Comparison of the time-dependent discriminatory accuracy of femoral strength and bone mineral density for predicting future hip and major osteoporotic fractures: a 16-year follow-up of the AGES-Reykjavik cohort.
Anitha D Praveen, Dheeraj Jha, Alexander Baker, Ingmar Fleps, Páll Björnsson, Lotta María Ellingsen, Thor Aspelund, Sigurdur Sigurdsson, Vilmundur Gudnason, Halldór Pálsson, David Matchar, Fjola Johannesdottir, Stephen J Ferguson, Benedikt Helgason
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The discriminative accuracy of femoral strength was significantly higher than that of aBMD over 16 years of follow-up for classifying hip fractures and major osteoporotic fractures. The use of accurate thresholds, whether for aBMD or other imaging-based biomarkers, is crucial to improve sensitivity and identify high-risk older adults.
Background: Areal bone mineral density (aBMD) is a surrogate for bone strength but has limited prognostic value. Finite element (FE)-derived femoral strength offers a biomechanical alternative to aBMD for fracture risk assessment, but its long-term predictive value remains unclear. This study compared the discriminatory accuracy of aBMD and femoral strength for hip (HFs) and major osteoporotic fractures (MOFs) over 16 years, accounting for mortality risk.
Methods: In the prospective Age Gene/Environment Susceptibility-Reykjavik (AGES-Reykjavik) Study, elderly participants underwent CT scans at entry and automated algorithms were used to compute aBMD and femoral strength. Time-dependent area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) was used to compare the predictive abilities of aBMD and femoral strength. Optimal cutoffs at the Youden's index were compared with the World Health Organization (WHO)-defined aBMD cutoffs at various time points.
Results: The cohort comprised 4621 older adults (mean age 76 ± 5 years). Femoral strength had a significantly higher AUC than aBMD in identifying HFs (p < 0.05) from the 6th year in males and females, while their AUCs in predicting MOFs were similar. WHO-defined aBMD showed low sensitivity (17-52%) but high specificity (78-94%) for both HFs and MOFs. The sensitivity of optimal femoral strength was significantly higher than that of aBMD at comparable specificity by 5-19% for HFs and 2-10% for MOFs (p < 0.05).
Conclusions: Both image-based markers predict long-term fracture risk and enable opportunistic screening with existing CT scans. However, femoral strength demonstrates better discriminatory accuracy than aBMD. The low sensitivity of the WHO-defined aBMD demonstrates the necessity to revise current risk assessment criteria.
期刊介绍:
An international multi-disciplinary journal which is a joint initiative between the International Osteoporosis Foundation and the National Osteoporosis Foundation of the USA, Osteoporosis International provides a forum for the communication and exchange of current ideas concerning the diagnosis, prevention, treatment and management of osteoporosis and other metabolic bone diseases.
It publishes: original papers - reporting progress and results in all areas of osteoporosis and its related fields; review articles - reflecting the present state of knowledge in special areas of summarizing limited themes in which discussion has led to clearly defined conclusions; educational articles - giving information on the progress of a topic of particular interest; case reports - of uncommon or interesting presentations of the condition.
While focusing on clinical research, the Journal will also accept submissions on more basic aspects of research, where they are considered by the editors to be relevant to the human disease spectrum.