Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate if the severity of Paget's disease of bone (PDB) is decreasing and whether a milder phenotype can have affected the results of studies on disease prevalence. From August 2007 to August 2019, 167 patients with PDB were referred to our centre. Demographic and clinical characteristics were collected and compared with those of a sample of 224 patients enrolled in the same setting between January 2000 and July 2007. Multivariate analyses on 391 patients as a whole were performed assuming the year of presentation as explanatory variable. Patients of newer sample were diagnosed at a significantly older age (64.0 ± 11.3 vs 61.1 ± 11.6; p = 0.01). By comparing clinical features acknowledged as markers of disease severity, the mean number of involved bones, the proportion of skeletal involvement, and pre-treatment serum alkaline phosphatase (SAP) values all showed significant decreases (p < 0.001) in the more recent sample. Multivariate analyses confirmed these results for the latter two indices. Further markers of disease severity such as the prevalence of monostotic disease and normal SAP at diagnosis showed the same trend. The sensitivity of tools allowing incidental diagnosis in asymptomatic patients showed a reduced sensitivity: -11% for radiological assessments and -33% for SAP. Allowing for referral differences, our study provides information on reduced severity of PDB over the last two decades. A milder phenotype affects the age at onset and impairs the sensitivity of the diagnostic tools contributing to reduce the prevalence of PDB patients incidentally discovered.

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