Trabecular bone deficits predominate in the appendicular skeleton of midlife women living with HIV: findings from a cross-sectional study in Zimbabwe
Trabecular bone deficits predominate in the appendicular skeleton of midlife women living with HIV: findings from a cross-sectional study in Zimbabwe
HIV-related mortality has fallen due to the scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART), so more women living with HIV (WLH) now live to reach menopause. Menopausal estrogen loss causes bone loss, as do HIV and certain ART regimens. However, quantitative bone data from WLH are few in Africa. A cross-sectional study of women aged 40-60 yr (49% WLH) was conducted in Harare, Zimbabwe. Menopause status, fracture history, HIV status and treatment, and anthropometry were collected, and radial/tibial peripheral QCT (pQCT) scans were performed. pQCT outcomes were distal radius and tibia trabecular volumetric BMD (vBMD), total area, and compressive bone strength (BSIc); proximal radius and tibia cortical vBMD, BMC, cortical thickness, bone area, and stress–strain index (SSI). Linear regression determined differences by HIV status, minimally adjusted for age and menopause status, and further adjusted for height and fat mass. Relationships between pQCT parameters and major osteoporotic fracture history were explored using univariate logistic regression. In WLH, linear regression assessed associations between HIV and ART durations on pQCT measures. 384 women mean (SD) age 49.7 (5.8) yr had pQCT data. WLH had lower absolute pQCT measures at all sites. Overall, HIV-related deficits were robust to adjustment for age, menopause status, height, and fat mass: WLH had lower trabecular vBMD (radius −7.3 [−12.5; −2.0]%, tibia −5.4 [−9.1; −1.7]%), and cortical vBMD (radius −3.5 [−5.9; −1.1]%, tibia −1.1 [−1.6; −0.5]%). Strength estimates were lower in WLH and of similar magnitude at the radius and tibia. Longer HIV duration was associated with lower radius bone area, BMC, and estimates of bone strength, independent of ART duration. Trabecular deficits predominate in WLH, though with age cortical compartment bone loss may increase in importance. This is particularly concerning as these differences were observed at the radius, a common site of postmenopausal osteoporotic fracture.
epidemiology, menopause, quantitation of bone, aging, analysis
454-462
Breasail, Mícheál Ó
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Madanhire, Tafadzwa
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Kahari, Cynthia
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Ebeling, Peter R.
71a1d109-c0fe-438d-9d01-660012eb7049
Simms, Victoria
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Micklesfield, Lisa K.
e73dd95b-ce79-4dc4-b0be-a8935eb069c8
Ferrand, Rashida A
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Gregson, Celia L.
6fc38b56-72d5-42a2-9132-9657f26de540
Ward, Kate A.
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7
17 March 2025
Breasail, Mícheál Ó
d9d3bc19-e3ca-4e67-90fc-0eec72004164
Madanhire, Tafadzwa
24f2c09f-1ee3-4674-9bf6-e201e1d17f6d
Kahari, Cynthia
833e2734-f622-41cf-a877-5c0fa2a1d8dc
Ebeling, Peter R.
71a1d109-c0fe-438d-9d01-660012eb7049
Simms, Victoria
0ff3eaa5-771c-4699-be49-488bf427ea1d
Micklesfield, Lisa K.
e73dd95b-ce79-4dc4-b0be-a8935eb069c8
Ferrand, Rashida A
9441b7cd-4eb5-4665-aa69-357911fd2c87
Gregson, Celia L.
6fc38b56-72d5-42a2-9132-9657f26de540
Ward, Kate A.
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7
Breasail, Mícheál Ó, Madanhire, Tafadzwa, Kahari, Cynthia, Ebeling, Peter R., Simms, Victoria, Micklesfield, Lisa K., Ferrand, Rashida A, Gregson, Celia L. and Ward, Kate A.
(2025)
Trabecular bone deficits predominate in the appendicular skeleton of midlife women living with HIV: findings from a cross-sectional study in Zimbabwe.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 40 (4), , [zjaf021].
(doi:10.1093/jbmr/zjaf021).
Abstract
HIV-related mortality has fallen due to the scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART), so more women living with HIV (WLH) now live to reach menopause. Menopausal estrogen loss causes bone loss, as do HIV and certain ART regimens. However, quantitative bone data from WLH are few in Africa. A cross-sectional study of women aged 40-60 yr (49% WLH) was conducted in Harare, Zimbabwe. Menopause status, fracture history, HIV status and treatment, and anthropometry were collected, and radial/tibial peripheral QCT (pQCT) scans were performed. pQCT outcomes were distal radius and tibia trabecular volumetric BMD (vBMD), total area, and compressive bone strength (BSIc); proximal radius and tibia cortical vBMD, BMC, cortical thickness, bone area, and stress–strain index (SSI). Linear regression determined differences by HIV status, minimally adjusted for age and menopause status, and further adjusted for height and fat mass. Relationships between pQCT parameters and major osteoporotic fracture history were explored using univariate logistic regression. In WLH, linear regression assessed associations between HIV and ART durations on pQCT measures. 384 women mean (SD) age 49.7 (5.8) yr had pQCT data. WLH had lower absolute pQCT measures at all sites. Overall, HIV-related deficits were robust to adjustment for age, menopause status, height, and fat mass: WLH had lower trabecular vBMD (radius −7.3 [−12.5; −2.0]%, tibia −5.4 [−9.1; −1.7]%), and cortical vBMD (radius −3.5 [−5.9; −1.1]%, tibia −1.1 [−1.6; −0.5]%). Strength estimates were lower in WLH and of similar magnitude at the radius and tibia. Longer HIV duration was associated with lower radius bone area, BMC, and estimates of bone strength, independent of ART duration. Trabecular deficits predominate in WLH, though with age cortical compartment bone loss may increase in importance. This is particularly concerning as these differences were observed at the radius, a common site of postmenopausal osteoporotic fracture.
Text
zjaf021
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 23 January 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 January 2025
Published date: 17 March 2025
Keywords:
epidemiology, menopause, quantitation of bone, aging, analysis
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Local EPrints ID: 498717
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498717
ISSN: 0884-0431
PURE UUID: 7395c1b9-63d4-4eb9-ac73-b13588fca9a1
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Date deposited: 25 Feb 2025 18:11
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:14
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Contributors
Author:
Mícheál Ó Breasail
Author:
Tafadzwa Madanhire
Author:
Cynthia Kahari
Author:
Peter R. Ebeling
Author:
Victoria Simms
Author:
Lisa K. Micklesfield
Author:
Rashida A Ferrand
Author:
Celia L. Gregson
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