| Literature DB >> 36060578 |
Yì Xiáng J Wáng1, Ben-Heng Xiao1.
Abstract
This study estimated the bone mineral density (BMD) defined osteoporosis prevalence of Chinese women and Chinese men aged ≥50 years. The estimation was based on the 1994 WHO definition of osteoporosis and two assumptions: (I) fragility fracture (FF) risk among older Chinese is half of that of older US Caucasians; (II) FF risk among older Chinese men is half of that of older Chinese women. In addition, we also consider the FF risk among older Chinese is close to those of American Blacks. We estimated that the osteoporosis prevalence based on lumbar BMD, femoral neck BMD, total hip BMD would be 15.8%, 20.4%, and 15.2% for US Caucasian women, 6.7%, 7.8%, and 7.9% for US black women, 7.5%, 7.5%, and 6.7% for Chinese women, 1.8%, 5.7%, and 3.3% for US black men, and 2.0%, 3.8%, and 3.4% for Chinese men. To satisfy the above estimates of osteoporosis prevalence for the Chinese population, in addition to using a local reference database, we suggest that the T-score cutpoints for defining osteopenia and osteoporosis among older Chinese should be adjusted from the conventional WHO thresholds of -2.5 and -1.0. Our suggested revised cutpoint T-score for defining osteoporosis described in this article will be more in line with the original WHO definition and will allow a more meaningful international comparison of disease burden. 2022 Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese; Osteoporosis; T-score; bone mineral density (BMD); fragility fracture (FF); prevalence
Year: 2022 PMID: 36060578 PMCID: PMC9403581 DOI: 10.21037/qims-22-281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Quant Imaging Med Surg ISSN: 2223-4306
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: women’s spine
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =25%¶ | Prevalence =7.5%§ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | |||||||||
| US White [2012] ( | 1.064 | 0.106 | ≥50 | 0.951 | 0.152 | 0.958 | 51.79 | 0.799 | 15.76 | |||||||
| ≥60 | 0.930 | 0.152 | 0.958 | 57.24 | 0.799 | 19.47 | ||||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 1.118 | 0.131 | ≥50 | 1.023 | 0.155 | 0.987 | 40.85 | 0.791 | 6.66 | |||||||
| ≥60 | 1.013 | 0.167 | 0.987 | 43.84 | 0.791 | 9.11 | ||||||||||
| Italian [2003] ( | 1.034 | 0.104 | 50–79 | 0.917 | 0.147 | 0.930 | 53.09 | 0.774 | 16.24 | |||||||
| ≥60–79 | 0.886 | 0.145 | 0.930 | 62.07 | 0.774 | 22.03 | ||||||||||
| Finnish [1992] ( | 1.196 | 0.128 | 50–70 | 1.020 | 0.140 | 1.068 | 63.57 | 0.877 | 15.48 | |||||||
| 60–70 | 0.949 | 0.130 | 1.068 | 82.10 | 0.877 | 29.02 | ||||||||||
| Austrian [2003] ( | 1.076 | 0.130 | 46–76 | 0.978 | 0.187 | 0.946 | 43.12 | 0.751 | 11.23 | |||||||
| 56–76 | 0.924 | 0.170 | 0.946 | 55.06 | 0.751 | 15.42 | ||||||||||
| Canadian [2000] ( | 1.042 | 0.121 | ≥50 | 0.921 | 0.740 | 12.10 | ||||||||||
| Spanish [1997] ( | 1.031 | 0.104 | 50–79 | 0.865 | 0.141 | 0.927 | 66.88 | 0.771 | 25.12 | |||||||
| British [1996] ( | 1.240 | 0.110 | 50–89 | 1.071 | 0.208 | 1.130 | 61.20 | 0.965 | 30.51 | |||||||
| Swedish [2000] ( | 1.057 | 0.105 | ≥70 | 0.875 | 0.162 | 0.952 | 68.27 | 0.795 | 30.96 | |||||||
| Chinese meta [2013] ( | 1.058 | 0.140 | ≥50 | 0.870 | 0.182 | 0.918 | 60.34 | 0.708 | 18.66 | 0.747 | −2.219 | 0.608 | −3.214 | |||
