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The observation that older men suffer from hip fracture at DXA T-scores higher than older women and a proposal of a new low BMD category, osteofrailia, for predicting fracture risk in older men.

Authors :
Wáng YXJ
Xiao BH
Leung JCS
Griffith JF
Aparisi Gómez MP
Bazzocchi A
Diacinti D
Chan WP
Guermazi A
Kwok TCY
Source :
Skeletal radiology [Skeletal Radiol] 2024 Sep 16. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 16.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

The clinical significance of osteoporosis lies in the occurrence of fragility fractures (FFx), and the most relevant fracture site is the hip. The T-score is defined as follows: (BMD <subscript>patient</subscript> -BMD <subscript>young adult mean</subscript> )/SDy <subscript>oung adult population</subscript> , where BMD is bone mineral density and SD is the standard deviation. When the femoral neck (FN) is measured in adult Caucasian women, a cutpoint value of patient BMD of 2.5 SD below the young adult mean BMD results in a prevalence the same as the lifetime risk of hip FFx for Caucasian women. The FN T-score criterion for classifying osteoporosis in older Caucasian men has been provisionally recommended to be - 2.5, but debates remain. Based on a systematic literature review, we noted that older men suffer from hip FFx at a FN T-score approximately 0.5-0.6 higher than older women. While the mean hip FFx FN T-score of around - 2.9 for women lies below - 2.5, the mean hip FF FN T-score of around - 2.33 for men lies above - 2.5. This is likely associated with that older male populations have a higher mean T-score than older female populations. We propose a new category of low BMD status, osteofrailia, for older Caucasian men with T-score ≤  - 2 (T-score ≤  - 2.1 for older Chinese men) who are likely to suffer from hip FFx. The group with T-score ≤  - 2 for older Caucasian men is comparable in prevalence to the group with T-score ≤  - 2.5 for older Caucasian women. However, older men in such category on average have only half the FFx risk as that of older women with osteoporotic T-score.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-2161
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Skeletal radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39284928
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00256-024-04793-2