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Comparing self-perceived and estimated fracture risk by FRAX® of women with osteoporosis.

Authors :
Baji P
Gulácsi L
Horváth C
Brodszky V
Rencz F
Péntek M
Source :
Archives of osteoporosis [Arch Osteoporos] 2017 Dec; Vol. 12 (1), pp. 4. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Dec 21.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In this study, we compared subjective fracture risks of Hungarian women with osteoporosis to FRAX®-based estimates. Patients with a previous fracture, parental hip fracture, low femoral T-score, higher age, and higher BMI were more likely to underestimate their risks. Patients also failed to associate risk factors with an increased risk of fractures.<br />Purpose: The main objectives were to explore associations between self-perceived 10-year fracture risks of women with osteoporosis (OP) and their risks calculated by the FRAX® algorithm and to identify determinants of the underestimation of risk.<br />Methods: We carried out a cross-sectional study in 11 OP centers in Hungary and collected data on the risk factors considered by the FRAX® calculator. Patients estimated their subjective 10-year probability of any major osteoporotic and hip fracture numerically, in percentages and also on a visual analog scale (VAS). We compared subjective and FRAX® estimates and applied logistic regression to analyze the determinants of the underestimation of risk. Associations between risk factors and subjective risk were explored using linear probability models.<br />Results: Nine hundred seventy-two OP patients were included in the analysis. Major OP and hip fracture risk by FRAX® were on average 20.1 and 10.5%, while subjective estimates were significantly higher, 30.0 and 24.7%, respectively. Correlations between FRAX® and subjective measures were very weak (r = 0.12-0.16). Underestimation of major OP fracture risk was associated with having had a single previous fracture (OR = 2.0), parental hip fracture (OR = 3.4), femoral T-score ≤-2.5 (OR = 4.2), higher age, body mass index, and better general health state. We did not find significant associations between subjective risk estimates and most of the risk factors except for previous fractures.<br />Conclusions: Hungarian OP patients fail to recognize most of the risk factors of fractures. Thus, education of patients about these risk factors would be beneficial especially for the elderly with a low femoral T-score and parental hip fracture history.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1862-3514
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Archives of osteoporosis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28004298
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11657-016-0300-5