| US Chinese [2006] ( | 0.994 | 0.110 | 50–89 | 0.837 | 0.137 | 0.884 | 63.48 | 0.719 | 19.48 | 0.774 | −2.269 | 0.640 | −3.221 | |||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 0.990 | 0.100 | ≥60 | 0.795 | 0.140 | 0.890 | 75.28 | 0.740 | 34.78 | 0.721 | −2.686 | 0.616 | −3.743 | |||
| Singapore [2020] ( | 1.071 | 0.121 | ≥51 | 0.931 | 0.151 | 0.950 | 54.94 | 0.768 | 13.98 | 0.830 | −1.994 | 0.715 | −2.946 | |||
| Japan [2001] ( | 1.015 | 0.105 | 50–79 | 0.810 | 0.143 | 0.910 | 75.80 | 0.752 | 34.51 | 0.713 | −2.877 | 0.603 | −3.921 | |||
| ML Chinese [2007] ( | 1.098 | 0.111 | 50–89 | 0.922 | 0.172 | 0.987 | 64.80 | 0.820 | 27.75 | 0.806 | −2.630 | 0.674 | −3.813 | |||
| Korea [2008] ( | 1.194 | 0.120 | 50–79 | 0.922 | 0.159 | 1.074 | 83.16 | 0.894 | 43.12 | 0.814 | −3.163 | 0.693 | −4.175 | |||
| Korea [2014] ( | 0.961 | 0.109 | ≥50 | 0.801 | 0.244* | 0.852 | 58.25 | 0.688 | 32.19 | 0.637 | −2.975 | 0.450 | −4.686 | |||
| Taiwan [2011] ( | 1.090 | 0.106 | >50 | 0.908 | 0.170 | 0.984 | 67.26 | 0.825 | 31.25 | 0.794 | −2.798 | 0.664 | −4.024 | |||
#, cited reference and the year of publication (see reference list). Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. ¶, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteopenia prevalence of 50%, the osteopenia prevalence for Chinese ≥50 years old is assumed to be 25%. §, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteoporosis prevalence of 15%, the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese ≥50 years old is assumed to be 7.5% (US Blacks: 6.66%). In one study (10), we compared spine radiographs from two studies conducted in Hong Kong [MsOS (Hong Kong) n=200] and in Rome (Roman Osteoporosis Prevention Project, n=200, age-matched subjects with both mean age: 74.1 years and range: 65–87 years). The results show radiographic OVF with ≥40% vertebral height loss was recorded among 9.5% of the Chinese subjects, while among 26% of the Italian subjects. We consider osteoporosis prevalence of 7.5% for older Chinese women could be an aggressive estimation, i.e., the real prevalence could be even lower (also see Figure S2B). ^, for Hong Kong data, it is assumed that, for subjects ≥60 years, osteopenia prevalence and osteoporosis prevalence is 30% and 10% respectively. *, a large SD was obtained. ##, Kwok et al. (20) reported Hong Kong Chinese women, Beijing Chinese women, Japanese women, Korean women have very similar radiographic osteoporotic vertebral fracture prevalence. BMD, bone mineral density; ML, mainland; Chinese meta, meta-analysis result; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: men’s spine
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =12.5%¶ | Prevalence =3.75% ¶ | Prevalence =2% § | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | BMDos | T-score | ||||||||||
| US White [2012] ( | 1.057 | 0.110 | ≥50 | 1.067 | 0.162 | 0.947 | 23.02 | 0.782 | 3.97 | ||||||||||
| 1.057 | 0.110 | ≥60 | 1.074 | 0.172 | 0.947 | 22.89 | 0.782 | 4.42 | |||||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 1.124 | 0.138 | ≥50 | 1.131 | 0.169 | 0.986 | 19.47 | 0.779 | 1.84 | ||||||||||
| Chinese meta [2013] ( | 1.066 | 0.154 | ≥50 | 0.997 | 0.175 | 0.912 | 31.40 | 0.681 | 3.55 | 0.796 | −1.756 | 0.685 | −2.472 | 0.638 | −2.782 | ||||
| ML Chinese [2008] ( | 0.954 | 0.116 | ≥50 | 0.944 | 0.145 | 0.838 | 23.34 | 0.663 | 2.67 | 0.777 | −1.527 | 0.685 | −2.312 | 0.646 | −2.652 | ||||
