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  3. Rheumatoid arthritis and subsequent fracture risk: an individual person meta-analysis to update FRAX.
 

Rheumatoid arthritis and subsequent fracture risk: an individual person meta-analysis to update FRAX.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/85729
Date of Publication
April 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Osteoporosi...

Author
Kanis, John A
Johansson, Helena
McCloskey, Eugene V
Liu, Enwu
Schini, Marian
Vandenput, Liesbeth
Åkesson, Kristina E
Anderson, Fred A
Azagra, Rafael
Bager, Cecilie L
Beaudart, Charlotte
Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A
Biver, Emmanuel
Bruyère, Olivier
Cauley, Jane A
Center, Jacqueline R
Chapurlat, Roland
Christiansen, Claus
Cooper, Cyrus
Crandall, Carolyn J
Cummings, Steven R
da Silva, José A P
Dawson-Hughes, Bess
Diez-Perez, Adolfo
Dufour, Alyssa B
Eisman, John A
Elders, Petra J M
Ferrari, Serge
Fujita, Yuki
Fujiwara, Saeko
Glüer, Claus-Christian
Goldshtein, Inbal
Goltzman, David
Gudnason, Vilmundur
Hall, Jill
Hans, Didier
Hoff, Mari
Hollick, Rosemary J
Huisman, Martijn
Iki, Masayuki
Ish-Shalom, Sophia
Jones, Graeme
Karlsson, Magnus K
Khosla, Sundeep
Kiel, Douglas P
Koh, Woon-Puay
Koromani, Fjorda
Kotowicz, Mark A
Kröger, Heikki
Kwok, Timothy
Lamy, Olivier
Langhammer, Arnulf
Larijani, Bagher
Lippuner, Kurt
Clinic of Osteoporosis
McGuigan, Fiona E A
Mellström, Dan
Merlijn, Thomas
Nguyen, Tuan V
Nordström, Anna
Nordström, Peter
O Neill, Terence W
Obermayer-Pietsch, Barbara
Ohlsson, Claes
Orwoll, Eric S
Pasco, Julie A
Rivadeneira, Fernando
Schott, Anne-Marie
Shiroma, Eric J
Siggeirsdottir, Kristin
Simonsick, Eleanor M
Sornay-Rendu, Elisabeth
Sund, Reijo
Swart, Karin
Szulc, Pawel
Tamaki, Junko
Torgerson, David J
van Schoor, Natasja M
van Staa, Tjeerd P
Vila, Joan
Wright, Nicole C
Yoshimura, Noriko
Zillikens, M Carola
Zwart, Marta
Harvey, Nicholas C
Lorentzon, Mattias
Leslie, William D
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Osteoporosis International
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1433-2965
0937-941X
Publisher
Springer
Language
en
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s00198-025-07397-1
PubMed ID
39955689
Uncontrolled Keywords

Epidemiology

FRAX

Fracture risk

Glucocorticoids

Hip fracture

Major osteoporotic fr...

Meta-analysis

Osteoporosis

Rheumatoid arthritis

Risk factors

Description
Unlabelled
The relationship between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and fracture risk was estimated in an international meta-analysis of individual-level data from 29 prospective cohorts. RA was associated with an increased fracture risk in men and women, and these data will be used to update FRAX®.Introduction
RA is a well-documented risk factor for subsequent fracture that is incorporated into the FRAX algorithm. The aim of this study was to evaluate, in an international meta-analysis, the association between rheumatoid arthritis and subsequent fracture risk and its relation to sex, age, duration of follow-up, and bone mineral density (BMD) with a view to updating FRAX.Methods
The resource comprised 1,909,896 men and women, aged 20-116 years, from 29 prospective cohorts in which the prevalence of RA was 3% or less (primary analysis) and an additional 17 cohorts with a prevalence greater than 3% (supplementary analysis). The association between RA and fracture risk (any clinical fracture, osteoporotic fracture, major osteoporotic fracture (MOF), and hip fracture) was examined using an extension of the Poisson regression model in each cohort and each sex, followed by random-effects meta-analyses of the weighted beta coefficients.Results
In the primary analysis, RA was reported in 1.3% of individuals. During 15,683,133 person-years of follow-up, 139,002 fractures occurred, of which 27,518 were hip fractures. RA was associated with an increased risk of any clinical fracture (hazard ratio [HR] 1.49, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.35-1.65). The HRs were of similar magnitude for osteoporotic fracture and MOF but higher for hip fracture (HR = 2.23; 95% CI 1.85-2.69). For hip fracture, there was a significant interaction with age with higher HRs at younger ages. HRs did not differ between men and women and were independent of exposure to glucocorticoids and femoral neck BMD. Lower HRs were observed in the supplementary analysis cohorts, particularly in those with a high apparent prevalence of RA, possibly from conflation of RA with osteoarthritis.Conclusions
A diagnosis of RA confers an increased risk of fracture that is largely independent of BMD, sex, and corticosteroids. RA should be retained as a risk factor in future iterations of FRAX with updated risk functions to improve fracture risk prediction.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/205861
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