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FRAX-vs. T-score-based intervention thresholds for osteoporosis

FRAX-vs. T-score-based intervention thresholds for osteoporosis
FRAX-vs. T-score-based intervention thresholds for osteoporosis
Summary:

Many current guidelines for the assessment of osteoporosis, including those in Kuwait, initiate fracture risk assessment in men and women using BMD T-score thresholds. We compared the Kuwaiti guidelines with FRAX-based age-dependent intervention thresholds equivalent to that in women with a prior fragility fracture. FRAX-based intervention thresholds identified women at higher fracture probability than fixed T-score thresholds, particularly in the elderly.

Purpose:

A FRAX® model been recently calibrated for Kuwait, but guidance is needed on how to utilise fracture probabilities in the assessment and treatment of patients.

Methods:

We compared age-specific fracture probabilities, equivalent to women with no clinical risk factors and a prior fragility fracture (without BMD), with the age-specific fracture probabilities associated with femoral neck T-scores of −2.5 and −1.5 SD, in line with current guidelines in Kuwait. Upper and lower assessment thresholds for BMD testing were additionally explored using FRAX.

Results:

When a BMD T-score of −2.5 SD was used as an intervention threshold, FRAX probabilities of a major osteoporotic fracture in women aged 50 years were approximately twofold higher than those in women of the same age but with an average BMD. The increase in risk associated with the BMD threshold decreased progressively with age such that, at the age of 83 years or more, a T-score of −2.5 SD was associated with a lower probability of fracture than that of the age-matched general population with no clinical risk factors. The same phenomenon was observed from the age of 66 years at a T-score of −1.5 SD. A FRAX-based intervention threshold, defined as the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture in a woman of average BMI with a previous fracture, rose with age from 4.3% at the age of 50 years to 23%, at the age of 90 years, and identified women at increased risk at all ages. Qualitatively comparable findings were observed in the case of hip fracture probability and in men.

Conclusion:

Intervention thresholds based on BMD alone do not optimally target women at higher fracture risk than those on age-matched individuals without clinical risk factors, particularly in the elderly. In contrast, intervention thresholds based on fracture probabilities equivalent to a ‘fracture threshold’ consistently target women at higher fracture risk, irrespective of age.
0937-941X
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Azizeh, Fawaz
e9ad4b44-e794-4189-816d-f7771116caee
al Ali, Nadia
d6c15804-653b-4f4f-903e-4c31be611258
Alessa, Thamer
ec0f1cd1-d4f0-4e10-9dba-144f22d123ef
Harvey, Nicholas
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
McCloskey, Eugene
6d3df4aa-b438-4a83-bd06-06b6cbe3980f
Kanis, John A.
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Azizeh, Fawaz
e9ad4b44-e794-4189-816d-f7771116caee
al Ali, Nadia
d6c15804-653b-4f4f-903e-4c31be611258
Alessa, Thamer
ec0f1cd1-d4f0-4e10-9dba-144f22d123ef
Harvey, Nicholas
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
McCloskey, Eugene
6d3df4aa-b438-4a83-bd06-06b6cbe3980f
Kanis, John A.
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d

Johansson, Helena, Azizeh, Fawaz, al Ali, Nadia, Alessa, Thamer, Harvey, Nicholas, McCloskey, Eugene and Kanis, John A. (2017) FRAX-vs. T-score-based intervention thresholds for osteoporosis. Osteoporosis International. (doi:10.1007/s00198-017-4160-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Summary:

Many current guidelines for the assessment of osteoporosis, including those in Kuwait, initiate fracture risk assessment in men and women using BMD T-score thresholds. We compared the Kuwaiti guidelines with FRAX-based age-dependent intervention thresholds equivalent to that in women with a prior fragility fracture. FRAX-based intervention thresholds identified women at higher fracture probability than fixed T-score thresholds, particularly in the elderly.

Purpose:

A FRAX® model been recently calibrated for Kuwait, but guidance is needed on how to utilise fracture probabilities in the assessment and treatment of patients.

Methods:

We compared age-specific fracture probabilities, equivalent to women with no clinical risk factors and a prior fragility fracture (without BMD), with the age-specific fracture probabilities associated with femoral neck T-scores of −2.5 and −1.5 SD, in line with current guidelines in Kuwait. Upper and lower assessment thresholds for BMD testing were additionally explored using FRAX.

Results:

When a BMD T-score of −2.5 SD was used as an intervention threshold, FRAX probabilities of a major osteoporotic fracture in women aged 50 years were approximately twofold higher than those in women of the same age but with an average BMD. The increase in risk associated with the BMD threshold decreased progressively with age such that, at the age of 83 years or more, a T-score of −2.5 SD was associated with a lower probability of fracture than that of the age-matched general population with no clinical risk factors. The same phenomenon was observed from the age of 66 years at a T-score of −1.5 SD. A FRAX-based intervention threshold, defined as the 10-year probability of a major osteoporotic fracture in a woman of average BMI with a previous fracture, rose with age from 4.3% at the age of 50 years to 23%, at the age of 90 years, and identified women at increased risk at all ages. Qualitatively comparable findings were observed in the case of hip fracture probability and in men.

Conclusion:

Intervention thresholds based on BMD alone do not optimally target women at higher fracture risk than those on age-matched individuals without clinical risk factors, particularly in the elderly. In contrast, intervention thresholds based on fracture probabilities equivalent to a ‘fracture threshold’ consistently target women at higher fracture risk, irrespective of age.

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Kuwait_thresholds_v8 OI revision 2 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 August 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413781
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413781
ISSN: 0937-941X
PURE UUID: fb5e90fb-dc01-42b5-9295-97c82e0fcc9d
ORCID for Nicholas Harvey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8194-2512

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Date deposited: 06 Sep 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:42

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Contributors

Author: Helena Johansson
Author: Fawaz Azizeh
Author: Nadia al Ali
Author: Thamer Alessa
Author: Nicholas Harvey ORCID iD
Author: Eugene McCloskey
Author: John A. Kanis

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