| ML Chinese [2006] ( | 0.951 | 0.089 | ≥50 | 0.949 | 0.159 | 0.862 | 29.31 | 0.728 | 8.32 | 0.766 | −2.082 | 0.665 | −3.208 | 0.622 | −3.696 | ||||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 0.990 | 0.110 | ≥60 | 0.940 | 0.162 | 0.880 | 35.57 | 0.715 | 8.27 | 0.772 | −1.983 | 0.673 | −2.880 | 0.613 | −3.415 | ||||
| Singapore [2020] ( | 1.041 | 0.098 | ≥50 | 1.129 | 0.215* | 0.943 | 19.37 | 0.796 | 6.08 | 0.882 | −1.627 | 0.746 | −3.009 | 0.687 | −3.608 | ||||
| Taiwan [2004] ( | 1.017 | 0.111 | 50–89 | 0.918 | 0.145 | 0.906 | 46.69 | 0.739 | 10.93 | 0.751 | −2.395 | 0.660 | −3.219 | 0.620 | −3.577 | ||||
| Taiwan [2011] ( | 1.130 | 0.223* | ≥50 | 1.018 | 0.206* | 0.907 | 29.48 | 0.573 | 1.53 | 0.782 | −1.564 | 0.652 | −2.146 | 0.596 | −2.399 | ||||
| Korea [2008] ( | 1.183 | 0.120 | 50–79 | 1.076 | 0.174 | 1.063 | 46.92 | 0.883 | 13.33 | 0.876 | −2.557 | 0.766 | −3.471 | 0.719 | −3.868 | ||||
| Korea [2014] ( | 1.002 | 0.113 | ≥50 | 0.938 | 0.165 | 0.889 | 38.41 | 0.720 | 9.27 | 0.748 | −2.246 | 0.644 | −3.164 | 0.599 | −3.562 | ||||
#, cited reference and the year of publication (see reference list). Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. ¶, assuming the fragility fracture prevalence of Chinese men is half of that of Chinese women, the osteopenia and osteoporosis prevalence is assumed to be 12.5% and 3.75%, respectively. §, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteoporosis prevalence of 4%, the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese is assumed to be 2% (this appears to be a more reasonable estimation). Note the US Blacks rate of osteoporosis prevalence is 1.84%. ^, for Hong Kong data, it is assumed that, for subjects ≥60 years, osteopenia prevalence and osteoporosis prevalence is 15% and 5% (or 2.235%) respectively. *, large SD were obtained, likely due to the limited sample size (see Appendix 2). BMD, bone mineral density; ML, mainland; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: women femoral neck
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =25%¶ | Prevalence =7.5% § | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | |||||||||
| US White [2012] ( | 0.884 | 0.113 | ≥50 | 0.705 | 0.125 | 0.771 | 70.29 | 0.601 | 20.41 | |||||||
| 0.884 | 0.113 | ≥60 | 0.682 | 0.118 | 0.771 | 77.44 | 0.601 | 24.81 | ||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 0.962 | 0.151 | ≥50 | 0.799 | 0.151 | 0.811 | 53.24 | 0.585 | 7.83 | |||||||
| Italian [2018] ( | ≥50 | 16.2 | ||||||||||||||
| Spain [2010] ( | ≥50 | 15.1 | ||||||||||||||
| Australia [2011] ( | ≥50^^ | 22.8## | ||||||||||||||
| Chinese meta [2013] ( | 0.858 | 0.120 | ≥50 | 0.700 | 0.139 | 0.738 | 60.69 | 0.558 | 15.39 | 0.606 | 2.099 | 0.499 | −2.988 | |||
| US Chinese [2006] ( | 0.797 | 0.110 | 50–89 | 0.655 | 0.102 | 0.687 | 62.40 | 0.522 | 9.67 | 0.586 | −1.919 | 0.508 | −2.629 | |||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 0.760 | 0.100 | ≥60 | 0.622 | 0.107 | 0.660 | 63.81 | 0.510 | 14.73 | 0.566A | −1.939A | 0.485A | −2.750A | |||
| 0.592B | −1.685B | 0.499B | −2.614B | |||||||||||||
| Japan [2001] ( | 0.812 | 0.112 | 50–79 | 0.657 | 0.107 | 0.700 | 65.64 | 0.531 | 12.06 | 0.585 | −2.026 | 0.503 | −2.755 | |||
| Korea [2008] ( | 0.968 | 0.100 | 50–79 | 0.801 | 0.125 | 0.868 | 70.47 | 0.718 | 25.53 | 0.716 | −2.521 | 0.620 | −3.480 | |||
