Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, volume 35, issue 3, pages 446-459

HR‐pQCT Measures of Bone Microarchitecture Predict Fracture: Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis

Nicholas Mikolajewicz 1, 2
N. Bishop 3
Andrew F. Burghardt 4
Lars Folkestad 5
Anthony Hall 6
K Kozloff 7
Pauline T Lukey 8
Michael Molloy-Bland 9
Amaka C Offiah 3
Jay Shapiro 11
Bert van Rietbergen 12
Kim Wager 13
Bettina M. Willie 1, 14
Svetlana V. Komarova 1, 2
Francis H. Glorielx 1
Show full list: 16 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2019-11-19
scimago Q1
SJR1.868
CiteScore11.3
Impact factor5.1
ISSN08840431, 15234681
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Abstract
HR‐pQCT is a non‐invasive imaging modality for assessing volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) and microarchitecture of cancellous and cortical bone. The objective was to (i) assess fracture‐associated differences in HR‐pQCT bone parameters and (ii) to determine if HR‐pQCT is sufficiently precise to reliably detect these differences in individuals. We systematically identified 40 studies that used HR‐pQCT (39/40 used XtremeCT scanners) to assess 1291‐3253 and 3389‐10,687 individuals with and without fractures, respectively, ranging in age from 10.9 to 84.7 years with no comorbid conditions. Parameters describing radial and tibial bone density, microarchitecture, and strength were extracted and percentage differences between fracture and control subjects were estimated using a random effects meta‐analysis. An additional meta‐analysis of short‐term in vivo reproducibility of bone parameters assessed by XtremeCT was conducted to determine whether fracture‐associated differences exceeded the least significant change (LSC) required to discern measured differences from precision error. Radial and tibial HR‐pQCT parameters, including failure load, were significantly altered in fracture subjects, with differences ranging from −2.6% (95% CI: −3.4 to −1.9) in radial cortical vBMD to −12.6% (95% CI: −15.0 to −10.3) in radial trabecular vBMD. Fracture‐associated differences reported by prospective studies were consistent with those from retrospective studies, indicating that HR‐pQCT can predict incident fracture. Assessment of study quality, heterogeneity and publication biases verified the validity of these findings. Finally, we demonstrated that fracture‐associated deficits in total and trabecular vBMD, and certain tibial cortical parameters, can be reliably discerned from HR‐pQCT‐related precision error and can be used to detect fracture‐associated differences in individual patients. Although differences in other HR‐pQCT measures, including failure load, were significantly associated with fracture, improved reproducibility is needed to ensure reliable individual cross‐sectional screening and longitudinal monitoring. In conclusion, our study supports the use of HR‐pQCT in clinical fracture prediction.

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