Glucocorticoids predict 10-year fragility fracture risk in a population-based ambulatory cohort of men and women: Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study (CaMos)

Archives of osteoporosis, 9(1), 169

DOI 10.1007/s11657-013-0169-5 PMID 24577853 Source

Abstract

UNLABELLED: We determined the prospective 10-year association among incident fragility fractures and four glucocorticoid (GC) treatment groups (Never GC, Prior GC, Baseline GC, and Ever GC). Results showed that GC treatment is associated with increased 10-year incident fracture risk in ambulatory men and women across Canada.

Purpose

Using the Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study dataset, we determined the prospective 10-year association between incident fragility fractures and GC treatment.

Methods

We conducted a 10-year prospective observational cohort study at nine sites across Canada. A total of 9,263 ambulatory men and women 25 years of age and older were included in the analysis. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards analyses were conducted to determine the relationship among GC treatment groups in four levels that included Never GC, Prior GC, Baseline GC, and Ever GC (combined baseline and prior groups) and time to fracture.

Results

In each of the Never GC, Prior GC, Baseline GC, and Ever GC treatment groups, the number of participants were 8,832 (95.4 %), 303 (3.3 %), 128 (1.4 %), and 431 (4.7 %), respectively. Of the 9,263 individuals enrolled, incident fragility non-spine, hip, spine, and any fractures were experienced by a total of 896 (9.67 %), 157 (1.69 %), 130 (1.40 %), and 1,102 (11.90 %) over 10-years, respectively. For men and women combined, prior GC treatment was associated with a higher hazard ratio (HR) for time to incident non-vertebral (HR = 1.5, 95 % confidence interval [CI] = 1.1, 2.0), hip (HR = 2.1, 95 % CI = 1.1, 4.0), and any fracture (HR = 1.4, 95 % CI = 1.0, 1.8) compared with never GC treatment.

Conclusions

GC treatment is associated with increased 10-year incident fracture risk; this highlights the importance of considering therapy to prevent GC-induced fractures for patients who are using GC for various medical conditions.

Topics

glucocorticoid osteoporosis risk, steroid induced fractures long term, prednisone bone loss women, corticosteroid fracture prevention, glucocorticoid induced osteoporosis epidemiology, fragility fracture risk steroids, bone health corticosteroid therapy, osteoporosis prophylaxis glucocorticoids, hip fracture steroid users, vertebral fracture corticosteroid treatment

Cite this article

George Ioannidis, Shelley Pallan, Alexandra Papaioannou, Manisha Mulgund, Lorena Rios, Jinhui Ma, Lehana Thabane, Kenneth S Davison, Robert G Josse, Christopher S Kovacs, Nancy Kreiger, Wojciech P Olszynski, Jerilynn C Prior, Tanveer Towheed, & Jonathan D Adachi (1900). Glucocorticoids predict 10-year fragility fracture risk in a population-based ambulatory cohort of men and women: Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study (CaMos). *Archives of osteoporosis*, *9*(1), 169. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11657-013-0169-5

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