62 research outputs found
Changes in Cross-Sectional Area of Spinal Canal and Vertebral Body Under 2 Years of Teriparatide Treatment: Results from the EUROFORS Study
The treatment of osteoporotic patients with teriparatide is associated with a significant increase in bone formation and gain of bone mass. The purpose of this post hoc analysis was to determine if the cross-sectional area (CSA) of the spinal canal and the vertebral body is affected by teriparatide treatment. Narrowing of the spinal canal might represent a safety problem, while widening of the vertebral CSA might improve mechanical stability. High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans of vertebra T12 were obtained at baseline and after 6, 12, and 24 months of teriparatide treatment (20 μg/day) from 44 postmenopausal women with established osteoporosis participating in the prospective, randomized EUROFORS study. The CSA of the spinal canal did not decrease but increased marginally by 0.9% (2.6 mm2) over 24 months (P < 0.001), with a range from −0.5% (−2 mm2) to 3.1% (+8 mm2). Even when analyzing the spinal CSA on a slice-by-slice basis, no clinically relevant narrowing of the spinal canal was observed. For vertebral bodies, the CSA increased by 0.7% (5.7 mm2) over 24 months (P < 0.001), with a range from −0.4% (–3 mm2) to 1.6% (+14 mm2). Our data do not provide evidence for safety concerns regarding spinal canal narrowing. On the other hand, the increases observed for vertebral CSA apparently also only minimally contribute to the mechanical strengthening of the vertebral body under teriparatide treatment
Spatio-temporal atlas of bone mineral density ageing
Osteoporosis is an age-associated bone disease characterised by low bone mass. An improved understanding of the underlying mechanism for age-related bone loss could lead to enhanced preventive and therapeutic strategies for osteoporosis. In this work, we propose a fully automatic pipeline for developing a spatio-temporal atlas of ageing bone. Bone maps are collected using a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scanner. Each scan is then warped into a reference template to eliminate morphological variation and establish a correspondence between pixel coordinates. Pixel-wise bone density evolution with ageing was modelled using smooth quantile curves. To construct the atlas, we amalgamated a cohort of 1714 Caucasian women (20–87 years) from five different centres in North Western Europe. As a systematic difference exists between different DXA manufacturers, we propose a novel calibration technique to homogenise bone density measurements across the centres. This technique utilises an alternating minimisation technique to map the observed bone density measurements into a latent standardised space. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first spatio-temporal atlas of ageing bone
An Analysis by Synthesis Approach for Automatic Vertebral Shape Identification in Clinical QCT
Quantitative computed tomography (QCT) is a widely used tool for osteoporosis
diagnosis and monitoring. The assessment of cortical markers like cortical bone
mineral density (BMD) and thickness is a demanding task, mainly because of the
limited spatial resolution of QCT. We propose a direct model based method to
automatically identify the surface through the center of the cortex of human
vertebra. We develop a statistical bone model and analyze its probability
distribution after the imaging process. Using an as-rigid-as-possible
deformation we find the cortical surface that maximizes the likelihood of our
model given the input volume. Using the European Spine Phantom (ESP) and a high
resolution \mu CT scan of a cadaveric vertebra, we show that the proposed
method is able to accurately identify the real center of cortex ex-vivo. To
demonstrate the in-vivo applicability of our method we use manually obtained
surfaces for comparison.Comment: Presented on German Conference on Pattern Recognition (GCPR) 2018 in
Stuttgar
Analysis of SNP-SNP interactions and bone quantitative ultrasound parameter in early adulthood
Background: Osteoporosis individual susceptibility is determined by the interaction of multiple genetic variants
and environmental factors. The aim of this study was to conduct SNP-SNP interaction analyses in candidate genes
influencing heel quantitative ultrasound (QUS) parameter in early adulthood to identify novel insights into the
mechanism of disease.
Methods: The study population included 575 healthy subjects (mean age 20.41; SD 2.36). To assess bone mass QUS
was performed to determine Broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA, dB/MHz). A total of 32 SNPs mapping to loci
that have been characterized as genetic markers for QUS and/or BMD parameters were selected as genetic markers
in this study. The association of all possible SNP pairs with QUS was assessed by linear regression and a SNP-SNP
interaction was defined as a significant departure from additive effects.
Results: The pairwise SNP-SNP analysis showed multiple interactions. The interaction comprising SNPs rs9340799
and rs3736228 that map in the ESR1 and LRP5 genes respectively, revealed the lowest p value after adjusting for
confounding factors (p-value = 0.001, β (95% CI) = 14.289 (5.548, 23.029). In addition, our model reported others
such as TMEM135-WNT16 (p = 0.007, β(95%CI) = 9.101 (2.498, 15.704), ESR1-DKK1 (p = 0.012, β(95%CI) = 13.641 (2.
959, 24.322) or OPG-LRP5 (p = 0.012, β(95%CI) = 8.724 (1.936, 15.512). However, none of the detected interactions
remain significant considering the Bonferroni significance threshold for multiple testing (p<0.0001).
Conclusion: Our analysis of SNP-SNP interaction in candidate genes of QUS in Caucasian young adults reveal several
interactions, especially between ESR1 and LRP5 genes, that did not reach statistical significance. Although our results do
not support a relevant genetic contribution of SNP-SNP epistatic interactions to QUS in young adults, further studies in
larger independent populations would be necessary to support these preliminary findings.This study was supported by a grant PI-0414-2014 from Consejería de Salud
(Junta de Andalucía, Spain). Correa-Rodríguez M is a predoctoral fellow (FPU13/
00143) from the Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (Programa de
Formación del Profesorado Universitario)
FRAX (R): Prediction of Major Osteoporotic Fractures in Women from the General Population: The OPUS Study
Purposes: The aim of this study was to analyse how well FRAXH predicts the risk of major osteoporotic and vertebral
fractures over 6 years in postmenopausal women from general population.
Patients and methods: The OPUS study was conducted in European women aged above 55 years, recruited in 5 centers
from random population samples and followed over 6 years. The population for this study consisted of 1748 women (mean
age 74.2 years) with information on incident fractures. 742 (43.1%) had a prevalent fracture; 769 (44%) and 155 (8.9%) of
them received an antiosteoporotic treatment before and during the study respectively. We compared FRAXH performance
with and without bone mineral density (BMD) using receiver operator characteristic (ROC) c-statistical analysis with ORs and
areas under receiver operating characteristics curves (AUCs) and net reclassification improvement (NRI).
Results: 85 (4.9%) patients had incident major fractures over 6 years. FRAXH with and without BMD predicted these
fractures with an AUC of 0.66 and 0.62 respectively. The AUC were 0.60, 0.66, 0.69 for history of low trauma fracture alone,
age and femoral neck (FN) BMD and combination of the 3 clinical risk factors, respectively. FRAXH with and without BMD
predicted incident radiographic vertebral fracture (n = 65) with an AUC of 0.67 and 0.65 respectively. NRI analysis showed a
significant improvement in risk assignment when BMD is added to FRAXH.
Conclusions: This study shows that FRAXH with BMD and to a lesser extent also without FN BMD predict major osteoporotic
and vertebral fractures in the general population
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