Significant differences in UK and US female bone density reference ranges.
Authors
Noon, ESingh, S
Cuzick, J
Spector, T D
Williams, F M K
Frost, M L
Howell, Anthony
Harvie, M
Eastell, R
Coleman, R E
Fogelman, I
Blake, G M
Affiliation
Osteoporosis Research Unit, Division of Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.Issue Date
2010-11
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In the United Kingdom (UK), T- and Z-scores are usually calculated using reference ranges derived from United States (US) populations. In the UK arm of a recent randomised trial (International Breast Cancer Intervention Study II (IBIS-II)), substantially, fewer women than expected were recruited into the osteopenic (-2.545 years with a typical body mass index of 28 kg m(-2) have spine and hip bone mineral density (BMD) 0.6 standard deviation higher than their US counterparts. INTRODUCTION: Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is widely used for the diagnosis of osteoporosis and to investigate the effect of pharmacological treatments on BMD. In both routine and research settings, it is important that DXA results are correctly interpreted. METHODS: T- and Z-scores for the first 650 UK Caucasian women enrolled in the IBIS-II study were compared with data from two independent studies of unrelated, unselected UK Caucasian women: (1) 2,382 women aged 18 to 79 recruited to the Twins UK Adult Twin Registry; (2) 431 women aged 21 to 84 with no risk factors for osteoporosis recruited at Guy's Hospital. All DXA measurements were performed on Hologic densitometers. Subjects were divided into six age bands, and T- and Z-scores were calculated using the manufacturer's US reference range for the spine and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III reference range for the femoral neck and total hip. RESULTS: The overall mean Z-scores for the IBIS-II, Twin, and Guy's groups were: spine: +0.61, +0.29, +0.33; femoral neck: +0.42, +0.36, +0.45; total hip: +0.65, +0.38, +0.39 (all p<0.001 compared with the expected value of 0). The mean body weight of subjects in the three studies was 74.4, 65.5, and 65.4 kg, respectively. Analysis revealed a highly significant relationship between Z-score and weight at each BMD site with a slope of 0.03 kg(-1). CONCLUSIONS: In general, US spine and hip reference ranges are not suitable for the calculation of Z-scores in UK women. For some research study designs, the differences may significantly influence the pattern of subject recruitment.Citation
Significant differences in UK and US female bone density reference ranges. 2010, 21 (11):1871-80 Osteoporos IntJournal
Osteoporosis InternationalDOI
10.1007/s00198-009-1153-1PubMed ID
20063090Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1433-2965ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s00198-009-1153-1
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Lumbar spine bone mineral density in US adults: demographic patterns and relationship with femur neck skeletal status.
- Authors: Looker AC, Melton LJ 3rd, Borrud LG, Shepherd JA
- Issue date: 2012 Apr
- Bone mineral density of the spine and femur in healthy Saudis.
- Authors: Ardawi MS, Maimany AA, Bahksh TM, Nasrat HA, Milaat WA, Al-Raddadi RM
- Issue date: 2005 Jan
- A referent bone mineral density database for Chinese American women.
- Authors: Walker MD, Babbar R, Opotowsky AR, Rohira A, Nabizadeh F, Badia MD, Chung W, Chiang J, Mediratta A, McMahon D, Liu G, Bilezikian JP
- Issue date: 2006
- Bone mineral density reference ranges for Australian men: Geelong Osteoporosis Study.
- Authors: Henry MJ, Pasco JA, Korn S, Gibson JE, Kotowicz MA, Nicholson GC
- Issue date: 2010 Jun
- Definition of a population-specific DXA reference standard in Italian women: the Densitometric Italian Normative Study (DINS).
- Authors: Pedrazzoni M, Girasole G, Bertoldo F, Bianchi G, Cepollaro C, Del Puente A, Giannini S, Gonnelli S, Maggio D, Marcocci C, Minisola S, Palummeri E, Rossini M, Sartori L, Sinigaglia L
- Issue date: 2003 Dec