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Is the predictive power of previous fractures for new spine and non-spine fractures associated with biochemical evidence of altered bone remodelling? The EPOS study. European Prospective Osteoporosis Study

Authors :
Vergnaud, P
Lunt, M
Scheidt-Nave, C
Poor, G
Gennari, C
Hoszowski, K
Vaz, A
Reid, D
Benevolenskaya, L
Grazio, S
Weber, K
Miazgowski, T
Stepan, J
Masaryk, P
Galan, F
Armas, J
Lorenc, R
Havelka, S
Perez Cano, R
Seibel, M
Armbrecht, G
Kaptoge, S
O'Neill, T
Silman, A
Felsenberg, D
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the European Prospective Osteoporosis Study (EPOS), a past spine fracture increased risk of an incident fracture 3.6 - 12-fold even after adjusting for BMD. We examined the possibility that biochemical marker levels were associated with this unexplained BMD-independent element of fracture risk. METHODS: Each of 182 cases in EPOS of spine or non-spine fracture that occurred in 3.8 years of follow-up was matched by age, sex and study centre with two randomly assigned never-fractured controls and one case of past fracture. Analytes measured blind were: osteocalcin, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, total alkaline phosphatase, serum creatinine, calcium, phosphate and albumin, together with the collagen cross-links degradation products serum CTS and urine CTX. Most subjects also had bone density measured by DXA. RESULTS: Cases who had recent fractures did not differ in marker levels from cases who had their last fracture more than 3 years previously. No statistically significant effect of recent fracture was found for any marker except osteocalcin, which was 17.6% lower in recent peripheral cases compared to unfractured controls (p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1064..791cd9c5056c26fd0852d78249da3919