Fragility Fracture Incidence and Risk in Patients Who Undergone Bone Mineral Density Testing in Qatar: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Date
2021-01Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Osteoporosis and its associated fragility fractures pose a significant
public health issue in the elderly population. Additionally, diabetes has been linked to
an increased risk of fragility fractures. In Qatar, little is known about the burden of
fragility fractures and their association with osteoporosis or diabetes.
Aims: Determining the burden of incident fragility fractures, following a bone mineral
density (BMD) test, and the effects of having lower BMD levels and being diabetic on
the risk of fragility fractures in the population aged fifty and older. Additionally,
assessing the impact of database selection for the BMD reference range used to
establish osteoporosis diagnosis on fracture risk estimates in the Qatari women
subpopulation.
Methods: In this retrospective hospital-based cohort study, patients who underwent
BMD testing between May 2016 and June 2019 were followed through their health
records from the date of the first test until the first fracture or their last encounter (before
April 2020), whichever came first. The incidence rate of fractures per 1000 personmonths of follow-up was estimated. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional
hazards regression analyses were performed to determine the effect of BMD and the
effect of diabetes on fracture-free survival. Fracture rates among patients with
osteoporosis and sensitivity for detecting incident fractures were estimated and compared using the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) and
the Qatari databases.
Results: The cohort consisted of 705 patients who had a median follow-up time of
31.03 months (IQR=12.05). The incidence rate was 1.73 (95% CI= (1.23-2.42)). The
crude hazard ratio (HR) for fragility fracture per standard deviation reduction in BMD
was 1.82 (95% CI= (1.34-2.48)) and 1.93 (95% CI= (1.37-2.71)) when adjusted for age
and gender. Compared to not being diabetic, HR for being diabetic was 1.36 (95% CI=
(0.69-2.68)). Using the NHANES database yielded higher incidence rates among
female patients with osteoporosis and more sensitivity in detecting incident fracture.
Conclusion: Among older adults, BMD is a significant predictor for fragility fractures,
and the association between diabetes and fractures remains equivocal. The NHANES
database is superior to the Qatari database in detecting incident fracture cases among
older Qatari women.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/17750Collections
- Public Health [42 items ]