Abstract

Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) is an emerging public health issue with high prevalence rates among older adults while fragility fractures constitute a significant public health burden with a great impact. Osteoporosis is the most important metabolic bone disease in patients with diabetes mellitus. Based on current evidence, individuals with T2DM are more vulnerable to fragility fractures than their non-diabetic counterparts, although until now, there aren’t any systematic reviews or meta-analyses concerning the impact of T2DM on the risk of fragility fractures in elderly patients. The aim of this study is to fill this gap in the current literature concerning this specific patient group.Literature in PubMed and Google Scholar was searched for relevant articles published up to January 2021. The keywords used were: elderly, diabetes mellitus type 2, and fragility fractures. Among the 180 articles retrieved, only four full-text articles were eligible and, finally, two studies (one population-based cohort study and one cross-sectional study) met the inclusion criteria for the review. Although we identified 15 records through the manual research, finally 17 records were included in the current review. The records retrieved from the manual research were 11 prospective cohort studies, two population-based studies, one prospective observational study, and one retrospective cohort study. The author's name, year of publication, country, type of study, and number of patients were reported.According to this systematic review, there is almost consensus about the increased prevalence of all kinds of fragility fractures and especially low-energy hip fractures among elderly patients with T2DM compared with their counterparts without T2DM while there is relative controversy concerning non-vertebral fractures. Vertebral fractures in the elderly with T2DM require further evaluation because the results from cohort studies are more conflicting. Finally, insulin usage can increase the possibility of fragility fractures and can even double this risk. Bone fragility should be recognized as a new complication of T2DM, especially in elderly patients, due to several additional aggravating factors such as senile osteoporosis, severe vitamin D deficiency, presence of many comorbidities, increased possibility of insulin usage, and the presence of diabetes-related complications (mainly neuropathy and retinopathy). Clinicians who treat these patients should be aware of the special diagnostic and therapeutic approaches concerning these patients.

Highlights

  • BackgroundDiabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) is an emerging public health issue with a high prevalence among older adults (>60 years old)

  • We identified 15 records through the manual research, 17 records were included in the current review

  • Insulin usage can increase the possibility of fragility fractures and can even double this risk

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) is an emerging public health issue with a high prevalence among older adults (>60 years old). The main causes are increased life expectancy and lifestyle alterations. It is estimated that 20% of the elderly worldwide suffer from T2DM while a similar proportion has undiagnosed T2DM [1]. Fragility fractures constitute a significant public health problem with a great impact. One in three women and one in five men will experience a fragility fracture resulting in a hospital visit every three seconds [2]. More than 250,000 hip fractures occur annually in older adults in the USA [3]

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