Erschienen in:
25.06.2018 | Original Article
Relationship of American Indian blood quantum with osteoporosis risk: a cross-sectional study of American Indian women in Oklahoma
verfasst von:
B. J. Smith, M. J. Leyva, L. D. Stephens, C. E. Aston, J. Hermann, M. Payton, M. Z. Baker
Erschienen in:
Osteoporosis International
|
Ausgabe 10/2018
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Abstract
Summary
Information regarding the prevalence and risk of osteoporosis among American Indian (AI) women is limited. This study showed that with increasing AI blood quantum, the prevalence of osteoporosis at the hip based on BMD T-scores decreased and this appeared to be independent of other risk factors.
Introduction
This study was designed to investigate the effects of AI blood quantum (BQ) on osteoporosis prevalence and risk in a cohort of AI women in Oklahoma.
Methods
Women (n = 301), aged 50 years and older, were recruited to participate in the Oklahoma American Indian Women’s Osteoporosis Study. Baseline bone density, fracture history, bone biochemical markers, and potential risk factors were assessed. Participants were stratified by AI BQ into BQ1 ≤ 25%, BQ2 = 25–49%, BQ3 = 50–74%, and BQ4 = 75–100%. The effects of BQ on the prevalence and risk of osteoporosis were evaluated.
Results
Based on T-scores, one in approximately eight women in the study was osteoporotic at one or more sites. The prevalence of osteoporosis decreased (p < 0.05) with increasing BQ, especially at the hip, trochanteric, and intertrochanter regions. No differences in bone-specific alkaline phosphatase and C-telopeptide were observed across BQ that could account for the differences in bone density. 25-OH vitamin D decreased with increasing BQ, but mean for each BQ1–4 was > 40 ng/mL. Fracture history did not differ across BQ, and though 52% of the population consumed less than the RDA for calcium, no effect of BQ was observed.
Conclusions
In this cohort of women who identified as AI, greater Indian BQ was associated with a decrease in the prevalence of osteoporosis.