| Taiwan [2011] ( | 0.880 | 0.106 | >50 | 0.752 | 0.174 | 0.774 | 55.10 | 0.615 | 21.66 | 0.634 | −2.320 | 0.501 | −3.579 | |||
#, cited reference and the year of publication [see reference list] . Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. ##, osteoporosis based on spine or femoral neck BMD (the lowest measure was considered). ^^, median age: 54.0 years. ¶, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteopenia prevalence of 50% (very high prevalence of osteopenia will lend this parameter meaningless in real world), the osteopenia prevalence for Chinese is assumed to be 25%. §, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteoporosis prevalence of 15% (1994 WHO definition of osteoporosis, also see the Italian, Spanish, and Australian data), the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese is assumed to be 7.5%. This prevalence of 7.5% could be an aggressive estimation (i.e., the real prevalence could be even lower), as some studies showed the hip fragility fracture prevalence of older Chinese women is close to 40% of that of Caucasians (3). ^, for Hong Kong data, it is assumed that, for subjects ≥60 years, osteopenia prevalence and osteoporosis prevalence is 30%A and 10%A respectively, or 38.7%B and 12.4%B respectively. Bow et al. (78) reported that Japanese and Hong Kong Chinese have very similar age-specific hip fragility fracture prevalences. BMD, bone mineral density; Chinese meta, meta-analysis result; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
Figure 1Schematic illustration showing how T-score cutpoints for defining osteoporosis and osteopenia amongst US Caucasian women can be adjusted to allow for the lower incidence of fragility fractures experienced by Chinese women. (A) Distribution curves for femoral neck BMD in US Caucasian young women aged 20 to 29 years (green curve) and older women aged ≥50 years (red curve). Both curves are approximated by Gaussian distributions based on the reference range data published by Looker et al. (52). Amongst the older women the prevalence of osteoporosis is approximately 20.4% and osteopenia 70.3% (). (B) Similar curves for Hong Kong Chinese young women (green curve) and older women (red curve) aged ≥60 years based on the data published by Lynn et al. (51). If the original (ori) WHO T-scores of −2.5 (BMD: 0.510 g/cm2) and −1.0 (BMD: 0.660 g/cm2) are used to define osteoporosis and osteopenia, then the percentages are not very different to those for US Caucasian women (). Since the incidence of fragility fractures experienced by Chinese women is approximately half of that of US Caucasian women, we can set a revised T-score of −2.750 (BMD: 0.485 g/cm2) corresponding to a revised (rev) prevalence of osteoporosis of 10%, and a revised T-score of −1.939 (BMD: 0.566 g/cm2) corresponding to a revised prevalence of osteopenia of 30% for Chinese women aged ≥60 years (). Note that the revised BMD thresholds are calculated from the area under the curve of the group of older women assuming a Gaussian distribution and cutpoints of 10% and 30% respectively. The corresponding T-scores are calculated from the mean BMD and population standard deviation of the young women. Further details of how the calculations were performed are given in Supplementary file (Appendix 3). BMD, bone mineral density.
