OA 中的性别差异:我们应该归咎于雌激素吗?

IF 1.3 Q4 RHEUMATOLOGY
Uyen-Sa D T Nguyen, Fiona R Saunders, Kathryn R Martin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

骨关节炎(OA)是导致慢性疼痛和残疾的主要原因,不仅在美国如此,在全世界也是如此。女性的 OA 负担高于男性。雌激素作为观察到的 OA 性别差异的一种可能解释尚未得到明确证实。本综述旨在总结有关雌激素、雌激素耗竭和治疗及其对膝、髋、手和脊柱 OA 影响的研究结果。我们使用 PubMed 对文献进行了有针对性的综述。尽管一些研究表明激素替代疗法有可能对某些关节的 OA 起保护作用,但也有一些研究表明激素替代疗法没有保护作用,甚至有不良影响。总之,雌激素疗法的保护作用的证据取决于 OA 关节、OA 结果和研究设计。尽管对这一领域的研究已有数十年之久,更确切地说,是自 20 世纪 90 年代以来,但在这一主题方面仍缺乏高质量的实验研究。关于雌激素是否对膝关节、髋关节、脊柱或手部 OA 的发展起作用,目前还没有明确的结论,部分原因是现有文献中的研究缺乏可比性。诊断标准、成像方式、研究人群、研究设计和结果测量的差异,以及随机误差,都是造成证据不确定的原因。未来需要对雌激素在 OA 中的作用进行研究,尤其是随着全球人口结构的变化,超重/肥胖率的增加和人口老龄化可能会导致与 OA 相关的健康不平等现象扩大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sex Difference in OA: Should We Blame Estrogen?

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of chronic pain and disability, not only in the United States but also worldwide. The burden of OA is higher in women than in men. Estrogen as a possible explanation for observed sex differences in OA has not been definitively established. The purpose of this review was to summarize the results from studies of estrogen, estrogen depletion and treatment, and their impact on knee, hip, hand, and spine OA. We conducted a targeted review of the literature using PubMed. Although several studies show that hormone replacement therapy has the potential to be protective of OA for some joints, there are studies that showed no protective effect or even adverse effect. Taken together, the evidence for the protective effect of estrogen therapy depends on OA joint, OA outcome, and study design. Although this area has been studied for decades, more exclusively since the 1990s, there is a lack of high-quality experimental research in this topic. The lack of definitive conclusion on whether estrogen can play a role in the development in OA of either the knee, hip, spine, or hand is often in part due to the noncomparability of studies existing within the literature. Differences in diagnostic criteria, imaging modalities, populations studied, study designs, and outcome measures, as well as random error, have all contributed to inconclusive evidence. Future research on the role of estrogen in OA is needed, particularly as global demographic shifts in increasing overweight/obesity prevalence and ageing populations may contribute to widening OA-related health inequalities.

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