Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8722920 | Journal of Clinical Densitometry | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The aim of the study was to establish factors with an impact on fracture risk and to develop an algorithm to predict osteoporotic fracture. A total of 978 postmenopausal women from the epidemiological, population-based RAC-OST-POL study with a mean age of 65.7â±â7.3 years were enrolled. At baseline, bone mineral density at hip and clinical risk factors for fracture were collected. Afterward, each person was asked annually on fracture incidence in the 5-year follow-up. Finally, data for complete 5-year observation were gathered for the group of 802 patients. During the follow-up, 92 osteoporotic fractures occurred in 78 women. The most common fracture site was the forearm (nâ=â45). The following baseline factors were found as significant for fracture incidence: femoral neck bone mineral density, prior fractures, steroid use, falls within previous 12 months, and height. Fracture risk was predicted by the following formula: Riskoffractureincidence=11+eâ(â9.899+1.077âSTEROIDS+0.681âPRIORFALLS+0.611âPRIORFRACTURESâ0.483âFNTscore+0.042âHEIGHT). In our current longitudinal study, an algorithm predicting fracture occurrence over a period of 5 years was developed. It may find application in daily medical practice.
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Authors
P. Adamczyk, A. Werner, M. Bach, J. Å»ywiec, A. CzekajÅo, W. Grzeszczak, B. Drozdzowska, W. Pluskiewicz,