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: men’s femoral neck
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =12.5%¶ | Prevalence =3.75%§ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | |||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 1.038 | 0.157 | ≥50 | 0.886 | 0.152 | 0.881 | 48.57 | 0.645 | 5.69 | |||||||
| 1.038 | 0.157 | ≥60 | 0.873 | 0.150 | 0.881 | 52.06 | 0.645 | 6.45 | ||||||||
| Spanish [1997] ( | 0.927 | 0.124 | 50–79 | 0.790 | 0.124 | 0.803 | 54.24 | 0.617 | 8.21 | |||||||
| 0.927 | 0.124 | 60–79 | 0.766 | 0.124 | 0.803 | 61.63 | 0.617 | 11.37 | ||||||||
| Australia [2011] ( | ≥50^^ | 5.9## | ||||||||||||||
| ML Chinese [2006] ( | 0.884 | 0.110 | 50–89 | 0.742 | 0.115 | 0.774 | 60.90 | 0.609 | 12.28 | 0.610 | −2.489 | 0.538 | −3.146 | |||
| ML Chinese [2007] ( | 0.867 | 0.125 | ≥50 | 0.743 | 0.109 | 0.743 | 49.96 | 0.556 | 4.28 | 0.618 | −2.004 | 0.549 | −2.554 | |||
| Chinese meta [2013] ( | 0.928 | 0.144 | ≥50 | 0.785 | 0.143 | 0.784 | 49.62 | 0.568 | 6.48 | 0.620 | −2.136 | 0.530 | −2.764 | |||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 0.850 | 0.130 | ≥60 | 0.696 | 0.115 | 0.720 | 58.24 | 0.525 | 6.75 | 0.577 | −2.096 | 0.496A | −2.726A | |||
| 0.508B | −2.632B | |||||||||||||||
| Korea [2008] ( | 1.106 | 0.140 | 50–79 | 0.896 | 0.130 | 0.966 | 71.57 | 0.756 | 14.19 | 0.746 | −2.573 | 0.664 | −3.159 | |||
| Korea [2015] ( | 0.919 | 0.132 | ≥50 | 0.741 | 0.220* | 0.787 | 58.21 | 0.589 | 24.38 | 0.489 | −3.259 | 0.350 | −4.307 | |||
| Taiwan [2011] ( | 0.990 | 0.223** | >50 | 0.817 | 0.090 | 0.767 | 29.11 | 0.433 | 0.00 | 0.713 | −1.242 | 0.657 | −1.496 | |||
#, cited reference and the year of publication (see reference list). Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. ##: osteoporosis based on spine or femoral neck BMD (the lowest measure was considered). ^^, median age 56.0 years. ¶, assuming the Chines women have an osteopenia prevalence of 25%, the osteopenia prevalence for Chinese ≥50 years old men is assumed to be 12.5%. §, assuming the Chines women have an osteoporosis prevalence of 7.5%, the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese ≥50 years old men is assumed to be 3.75%. Note the hip fracture rate among elderly Ascian American men is lower than American Blacks (Appendix 4). ^, for Hong Kong data, it is assumed that, for subjects ≥60 years, osteopenia prevalence is 15% (i.e., half of the women’s rate) and osteoporosis prevalence is 4%A or 5%B. *, a large SD was obtained. **, a large SD was obtained, likely due to the limited sample size (see Appendix 4). BMD, bone mineral density; ML, mainland; Chinese meta, meta-analysis result; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: women’s total hip
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =29%¶ | Prevalence =6.7% § | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | |||||||||
| US White [2012] ( | 0.971 | 0.114 | ≥50 | 0.830 | 0.140 | 0.857 | 57.55 | 0.686 | 15.15 | |||||||
| 0.971 | 0.114 | ≥60 | 0.806 | 0.135 | 0.857 | 64.69 | 0.686 | 18.74 | ||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 1.036 | 0.147 | ≥50 | 0.901 | 0.164 | 0.889 | 47.07 | 0.669 | 7.86 | |||||||
| Canada white [2008] ( | ≥50** | 11.3 | ||||||||||||||
| Argentina [2016] ( | ≥50 | 6.2 | ||||||||||||||
