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Journal Article

Citation

Kern LM, Powe NR, Levine MA, Fitzpatrick AL, Harris TB, Robbins J, Fried LP. Ann. Intern Med. 2005; 142(3): 173-181.

Affiliation

Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. lmk2003@med.cornell.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, American College of Physicians)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15684205

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Because direct evidence for the effectiveness of screening is lacking, guidelines disagree on whether people should be screened for osteoporosis. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether population-based screening for osteoporosis in older adults is associated with fewer incident hip fractures than usual medical care. DESIGN: Nonconcurrent cohort study. SETTING: Population-based cohort enrolled in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) from 4 states (California, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and North Carolina). PATIENTS: 3107 adults 65 years of age and older who attended their CHS study visits in 1994-1995. MEASUREMENTS: 31 participant characteristics (including demographic characteristics, medical histories, medications, and physical examination findings) and incident hip fractures over 6 years of follow-up. INTERVENTION: Bone density scans (dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry [DEXA] at the hip) for participants in California and Pennsylvania (n = 1422) and usual care for participants in Maryland and North Carolina (n = 1685). RESULTS: The incidence of hip fractures per 1000 person-years was 4.8 in the screened group and 8.2 in the usual care group. Screening was associated with a statistically significant lower hazard of hip fracture than usual care after adjustment for sex and propensity to be screened (Cox proportional hazard ratio, 0.64 [95% CI, 0.41 to 0.99]). LIMITATIONS: The mechanism of the association was unclear. A small unmeasured confounder that decreased the hazard of hip fracture could diminish or erase the observed association. CONCLUSIONS: Use of hip DEXA scans to screen for osteoporosis in older adults was associated with 36% fewer incident hip fractures over 6 years compared with usual medical care. Further research is needed to explore the mechanism of this association.


Language: en

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