4.6 Article

Vertebral Fractures and Trabecular Microstructure in Men With Prostate Cancer on Androgen Deprivation Therapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 325-332

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.1771

Keywords

PROSTATE CANCER; OSTEOPOROSIS; BONE DENSITOMETRY; RADIOLOGY

Funding

  1. Tarsa
  2. Warner Chilcott
  3. Eli Lilly
  4. Merck
  5. Ortho Biotech
  6. DOD IDEA [PC060710]
  7. University of Pittsburgh Clinical Translational Research Center [RFA-RM-06-002]
  8. University of Pittsburgh Department of Urology, Claude D. Pepper Center, Division of Geriatric Medicine [2 P30 AG024827-06]
  9. [2K24DK062895-06]

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Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT), a treatment for prostate cancer, is associated with bone loss and fractures. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-measured bone mineral density does not assess vertebral fractures (VF). High-resolution micro-magnetic resonance imaging (HR-MRI) assesses bone microarchitecture and provides structural information. To determine if VF identification increased the diagnosis of osteoporosis beyond DXA and if HR-MRI demonstrated skeletal deterioration in men with VF, we cross-sectionally studied 137 men aged >60 years with nonmetastatic prostate cancer on ADT for >6 months. Vertebral fracture assessment (VFA) by DXA was confirmed with X-rays. HR-MRI of the wrist included bone volume to total volume (BV/TV), surface density (trabecular plates), surface/curve ratio (plates/rods), and erosion index (higher depicts deterioration). VF were found in 37% of men; the majority were unknown. Seven percent of participants were classified as osteoporotic by hip or spine DXA. Thirty-seven percent of men without osteoporosis by DXA had VF identified, suggesting that 90% of patients with clinical osteoporosis would have been misclassified by DXA alone. By ANOVA comparison across VF grades, the BV/TV, surface density, and spine, hip, and wrist DXA were lower, and erosion index was higher in men with moderate-severe VF compared with lesser grades (all p<0.05). By unadjusted ROC analysis, the addition of HR-MRI to DXA at the spine, hip, and femoral neck added substantially (AUC increased 0.831 to 0.902, p<0.05) to prediction of moderate-severe vertebral fracture. HR-MRI indices were associated with spine, hip, and wrist DXA measures (p<0.01). Longer duration of ADT was associated with lower BV/TV, surface density, and surface/curve ratio (p<0.05). ADT for men with prostate cancer is associated with silent VF. DXA alone leads to misclassifications of osteoporosis, which can be avoided by VF assessment. HR-MRI provides a novel technique to assess deterioration of structural integrity in men with VF and adds micro-structural information. (C) 2013 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

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