| US Amerindian [2016] ( | 50–79 | 8.4 | ||||||||||||||
| ML Chinese [2007] ( | 0.956 | 0.120 | 50–89 | 0.851 | 0.140 | 0.835 | 45.55 | 0.655 | 8.01 | 0.774 | −1.510 | 0.641 | −2.609 | |||
| US Chinese [2006] ( | 0.902 | 0.110 | 50–89 | 0.781 | 0.117 | 0.792 | 53.85 | 0.627 | 9.42 | 0.716 | −1.689 | 0.606 | −2.695 | |||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 0.89 | 0.11 | ≥60 | 0.751 | 0.115 | 0.780 | 60.00 | 0.615 | 11.85 | 0.699 | −1.743 | 0.599 | −2.642 | |||
| Japan [2001] ( | 0.886 | 0.107 | 50–79 | 0.748 | 0.125 | 0.779 | 59.87 | 0.618 | 14.94 | 0.679 | −1.932 | 0.561 | −3.034 | |||
| Korea [2014] ( | 0.889 | 0.102 | ≥50 | 0.765 | 0.205^^ | 0.787 | 54.20 | 0.634 | 26.12 | 0.652 | −2.322 | 0.458 | −4.229 | |||
#, cited reference and the year of publication (see reference list). Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. **, mean age: 65.0±9.4 (SD) years. ¶, assuming the reference Caucasian have an osteopenia prevalence of 58%, the osteopenia prevalence for Chinese women ≥50 years old is assumed to be 29%. §, based on the US and Canadian Caucasian data and also those of femoral neck results, the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese women ≥50 years old is assumed to be 6.7%, which could be an aggressive estimation (i.e., the real prevalence could be even lower), as some studies showed hip fragility fracture prevalence of older Chinese women is close to 40% of that of Caucasians (3). Data of Latin American and US Amerindian are listed as reference. Argentina has a high percentage of population with European ancestry. ^, for Hong Kong data, it is assumed that, for subjects ≥60 years, osteopenia prevalence and osteoporosis prevalence is 32.35% and 9.37% respectively. ##, Bow et al. (78) reported that Japanese and Hong Kong Chinese have very similar age-specific hip fragility fracture prevalences. ^^, this SD value is large. BMD, bone mineral density; ML, mainland; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
Cutoff BMD values and T-scores for osteopenia and osteoporosis based on literature data: men’s total hip
| Studies | BMDyoung | SDyoung | Ageold | BMDold | SDold | T-score ≤−1.0 | T-score ≤−2.5 | Prevalence =14.54%¶ | Prevalence =3.35%§ | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDlow | Prevalence (%) | BMDos | Prevalence (%) | BMDlow | T-score | BMDos | T-score | |||||||||
| US White [2012] ( | 1.067 | 0.120 | ≥50 | 0.978 | 0.148 | 0.947 | 41.74 | 0.767 | 7.69 | |||||||
| 1.067 | 0.120 | ≥60 | 0.963 | 0.148 | 0.947 | 45.68 | 0.767 | 9.22 | ||||||||
| US Black [2012] ( | 1.155 | 0.156 | ≥50 | 1.065 | 0.163 | 0.999 | 34.37 | 0.765 | 3.32 | |||||||
| 1.155 | 0.156 | ≥60 | 1.049 | 0.164 | 0.999 | 38.03 | 0.765 | 4.15 | ||||||||
| Hong Kong [2005] ( | 1.000 | 0.140 | ≥60 | 0.861 | 0.136 | 0.860 | 49.56 | 0.650 | 5.99 | 0.760 | −1.713 | 0.633 | −2.625 | |||
| Korea [2014] ( | 1.025 | 0.120 | ≥50 | 0.916 | 0.175 | 0.905 | 47.55 | 0.725 | 13.83 | 0.731 | −2.453 | 0.595 | −3.587 | |||
| ML Chinese [2006] ( | 0.967 | 0.117 | 50–89 | 0.861 | 0.122 | 0.851 | 46.68 | 0.676 | 6.50 | 0.732 | −2.020 | 0.637 | −2.833 | |||
| ML Chinese [2007] ( | 0.938 | 0.124 | ≥50 | 0.868 | 0.123 | 0.813 | 32.85 | 0.627 | 2.46 | 0.738 | −1.603 | 0.643 | −2.367 | |||
