Abstract

Changes in select adipose tissue volumes may differentially impact bone mineral density. This study was performed to assess cross-sectional and longitudinal relationships between computed tomography-determined visceral (VAT), subcutaneous (SAT), inter-muscular (IMAT), and pericardial adipose tissue (PAT) volumes with respective changes in thoracic vertebral and lumbar vertebral volumetric trabecular bone mineral density (vBMD) in African Americans with type 2 diabetes. Generalized linear models were fitted to test relationships between baseline and change in adipose volumes with change in vBMD in 300 African American-Diabetes Heart Study participants; adjustment was performed for age, sex, diabetes duration, study interval, smoking, hypertension, BMI, kidney function, and medications. Participants were 50% female with mean ± SD age 55.1±9.0 years, diabetes duration 10.2±7.2 years, and BMI 34.7±7.7 kg/m2. Over 5.3 ± 1.4 years, mean vBMD decreased in thoracic/lumbar spine, while mean adipose tissue volumes increased in SAT, IMAT, and PAT, but not VAT depots. In fully-adjusted models, changes in lumbar and thoracic vBMD were positively associated with change in SAT (β[SE] 0.045[0.011], p<0.0001; 0.40[0.013], p = 0.002, respectively). Change in thoracic vBMD was positively associated with change in IMAT (p = 0.029) and VAT (p = 0.016); and change in lumbar vBMD positively associated with baseline IMAT (p<0.0001). In contrast, vBMD was not associated with change in PAT. After adjusting for BMI, baseline and change in volumes of select adipose depots were associated with increases in thoracic and lumbar trabecular vBMD in African Americans. Effects of adiposity on trabecular bone appear to be site-specific and related to factors beyond mechanical load.

Highlights

  • Obesity is an important risk factor for the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D)

  • In fully-adjusted models assessing longitudinal relationships between the changes in volumetric bone mineral density (BMD) with select adipose depots in African Americans, significant positive relationships were seen between change in subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) with the changes in both thoracic vertebral volumetric trabecular bone mineral density (vBMD) and lumbar vertebral vBMD

  • Strong trends toward positive association were detected between changes in inter-muscular adipose tissue (IMAT) and visceral adipose tissue (VAT) with the change in thoracic vBMD

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is an important risk factor for the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D). In a secondary analysis of 770 women and 1199 men with T2D from three prospective observational studies (the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures, the Osteoporotic Fractures in Men, and the Health, Aging, and Body Composition), Schwartz et al reported that individuals with T2D have higher risk of hip and non-spine fractures compared to age- and BMD-matched controls [8]. Whether these conflicting observations reflect the effect of specific adipose tissue distributions on BMD remains unclear

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