Degenerative inter-vertebral disc disease (Osteochondrosis Intervertebralis) in Europe: prevalence, geographic variation, and radiological correlates in men and women aged 50 and over

<strong>Objectives:</strong> To assess the prevalence across Europe of radiological indices of degenerative inter-vertebral disc disease (DDD); and to quantify their associations with, age, sex, physical anthropometry, areal bone mineral density (aBMD) and change in aBMD with time. <...

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Bibliografski detalji
Glavni autori: Armbrecht, G, Felsenberg, D, Ganswindt, M, Lunt, M, Kaptoge, S, Abendroth, K, Aroso Dias, A, Bhalla, A, Cannata Andia, J, Dequeker, J, Eastell, R, Hoszowski, K, Lyritis, G, Masaryk, P, van Meurs, J, Miazgowski, T, Nuti, R, Poór, G, Redlund-Johnell, I, Reid, D, Schatz, H, Todd, C, Woolf, A, Rivadeneira, F, Javaid, M, Cooper, C, Silman, A, O'Neill, T, Reeve, J, European Vertebral Osteoporosis Study Group, European Prospective Osteoporosis Study Group
Format: Journal article
Izdano: Oxford University Press 2017
Opis
Sažetak:<strong>Objectives:</strong> To assess the prevalence across Europe of radiological indices of degenerative inter-vertebral disc disease (DDD); and to quantify their associations with, age, sex, physical anthropometry, areal bone mineral density (aBMD) and change in aBMD with time. <strong>Methods:</strong> In the population-based European Prospective Osteoporosis Study 27 age-stratified samples of men and women from across the continent aged 50+ had standardized lateral radiographs of the lumbar and thoracic spine to evaluate the severity of DDD, using the Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) scale. Measurements of anterior, mid-body and posterior vertebral heights on all assessed vertebrae from T4 to L4 were used to generate indices of end-plate curvature. <strong>Results:</strong> Images from 10,132 participants (56% female, mean age 63.9 years) passed quality checks. Overall, 47% of men and women had DDD grade 3 or more in the lumbar spine and 36% in both thoracic and lumbar spine. Risk ratios for DDD grades 3 and 4, adjusted for age and anthropometric determinants, varied across a three-fold range between centres, yet prevalences were highly correlated in men and women. DDD was associated with flattened, non-ovoid inter-vertebral disc spaces. KL grade 4 and loss of inter-vertebral disc space were associated with higher spine aBMD. <strong>Discussion:</strong> KL Grades 3 and 4 are often used clinically to categorise radiological DDD. Highly variable European prevalences of radiologically-defined DDD Grades 3+ along with the large effects of age may have growing and geographically unequal health and economic impacts as the population ages. These data encourage further studies of potential genetic and environmental causes.