#, cited reference and the year of publication (see reference list). Age in years. BMD unit in g/cm2. ¶, assuming Chinese women have an osteopenia prevalence of 29% (see ), the osteopenia prevalence for Chinese men ≥50 years old is assumed to be approximately half of the rate of Chinese women. §, assuming Chinese women have an osteoporosis prevalence of 6.7% (see ), the osteoporosis prevalence for Chinese men ≥50 years old is assumed to be half of the rate of Chinese women (i.e., 3.35%). That Chinese men have an osteoporosis prevalence of 3.35% is consistent with that this rate is half of the rate of Caucasians and is similar to the US Blacks rate. ^, for Hong Kong data, only data of subjects ≥60 years were available, osteopenia and osteoporosis prevalences are assumed to be 22.8% and 4.6% respectively. BMD, bone mineral density; ML, mainland; BMDyoung, adopted value as the reference BMD; SDyoung, standard deviation of the reference young subject data; BMDold, measured BMD of the subjects ≥50 years old; SDold, standard deviation of the subjects ≥50 years old; BMDlow, the cutpoint to define osteopenia; BMDos, the cutpoint to define osteoporosis.
A summary of estimated BMD-based osteoporosis prevalence of Caucasians, US Blacks, and Chinese (age ≥50 years)
| Ethnicity | Lumbar BMD | Femoral neck BMD | Total hip BMD |
|---|---|---|---|
| US Caucasian women | 15.8%a | 20.4%b | 15.2%c |
| Italian women | 16.2%d | ||
| US Black women | 6.7%e | 7.8%f | 7.9%g |
| Chinese women | 7.5%h | 7.5%i | 6.7%j |
| US Caucasian men | 4%k | 7.7%l | |
| Spanish men | 8.2%m | ||
| US Black men | 1.8%n | 5.7%o | 3.3%p |
| Chinese men | 2.0%q | 3.8%r | 3.4%s |
a, according to , US Caucasian women had prevalence of 15.8%; b, according to , US Caucasian women had prevalence of 20.4%; c, according to , US Caucasian women had a prevalence of 15.2%; d, according to , Italian women had a prevalence of 16.2%; e, according to , US Black women had a prevalence of 6.7%; f, according to , US Black women had prevalence of 7.8%; g, according to Table 5, US Black women had a prevalence of 7.9%; h, assuming the reference US Caucasian women have prevalence of 15.8% (), the value for Chinese women is assumed to be 7.5%; i, assuming the reference Caucasian have a prevalence of 16% (according to the WHO 1994 definition), the prevalence for Chinese is assumed to be 7.5%; j, according to the reference US and Canada Caucasian women values () the value for Chinese women is assumed to be 6.7%; k, according to , US Caucasian men had a prevalence of 3.97%; l, according to , US Caucasian men had a prevalence of 7.69%; m, according to , Spanish men had a prevalence of 8.2%; n, according to , US Black men had a prevalence of 1.84%; o, according to , US Black men had a prevalence of 5.7%; p, according to , US Black men had prevalence of 3.32%; q, assuming the reference US Caucasian men have a prevalence of 4%, the prevalence for Chinese is assumed to be 2%, which is slightly higher than the rate of US Blacks; r, the prevalence of Chinese men is assumed to be 3.8%, which is about half of the rate of Chinese women and also about half of the rate of Spanish men. Note hip fragility fracture prevalence among Chinese men is lower than that of US Blacks; s, assuming Chinese women have a prevalence of 6.7%, the prevalence for Chinese men is assumed to be half of the rate of Chinese women. BMD, bone mineral density.