4.6 Article

DXA in vivo BMD methodology:: An erroneous and misleading research and clinical gauge of bone mineral status, bone fragility, and bone remodelling

Journal

BONE
Volume 41, Issue 1, Pages 138-154

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2007.02.022

Keywords

DXA methodology; BMD; DXA in vivo BMD inaccuracies; bone remodelling; anti-resorptive and anabolic PTH therapy efficacy; osteoporosis

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The seemingly unqualified reliance and near-universal dependence upon in vivo dual-energy X-ray absorptiometric (DXA) methodology to provide accurate, quantitative, and meaningful in vivo (in situ cadaveric) bone mineral areal density (BMD) determinations are proven to be unwarranted and misplaced. The underlying systematics of sizable, inherently unavoidable and un-correctable inaccuracies in the DXA output values of in vivo BMD are shown to be quantitatively consistent with being the root cause of unreliable, misdirected, and misinterpreted aspects of consensual knowledge of bone fragility, osteoporotic diagnostics/prognostics, and remodelling therapies. The BMD label that DXA ascribes to the output values of in vivo (in situ cadaveric) bone densitometry scans is shown to be a misnomer and an erroneous and invalid measure of bone mineral material. The DXA-derived BMD value does not correctly represent the areal density of bone mineral material, as it is contaminated by sizable, unavoidable, inextricable, independent soft tissue contributions. Due to intra- and extra-osseous soft tissue X-ray absorptiometric effects, it is unknown (and unknowable) exactly what DXA in vivo BMD is a measure of in any given case, or what proportion of the BMD value represents the actual bone mineral material areal density present in the DXA scan region of interest (ROI) of any predominantly trabecular bone-site (e.g., lumbar vertebrae, proximal femora). This inherent fundamental defect in DXA in vivo bone mineral areal density methodology adversely compromises both the validity and reliability of patient-specific diagnostic/prognostic evaluations, cross sectional and prospective studies, and DXA-based interpretations of bone quality and bone fragility. It further undermines the WHO characterizations (and definitions) of 'normal', 'osteopenic', and 'osteoporotic' classifications. It is also seen to make equivocal the qualitative and quantitative epidemiological estimates of the proportion of the population that is, or is deemed to become, osteoporotic. The present quantitative exposition shows DXA-measured in vivo BMD methodology to be an intrinsically flawed and misleading indicator of bone mineral status and an erroneous gauge of relative fracture risk. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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