Volume 60, Issue 7 pp. 2028-2036
Osteoarthritis

Changes in proximal femoral mineral geometry precede the onset of radiographic hip osteoarthritis: The study of osteoporotic fractures

M. K. Javaid

Corresponding Author

M. K. Javaid

University of California, San Francisco, and University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

University of Oxford, Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, Windmill Road, Oxford OX3 7LD, UKSearch for more papers by this author
N. E. Lane

N. E. Lane

University of California, Davis, Sacramento, and University of California, San Francisco

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D. C. Mackey

D. C. Mackey

California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco

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L.-Y. Lui

L.-Y. Lui

California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco

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N. K. Arden

N. K. Arden

MRC Epidemiology Resource Centre, Southampton, UK and University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

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T. J. Beck

T. J. Beck

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

Dr. Beck reports pending royalties for Hip Structure Analysis software that is licensed by Johns Hopkins University to Hologic, Inc.

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M. C. Hochberg

M. C. Hochberg

University of Maryland, Baltimore

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M. C. Nevitt

M. C. Nevitt

University of California, San Francisco

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First published: 29 June 2009
Citations: 44

Abstract

Objective

Radiographic hip osteoarthritis (RHOA) is associated with increased hip areal bone mineral density (aBMD). This study was undertaken to examine whether femoral geometry is associated with RHOA independent of aBMD.

Methods

Participants in the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures in whom pelvic radiographs had been obtained at visits 1 and 5 (mean 8.3 years apart) and hip dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) had been performed (2 years after baseline) were included. Prevalent and incident RHOA phenotypes were defined as composite (osteophytes and joint space narrowing [JSN]), atrophic (JSN without osteophytes), or osteophytic (femoral osteophytes without JSN). Analogous definitions of progression were based on minimum joint space and total osteophyte score. Hip DXA scans were assessed using the Hip Structural Analysis program to derive geometric measures, including femoral neck length, width, and centroid position. Relative risks and 95% confidence intervals for prevalent, incident, and progressive RHOA per SD increase in geometric measure were estimated in a hip-based analysis using multinomial logistic regression with adjustment for age, body mass index, knee height, and total hip aBMD.

Results

In 5,245 women (mean age 72.6 years), a wider femoral neck with a more medial centroid position was associated with prevalent and incident osteophytic and composite RHOA phenotypes (P < 0.05). Increased neck width and centroid position were associated with osteophyte progression (both P < 0.05). No significant geometric associations with atrophic RHOA were found.

Conclusion

Differences in proximal femoral bone geometry and spatial distribution of bone mass occur early in hip OA and predict prevalent, incident, and progressive osteophytic and composite phenotypes, but not the atrophic phenotype. These bone differences may reflect responses to loading occurring early in the natural history of RHOA.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

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