Erschienen in:
01.07.2014 | Original Article
Changes in trabecular bone density in incident pediatric Crohn’s disease: a comparison of imaging methods
verfasst von:
A. Tsampalieros, M. K. Berkenstock, B. S. Zemel, L. Griffin, J. Shults, J. M. Burnham, R. N. Baldassano, M. B. Leonard
Erschienen in:
Osteoporosis International
|
Ausgabe 7/2014
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Abstract
Summary
This study of changes in dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) spine BMD following diagnosis and treatment for childhood Crohn’s disease demonstrated that changes in conventional posteroanterior BMD results were confounded by impaired growth, and suggested that lateral spine measurements and strategies to estimate volumetric BMD were more sensitive to disease and treatment effects.
Introduction
We previously reported significant increases in peripheral quantitative CT (pQCT) measures of trabecular volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) following diagnosis and treatment of pediatric Crohn’s disease (CD). The objective of this study was to compare pQCT trabecular vBMD and three DXA measures of spine BMD in this cohort: (1) conventional posteroanterior BMD (PA-BMD), (2) PA-BMD adjusted for height Z (PA-BMDHtZ), and (3) width-adjusted volumetric BMD (WA-BMD) estimated from PA and lateral scans.
Methods
Spine DXA [lumbar (L1–4) for posteroanterior and L3 for lateral] and tibia pQCT scans were obtained in 65 CD subjects (ages 7–18 years) at diagnosis and 12 months later. BMD results were converted to sex, race, and age-specific Z-scores based on reference data in >650 children (ages 5–21 years). Multivariable linear regression models identified factors associated with BMD Z-scores.
Results
At CD diagnosis, all BMD Z-scores were lower compared with the reference children (all p values <0.01). The pQCT vBMD Z-scores (−1.46 ± 1.30) were lower compared with DXA PA-BMD (−0.75 ± 0.98), PA-BMDHtZ (−0.53 ± 0.87), and WA-BMD (−0.61 ± 1.10) among CD participants. Only PA-BMD Z-scores were correlated with height Z-scores at baseline (R = 0.47, p < 0.0001). pQCT and WA-BMD Z-scores increased significantly over 12 months to −1.04 ± 1.26 and −0.20 ± 1.14, respectively. Changes in all four BMD Z-scores were positively associated with changes in height Z-scores (p < 0.05). Glucocorticoid doses were inversely associated with changes in WA-BMD (p < 0.01) only.
Conclusions
Conventional and height Z-score-adjusted PA DXA methods did not demonstrate the significant increases in trabecular vBMD noted on pQCT and WA-BMD scans. WA-BMD captured glucocorticoid effects, potentially due to isolation of the vertebral body on the lateral projection. Future studies are needed to identify the BMD measure that provides greatest fracture discrimination in CD.