4.4 Review

Early-Onset Osteoporosis

Journal

CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL
Volume 110, Issue 5, Pages 546-561

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00223-021-00885-6

Keywords

Fragility fractures; Osteogenesis imperfecta; Early-onset osteoporosis; Osteoporosis in children

Funding

  1. University of Helsinki including Helsinki University Central Hospital - Novo Nordisk Foundation
  2. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  3. Finnish Pediatric Research Foundation
  4. Academy of Finland
  5. Folkhalsan Research Foundation

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Osteoporosis is a skeletal disorder affecting mainly the elderly, characterized by low bone density and fragility fractures. In children and young adults, investigations should explore the possibility of underlying monogenetic bone diseases when fragility fractures occur. Management involves treating secondary factors, optimizing lifestyle factors, and discussing personalized bone-active medication based on severity of osteoporosis and underlying diseases.
Osteoporosis is a skeletal disorder with enhanced bone fragility, usually affecting the elderly. It is very rare in children and young adults and the definition is not only based on a low BMD (a Z-score < - 2.0 in growing children and a Z-score <= - 2.0 or a T-score <= - 2.5 in young adults) but also on the occurrence of fragility fractures and/or the existence of underlying chronic diseases or secondary factors such as use of glucocorticoids. In the absence of a known chronic disease, fragility fractures and low BMD should prompt extensive screening for secondary causes, which can be found in up to 90% of cases. When fragility fractures occur in childhood or young adulthood without an evident secondary cause, investigations should explore the possibility of an underlying monogenetic bone disease, where bone fragility is caused by a single variant in a gene that has a major role in the skeleton. Several monogenic forms relate to type I collagen, but other forms also exist. Loss-of-function variants in LRP5 and WNT1 may lead to early-onset osteoporosis. The X-chromosomal osteoporosis caused by PLS3 gene mutations affects especially males. Another recently discovered form relates to disturbed sphingolipid metabolism due to SGMS2 mutations, underscoring the complexity of molecular pathology in monogenic early-onset osteoporosis. Management of young patients consists of treatment of secondary factors, optimizing lifestyle factors including calcium and vitamin D and physical exercise. Treatment with bone-active medication should be discussed on a personalized basis, considering the severity of osteoporosis and underlying disease versus the absence of evidence on anti-fracture efficacy and potential harmful effects in pregnancy.

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