Hip geometric parameters are associated with radiographic and clinical hip osteoarthritis: findings from a cross-sectional study in UK Biobank
Hip geometric parameters are associated with radiographic and clinical hip osteoarthritis: findings from a cross-sectional study in UK Biobank
Objective: To examine the extent to which geometric parameters derived from dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans in the UK Biobank study are related to hip osteoarthritis (HOA) independently of sex, age and body size. Design: Femoral neck width (FNW), diameter of the femoral head (DFH) and hip axis length (HAL) were derived automatically from left hip DXA scans in UK Biobank using outline points placed around the hip by a machine-learning program. Correlations were calculated between geometric parameters, age, height, and weight. Logistic regression was used to examine the relationship of geometric parameters with radiographic HOA, hospital diagnosed HOA (HESOA), and Cox proportional hazards model to evaluate the relationship with total hip replacement (THR). Analyses were adjusted for sex, age, height, weight, and geometric parameters. Results: The study consisted of 40,312 participants. In age and sex-adjusted analyses, FNW, HAL and DFH were related to increased risk of radiographic HOA. In a model adjusted for age, sex, height, weight and other geometric parameters, both FNW and HAL retained independent relationships with radiographic HOA [FNW: odds ratios 2.38 (2.18–2.59), HAL: 1.25 (1.15–1.36)], while DFH was now protective [0.55 (0.50–0.61)]. Only FNW was independently related to HESOA [2.20 (1.80–2.68)] and THR [hazard ratios 2.51 (1.89–3.32)]. Conclusion: Greater FNW and HAL were independently related to an increased risk of radiographic HOA, whereas greater DFH appeared to be protective. Greater FNW was independently associated with HESOA and THR. These results suggest that DXA-derived geometric parameters, particularly FNW, could help determine HOA and THR risk.
DXA, Epidemiology, Hip geometry, Hip osteoarthritis, Hip shape
1627-1635
Heppenstall, S.V.
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Ebsim, R.
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Saunders, F.R.
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Lindner, C.
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Gregory, J.S.
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Aspden, R.M.
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Harvey, N.C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Cootes, T.
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Tobias, J.H.
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Frysz, M.
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Faber, B.G.
85a38e7f-74a4-4ba7-a985-a1cff3392ed0
December 2023
Heppenstall, S.V.
47936e8c-3e00-43b0-93d2-1f1c0407ce8e
Ebsim, R.
fa3d2f2c-9d77-4b95-b0ff-c34b57142381
Saunders, F.R.
a51cc79d-0928-4ab6-a479-3972c974670b
Lindner, C.
03ee5726-0741-4170-8375-659292641028
Gregory, J.S.
6995d8fa-b32b-4f7c-aa15-8146acb4fd67
Aspden, R.M.
71d1c790-5d9f-40b4-9130-bf7781b0e0dd
Harvey, N.C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Cootes, T.
f82f878a-ab1d-426c-9510-afa3f6de7aef
Tobias, J.H.
514342d7-3491-4a7b-bbeb-b00dcf244daa
Frysz, M.
bda9e219-ca28-43e4-babd-81f2d91ca3e4
Faber, B.G.
85a38e7f-74a4-4ba7-a985-a1cff3392ed0
Heppenstall, S.V., Ebsim, R., Saunders, F.R., Lindner, C., Gregory, J.S., Aspden, R.M., Harvey, N.C., Cootes, T., Tobias, J.H., Frysz, M. and Faber, B.G.
(2023)
Hip geometric parameters are associated with radiographic and clinical hip osteoarthritis: findings from a cross-sectional study in UK Biobank.
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, 31 (12), .
(doi:10.1016/j.joca.2023.09.001).
Abstract
Objective: To examine the extent to which geometric parameters derived from dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans in the UK Biobank study are related to hip osteoarthritis (HOA) independently of sex, age and body size. Design: Femoral neck width (FNW), diameter of the femoral head (DFH) and hip axis length (HAL) were derived automatically from left hip DXA scans in UK Biobank using outline points placed around the hip by a machine-learning program. Correlations were calculated between geometric parameters, age, height, and weight. Logistic regression was used to examine the relationship of geometric parameters with radiographic HOA, hospital diagnosed HOA (HESOA), and Cox proportional hazards model to evaluate the relationship with total hip replacement (THR). Analyses were adjusted for sex, age, height, weight, and geometric parameters. Results: The study consisted of 40,312 participants. In age and sex-adjusted analyses, FNW, HAL and DFH were related to increased risk of radiographic HOA. In a model adjusted for age, sex, height, weight and other geometric parameters, both FNW and HAL retained independent relationships with radiographic HOA [FNW: odds ratios 2.38 (2.18–2.59), HAL: 1.25 (1.15–1.36)], while DFH was now protective [0.55 (0.50–0.61)]. Only FNW was independently related to HESOA [2.20 (1.80–2.68)] and THR [hazard ratios 2.51 (1.89–3.32)]. Conclusion: Greater FNW and HAL were independently related to an increased risk of radiographic HOA, whereas greater DFH appeared to be protective. Greater FNW was independently associated with HESOA and THR. These results suggest that DXA-derived geometric parameters, particularly FNW, could help determine HOA and THR risk.
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Clean Hip Geometry and its associations with HOA
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 September 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 September 2023
Published date: December 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
CL was funded by a Sir Henry Dale Fellowship jointly funded by the Wellcome Trust and the Royal Society ( 223267/Z/21/Z ). NCH acknowledges support from the MRC and NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre , University of Southampton and University Hospital Southampton . BGF, MF & JHT work in the MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit at the University of Bristol, which is supported by the MRC ( MC_UU_00011/1 ). BGF is a National Institute for Health and Care Research Academic Clinical Lecturer and was previously supported by a Medical Research Council (MRC) clinical research training fellowship (MR/S021280/1). No funders had any role in the study design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; and in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Funding Information:
SVH was a self-funded undergraduate student for this work. RE, MF, FS are supported, and this work is funded by a Wellcome Trust collaborative award (reference number 209233). This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust [Grant number 223267/Z/21/Z ]. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
Keywords:
DXA, Epidemiology, Hip geometry, Hip osteoarthritis, Hip shape
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 482259
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482259
ISSN: 1063-4584
PURE UUID: ba57d208-e138-4c9c-a054-ea7208917213
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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2023 16:37
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:59
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Contributors
Author:
S.V. Heppenstall
Author:
R. Ebsim
Author:
F.R. Saunders
Author:
C. Lindner
Author:
J.S. Gregory
Author:
R.M. Aspden
Author:
T. Cootes
Author:
J.H. Tobias
Author:
M. Frysz
Author:
B.G. Faber
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