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Bone quality in patients with osteoporosis undergoing lumbar fusion surgery: analysis of the MRI-based vertebral bone quality score and the bone microstructure derived from microcomputed tomography

Authors :
Henryk Haffer
Maximilian Muellner
Erika Chiapparelli
Manuel Moser
Yusuke Dodo
Jiaqi Zhu
Jennifer Shue
Andrew A. Sama
Frank P. Cammisa
Federico P. Girardi
Alexander P. Hughes
Source :
The Spine Journal. 22:1642-1650
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Osteoporosis is a risk factor for instrumentation failure in spine surgery. Bone strength is commonly assessed by bone mineral density (BMD) as a surrogate marker. However, BMD represents only a portion of bone strength and does not capture the qualitative dimensions of bone. Recently, the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based vertebral bone quality (VBQ) score was introduced as a novel marker of bone quality. However, it is still unclear if the VBQ score correlates with in-vivo bone microstructure.The aims of the study were (1) to demonstrate differences in MRI-based (VBQ) and in-vivo (microcomputed tomography; μCT) bone quality between osteopenic/osteoporotic and normal bone, (2) to show the correlation between VBQ, bone microstructure and volumetric BMD (vBMD), and (3) to determine the predictive value of the VBQ score for the prevalence of osteopenia/osteoporosis.Retrospective cross-sectional study.267 patients who underwent posterior lumbar fusion surgery from 2014 to 2021 at a single academic institution. Bone biopsies were harvested intraoperatively in 118 patients.VBMD, VBQ score, and bone microstructure parameters derived from μCT.Quantitative computed tomography (QCT) measurements were performed at the lumbar spine and the L1/L2 average was used to categorize patients with a vBMD ≤120mg/cm267 patients (55.8% female, age 63.3 years, BMI 29.7 kg/mThis study demonstrated for the first time that the VBQ score is associated with trabecular microstructure determined by μCT. The bone microstructure and VBQ score were significantly different in patients with impaired vBMD. However, the ability to predict osteopenia/osteoporosis with the VBQ score was moderate. The VBQ score appears to reflect additional bone quality characteristics and might have a complementary role to vBMD. This enhances our understanding of the biological background of the radiographic VBQ score and might be a take-off point to evaluate the clinical utility of it as non-invasive screening tool for bone quality.

Details

ISSN :
15299430
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Spine Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a199d7eb4ea0a6f080c89190758331f