Bone mineral density and fractures in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: the DXA-HIP project

Author:

Ebrahimiarjestan Mina1ORCID,Yang Lan2,E. Erjiang3,Wang Tingyan4ORCID,Carey John J56ORCID,Whelan Bryan57ORCID,Silke Carmel57,O’Sullivan Miriam57,Gsel Amina58,Brennan Attracta9,Dempsey Mary10,Yu Ming1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Industrial Engineering, Tsinghua University , Beijing, China

2. Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland , Galway, Ireland

3. School of Management, Guangxi Minzu University , Nanning, China

4. Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford , Oxford, UK

5. School of Medicine, National University of Ireland , Galway, Ireland

6. Department of Rheunatology, Galway University Hospitals , Galway, Ireland

7. Department of Rheumatology, Our Lady’s Hospital , Manorhamilton, Ireland

8. Department of Rheumatology, Galway University Hospitals , Galway, Ireland

9. School of Computer Science, National University of Ireland , Galway, Ireland

10. School of Engineering, National University of Ireland , Galway, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract Objectives RA is a chronic disabling disease affecting 0.5–1% of adults worldwide. People with RA have a greater prevalence of multimorbidity, particularly osteoporosis and associated fractures. Recent studies suggest that fracture risk is related to both non-RA and RA factors, whose importance is heterogeneous across studies. This study seeks to compare baseline demographic and DXA data across three cohorts: healthy controls, RA patients and a non-RA cohort with major risk factors and/or prior major osteoporotic fracture (MOF). Methods This is a cross-sectional study using data collected from three DXA centres in the west of Ireland from January 2000 to November 2018. Results Data were available for 30 503 subjects who met our inclusion criteria: 9539 (31.3%) healthy controls, 1797 (5.9%) with RA and 19 167 (62.8%) others. Although age, BMI and BMD were similar between healthy controls, the RA cohort and the other cohort, 289 (16.1%) RA patients and 5419 (28.3%) of the non-RA cohort had prior MOF. In the RA and non-RA cohorts, patients with previous MOF were significantly older and had significantly lower BMD at the femoral neck, total hip and spine. Conclusion Although age, BMI and BMD were similar between a healthy control cohort and RA patients and others with major fracture risk factors, those with a previous MOF were older and had significantly lower BMD at all three measured skeletal sites. Further studies are needed to address the importance of these and other factors for identifying those RA patients most likely to experience fractures.

Funder

Health Research Board of Ireland

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rheumatology

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