Abstract

ObjectiveTo analyse the risk of fracture calculated by FRAX and the frequency of high risk of fracture in the general population in Spain. MethodsEPISER2016 is a multicentre cross-sectional population-based study of the prevalence of rheumatic diseases in the adult population in Spain. 3154 subjects aged ≥40 years 1184 men and 1970 women were selected by stratified random sampling. The questions related to fracture risk factors were asked by telephone survey. The risk of major osteoporotic fracture MOFR and hip fracture HFR were calculated with the Spanish version of the FRAX tool, without the inclusion of bone mineral density. To define high fracture risk, the MOFR≥20%, MOFR≥10%, MOFR≥7.5% and HFR≥3% thresholds were used. ResultsThe median (interquartile range) of the MOFR was 2.61% (1.55–6.34%) in women and 1.67% (1.15–2.87%) in men, whereas that of the HFR was 0.39% (0.14–1.86%) and 0.18% (0.07–0.77%). 3.83% of women and no men had a MOFR≥20%; 15.71% and 1.14% had a MOFR≥10%; 20.62% and 2.21%, a MOFR≥7.5%; and 19.27% and 8.05%, an HFR≥3%. In women aged 65 and over, the HFR was high in 58.09%. ConclusionsEPISER2016 enabled us to establish the risk of fracture calculated by FRAX and the prevalence of high risk of fracture in the general population according to the different thresholds used in Spain.

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