Association between walking and hip fracture in women aged 65 and older: 20-year follow-up from the study of osteoporotic fractures
Association between walking and hip fracture in women aged 65 and older: 20-year follow-up from the study of osteoporotic fractures
Summary: Hip fractures in elderly women pose significant healthcare challenges. Promoting walking for exercise as a cost-effective intervention may help reduce the risk of fractures in this population. Purpose: This study aimed to examine the relationship between walking and hip fracture risk among women aged 65 years and older. Methods: A 20-year prospective study (1986–2006) included 9704 women from the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures (SOF) in the USA. Participants were followed biennially, and walking exposure was assessed by the number of city blocks walked for exercise, routine activity, and total blocks walked daily. Cox regression models with time-varying covariates assessed associations, with competing risks addressed using Fine and Gray models. Penalized splines were used to explore dose–response relationships. Results: In total, 1419 hip fractures were identified through the study period. The mean and median follow-up times for hip fractures or censoring were 15.0 and 15.8 years in the walking for exercise group, vs. 13.2 and 13.7 years in the not walking for exercise group. The hip fracture incidence rate was 10.0 cases per 1000 person-years (py) in the walking for exercise group compared to 10.9 per 1000 py in the not walking for exercise group. All-cause mortality was 37.1 per 1000 py in the walking for exercise group compared to 46.4 per 1000 py in the not walking for exercise group. Adjusted models showed that walking for exercise significantly reduced hip fracture risk (HR, 0.864; 95% CI, 0.762–0.980; P = 0.0230), with each additional block walked for exercise reducing risk (HR per block, 0.986; 95% CI, 0.978–0.995; P = 0.0022). Walking for routine activities showed no significant association. Spline analysis indicated walking 16 blocks (≈3200 steps) daily significantly lowered hip fracture risk. Conclusion: Walking for exercise is linked to a reduced risk of hip fractures in elderly women. Walking the equivalent of 16 blocks or more (> 3200 steps) per day might be an effective way to reduce the risk of hip fractures in this vulnerable population.
Elderly women, Hip fracture, Osteoporotic fractures
1155-1164
Liu, Enwu
08027c15-9e71-44bb-9623-3081f5f6492d
Liu, Ryan Yan
559e5663-f67c-4024-994e-c2f6955d728e
Moraros, John
21d17b66-b2e7-40b3-9e50-78bee61ef208
McCloskey, Eugene V
2f057a16-3d4e-4597-80c7-6ce47f969c78
Harvey, Nicholas C
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Lorentzon, Mattias
9d78ed25-2b0c-46c5-a2db-a8b246af0956
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Kanis, John A
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d
July 2025
Liu, Enwu
08027c15-9e71-44bb-9623-3081f5f6492d
Liu, Ryan Yan
559e5663-f67c-4024-994e-c2f6955d728e
Moraros, John
21d17b66-b2e7-40b3-9e50-78bee61ef208
McCloskey, Eugene V
2f057a16-3d4e-4597-80c7-6ce47f969c78
Harvey, Nicholas C
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Lorentzon, Mattias
9d78ed25-2b0c-46c5-a2db-a8b246af0956
Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Kanis, John A
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d
Liu, Enwu, Liu, Ryan Yan, Moraros, John, McCloskey, Eugene V, Harvey, Nicholas C, Lorentzon, Mattias, Johansson, Helena and Kanis, John A
(2025)
Association between walking and hip fracture in women aged 65 and older: 20-year follow-up from the study of osteoporotic fractures.
Osteoporosis International, 36 (7), .
(doi:10.1007/s00198-025-07508-y).
Abstract
Summary: Hip fractures in elderly women pose significant healthcare challenges. Promoting walking for exercise as a cost-effective intervention may help reduce the risk of fractures in this population. Purpose: This study aimed to examine the relationship between walking and hip fracture risk among women aged 65 years and older. Methods: A 20-year prospective study (1986–2006) included 9704 women from the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures (SOF) in the USA. Participants were followed biennially, and walking exposure was assessed by the number of city blocks walked for exercise, routine activity, and total blocks walked daily. Cox regression models with time-varying covariates assessed associations, with competing risks addressed using Fine and Gray models. Penalized splines were used to explore dose–response relationships. Results: In total, 1419 hip fractures were identified through the study period. The mean and median follow-up times for hip fractures or censoring were 15.0 and 15.8 years in the walking for exercise group, vs. 13.2 and 13.7 years in the not walking for exercise group. The hip fracture incidence rate was 10.0 cases per 1000 person-years (py) in the walking for exercise group compared to 10.9 per 1000 py in the not walking for exercise group. All-cause mortality was 37.1 per 1000 py in the walking for exercise group compared to 46.4 per 1000 py in the not walking for exercise group. Adjusted models showed that walking for exercise significantly reduced hip fracture risk (HR, 0.864; 95% CI, 0.762–0.980; P = 0.0230), with each additional block walked for exercise reducing risk (HR per block, 0.986; 95% CI, 0.978–0.995; P = 0.0022). Walking for routine activities showed no significant association. Spline analysis indicated walking 16 blocks (≈3200 steps) daily significantly lowered hip fracture risk. Conclusion: Walking for exercise is linked to a reduced risk of hip fractures in elderly women. Walking the equivalent of 16 blocks or more (> 3200 steps) per day might be an effective way to reduce the risk of hip fractures in this vulnerable population.
Text
s00198-025-07508-y (2)
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 24 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 May 2025
Published date: July 2025
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© The Author(s) 2025.
Keywords:
Elderly women, Hip fracture, Osteoporotic fractures
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Local EPrints ID: 502108
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502108
ISSN: 0937-941X
PURE UUID: 959e5bcb-5a4b-4a03-85b7-b00637531264
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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2025 17:08
Last modified: 04 Sep 2025 02:07
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Contributors
Author:
Enwu Liu
Author:
Ryan Yan Liu
Author:
John Moraros
Author:
Eugene V McCloskey
Author:
Mattias Lorentzon
Author:
Helena Johansson
Author:
John A Kanis
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