Abstract

ObjectivesTo assess whether digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) analysis of standard clinical hand or wrist radiographs obtained at emergency hospitals can predict hip fracture risk.MethodsA total of 45,538 radiographs depicting the left hand were gathered from three emergency hospitals in Stockholm, Sweden. Radiographs with insufficiently included metacarpal bone, fractures in measurement regions, foreign material or unacceptable positioning were manually excluded. A total of 18,824 radiographs from 15,072 patients were analysed with DXR, yielding a calculated BMD equivalent (DXR-BMD). Patients were matched with the national death and inpatient registers. Inclusion criteria were age ≥ 40 years, no prior hip fracture and observation time > 7 days. Hip fractures were identified via ICD-10 codes. Age-adjusted hazard ratio per standard deviation (HR/SD) was calculated using Cox regression.Results8,257 patients (65.6 % female, 34.4 % male) met the inclusion criteria. One hundred twenty-two patients suffered a hip fracture after their radiograph. The fracture group had a significantly lower DXR-BMD than the non-fracture group when adjusted for age. The HR/SD for hip fracture was 2.52 and 2.08 in women and men respectively. The area under the curve was 0.89 in women and 0.84 in men.ConclusionsDXR analysis of wrist and hand radiographs obtained at emergency hospitals predicts hip fracture risk in women and men.Key Points• Digital X-ray radiogrammetry of emergency hand/wrist radiographs predicts hip fracture risk. • Digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) predicts hip fracture risk in both women and men. • Osteoporosis can potentially be identified in patients with suspected wrist fractures. • DXR can potentially be used for selective osteoporosis screening.

Highlights

  • According to epidemiological studies, about one third of women over 50 years of age will experience a fragility fracture [1, 2]

  • bone mineral density (BMD) measurement has a prominent position in fracture risk assessment and diagnosis of osteoporosis

  • 122 patients (89 women and 33 men) suffered from a hip fracture. In both men and women, the patients who suffered from a hip fracture were significantly older at the time of X-ray examination and had a significantly lower Digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR)-BMD, DXR T-score and DXR Zscore than those who did not (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

About one third of women over 50 years of age will experience a fragility fracture [1, 2]. Previous studies have shown a correlation between bone mineral density (BMD) and the risk of fracture [11,12,13,14,15]. BMD measurement has a prominent position in fracture risk assessment and diagnosis of osteoporosis. Most patients with a high risk of osteoporosis are not scanned by DXA, even when the clinician suspects osteoporosis. This is due to the relatively high costs [17, 18] and low availability of equipment [19,20,21,22]

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