Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9239440 Journal of Clinical Densitometry 2005 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
To identify clinical risk factors (CRFs) best related to low bone mineral density (BMD) and to assess their ability in deferring women from dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), 1187 Italian postmenopausal women, divided into development (709) and validation (478) groups, were studied. CRFs were investigated by questionnaire. DXA was performed at the spine and femoral neck. A T-score < −2.5 at both measurement sites classified those with low BMD. In the development group, using the logistic regression, the CRFs best predicting low BMD were years since menopause, age at menarche, weight, previous fracture, and muscle weakness. The predicted probability of low BMD (PPL-BMD), calculated by the logistic equation, was used to build receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves (area=0.786, standard error [SE]=0.017) on diagnosed BMD status. The PPL-BMD cutoff below which to defer women from DXA was set corresponding to the ROC curve sensitivity of 99%, 98%, and 97%. The coefficients of the logistic regression were then used to calculate the PPL-BMD of the validation group. In the validation group, the overall ability of CRFs to predict low BMD (ROC area=0.744, SE=0.023) was not different from that of the development group. At the PPL-BMD cutoff of 0.132, the percentage of DXA-deferred cases (14.5% vs 19.0%) and low-BMD-missed cases (0.7% vs 1.7%) was similar in both groups. The rates of DXA-deferred women by CRFs are reproducible and this tool should be useful in clinical practice.
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