractures in high-risk patients. In the next decade, novel advances in the diagnostic tools will be largely available. Moreover, new and more precise fracture risk assessment tools will change our ability to detect patients at high risk of fractures. Finally, big data and artificial intelligence will help us to move forward into the world of precision medicine. In the present review, we will discuss the future epidemiology and costs of osteoporosis, the advances in early and accurate diagnosis of osteoporosis, with a special focus on biomarkers and imaging tools. Then we will examine new and refined fracture risk assessment tools, the role of fracture liaison services, and a future perspective on osteoporosis treatment.Entities:
Keywords: bone mineral density; fractures; future perspective; osteoporosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35342458 PMCID: PMC8941690 DOI: 10.1177/1759720X221083541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Musculoskelet Dis ISSN: 1759-720X Impact factor: 5.346
Novel imaging techniques for osteoporosis diagnosis and fracture risk34,39.
| Technique | Data acquisition | Advantages | Disadvantages | Radiation exposure (μSv) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DXA | Dual energy X-rays | Reference | Only BMD assessment | 1–15 |
| TBS | Post-processing DXA images | Strength analysis, estimate fracture risk independently from BMD | Availability, cost of software | 1–15 |
| FEA DXA | Post-processing DXA images | Strength analysis | Availability | 1–15 |
| HAL | Post-processing DXA images | Easily obtainable from DXA images | Not modifiable by therapy, not endorsed by international society for fracture risk assessment | 1–15 |
| HSA | Post-processing DXA images | Easily obtainable from DXA images | Not modifiable by therapy, not endorsed by international society for fracture risk assessment | 1–15 |
| REMS | Ultrasound | No radiation exposure, similar sensitivity and specificity to DXA, transportable instrument | Operator dependent | None |
| HRpQCT | CT scan | Qualitative and quantitative assessment, strength estimation, estimate fracture risk independently from BMD | Costs, availability, radiation exposure | 50–100 |
BMD, bone mineral density; DXA, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; FEA, finite element analysis; HAL, hip-axis length; HSA, hip-strength analysis; HRpQCT, high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography; REMS, radiofrequency echographic multi spectrometry; TBS, trabecular bone score.