Pubertal timing and bone phenotype in early old age: findings from a British birth cohort study
Pubertal timing and bone phenotype in early old age: findings from a British birth cohort study
Objectives: To investigate the effect of pubertal timing, assessed in adolescence, on bone size, strength and density in men and women in early old age
Design: A British birth cohort study with prospective indicators of pubertal timing based on age at menarche, clinical assessment of pubertal stage, and growth tempo from serial height measures, and bone measures derived from peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) at 60-64 years on 866 women and 792 men.
Methods: A first set of regression models investigated the relationships between pubertal timing and bone size, strength and density, adjusting for current height and weight, smoking and adult socioeconomic position. To make an equivalent comparison between men and women, the percentage difference in bone outcomes was calculated for a five-year difference in age at menarche, and in men a comparison between those who were fully mature or pre-adolescent at 14.5 years. A second set of models investigated the percentage difference in bone outcomes for a 5-year difference in timing of peak height velocity (height tempo) derived from longitudinal growth modelling (SITAR).
Results: After adjustment for current height and weight, a 5-year increase in age at menarche was associated with an 8% (95% CI -17%, 0.5%, p=0.07) lower trabecular volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD); men who were pre-adolescent at 14.5 years had a 9%, (95%CI -14%,-4%; p=.001) lower trabecular vBMD compared with those who had been fully mature. Other confounders did not attenuate these estimates further. Patterns of association were similar but somewhat weaker for lumbar spine and total hip areal BMD. Age at peak height velocity was associated with even larger differences in BMD in men and women, and was negatively associated with bone size and strength.
Conclusions: The association between later puberty and lower BMD persists into early old age. The 9-10% lower trabecular vBMD in later compared with earlier maturers could be clinically important given a rate of bone loss from midlife of 1-2% a year, and the negative association between BMD and fracture.
1113-1124
Kuh, Diana
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Muthuri, Stella G.
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Moore, Adam
d54aa1ca-9878-43a4-b98b-e601212a099c
Cole, Tim J.
78cebdf5-e360-4e8e-9dea-ba4b88306980
Adams, Judith E.
2a5cb6a4-b282-416f-aabd-553121947e72
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Hardy, Rebecca
99fecbaf-fc92-4354-aa02-cb904dd2bd32
Ward, Kate A.
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7
August 2016
Kuh, Diana
4f3b51aa-21a0-4d68-be14-e1ed75448aaf
Muthuri, Stella G.
53016ed4-923f-411b-897d-f32fba65a2fa
Moore, Adam
d54aa1ca-9878-43a4-b98b-e601212a099c
Cole, Tim J.
78cebdf5-e360-4e8e-9dea-ba4b88306980
Adams, Judith E.
2a5cb6a4-b282-416f-aabd-553121947e72
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Hardy, Rebecca
99fecbaf-fc92-4354-aa02-cb904dd2bd32
Ward, Kate A.
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7
Kuh, Diana, Muthuri, Stella G., Moore, Adam, Cole, Tim J., Adams, Judith E., Cooper, Cyrus, Hardy, Rebecca and Ward, Kate A.
(2016)
Pubertal timing and bone phenotype in early old age: findings from a British birth cohort study.
International Journal of Epidemiology, 45 (4), .
(doi:10.1093/ije/dyw131).
Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the effect of pubertal timing, assessed in adolescence, on bone size, strength and density in men and women in early old age
Design: A British birth cohort study with prospective indicators of pubertal timing based on age at menarche, clinical assessment of pubertal stage, and growth tempo from serial height measures, and bone measures derived from peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) at 60-64 years on 866 women and 792 men.
Methods: A first set of regression models investigated the relationships between pubertal timing and bone size, strength and density, adjusting for current height and weight, smoking and adult socioeconomic position. To make an equivalent comparison between men and women, the percentage difference in bone outcomes was calculated for a five-year difference in age at menarche, and in men a comparison between those who were fully mature or pre-adolescent at 14.5 years. A second set of models investigated the percentage difference in bone outcomes for a 5-year difference in timing of peak height velocity (height tempo) derived from longitudinal growth modelling (SITAR).
Results: After adjustment for current height and weight, a 5-year increase in age at menarche was associated with an 8% (95% CI -17%, 0.5%, p=0.07) lower trabecular volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD); men who were pre-adolescent at 14.5 years had a 9%, (95%CI -14%,-4%; p=.001) lower trabecular vBMD compared with those who had been fully mature. Other confounders did not attenuate these estimates further. Patterns of association were similar but somewhat weaker for lumbar spine and total hip areal BMD. Age at peak height velocity was associated with even larger differences in BMD in men and women, and was negatively associated with bone size and strength.
Conclusions: The association between later puberty and lower BMD persists into early old age. The 9-10% lower trabecular vBMD in later compared with earlier maturers could be clinically important given a rate of bone loss from midlife of 1-2% a year, and the negative association between BMD and fracture.
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revised_final_Pubertal timing and bone health in early old age_20-10-15 with biblio_untracked.docx
- Accepted Manuscript
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dyw131
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Pubertal timing and bone health in early old age: Tables
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 April 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 July 2016
Published date: August 2016
Organisations:
MRC Life-Course Epidemiology Unit
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 396024
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/396024
ISSN: 0300-5771
PURE UUID: 963bc55f-7745-4ea2-b873-777120331793
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Date deposited: 02 Jun 2016 11:32
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 05:08
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Contributors
Author:
Diana Kuh
Author:
Stella G. Muthuri
Author:
Adam Moore
Author:
Tim J. Cole
Author:
Judith E. Adams
Author:
Rebecca Hardy
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