What personal factors are associated with osteoporosis, fragility fracture, and osteopenia? A population-level analysis using the United Kingdom Biobank
Elizabeth Duckworth , Romil Shah , Colin O'Neill , Eeric Truumees , Vagheesh Narasimhan , Prakash Jayakumar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose
Osteopenia, osteoporosis, and fragility fractures pose a major public health concern. Population-level clinical and biopsychosocial data may uncover modifiable risk factors to target when developing whole person approaches to managing these conditions. The purpose of this study was to identify personal risk factors associated with osteoporosis, fragility fractures, and osteopenia from the United Kingdom Biobank (UKB) – a large population-level database.
Methods
We performed a cross-sectional study using the UKB to evaluate the association between 39 systematically selected explanatory variables with a diagnosis of osteopenia, osteoporosis, or fragility fracture. Bivariate analysis was performed followed by multivariable logistic regression adjusting for multicollinearity using covariance testing.
Results
Of 502,507 patients in the UKB, 40,657 had complete bone mineral density information from DEXA scans, and 32,193 had sustained a fragility fracture in the previous five years. In multivariable regression, increased time spent watching television (OR 1.15), living in an area with a high index of deprivation (OR 1.14), infrequent visits from friends and family (OR 1.09), experiencing symptoms of anxiety (OR 1.09), experiencing symptoms of depression (OR 1.08), and decreased exercise frequency (OR 1.03), were associated with increased risk of osteoporosis. Decreased exercise frequency (OR 1.27), increased BMI (OR 1.2), living in an area with a high index of deprivation (OR 1.11), and decreased salary (OR 1.10) were associated with increased risk of fragility fracture. Symptoms of anxiety (OR 1.15), living in an area with a high index of deprivation (OR 1.13), and increased time spent watching television (OR 1.11), living alone (OR 1.08), and symptoms of depression (OR 1.06), were associated with increased risk of osteopenia (p < 0.05 for all variables).
Conclusion
Analysis of population-level datasets reveal a range of modifiable mental, social, and lifestyle/behavioral health factors that can inform multidisciplinary team-based care, including strategies that respond to psychosocial concerns and sustaining healthy lifestyles and behaviors in patients experiencing osteoporosis, fragility fracture, and osteopenia. Future work should assess the impact of integrated, whole person management programs for these conditions on longitudinal outcomes.
期刊介绍:
BONE is an interdisciplinary forum for the rapid publication of original articles and reviews on basic, translational, and clinical aspects of bone and mineral metabolism. The Journal also encourages submissions related to interactions of bone with other organ systems, including cartilage, endocrine, muscle, fat, neural, vascular, gastrointestinal, hematopoietic, and immune systems. Particular attention is placed on the application of experimental studies to clinical practice.