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CT‐measured bone attenuation in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Relation to clinical features and outcomes
Author(s) -
Romme Elisabeth APM,
Murchison John T,
Edwards Lisa D,
JR van Beek Edwin,
Murchison David M,
Rutten Erica PA,
Smeenk Frank WJM,
Williams Michelle C,
Wouters Emiel FM,
MacNee William
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of bone and mineral research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.882
H-Index - 241
eISSN - 1523-4681
pISSN - 0884-0431
DOI - 10.1002/jbmr.1873
Subject(s) - pulmonary disease , medicine , attenuation , disease , relation (database) , radiology , intensive care medicine , data mining , computer science , physics , optics
Osteoporosis is highly prevalent in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients and has been related to several clinical features. However, most studies have been in relatively small COPD cohorts. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to compare bone attenuation measured on low‐dose chest computed tomography (CT) between COPD subjects and smoker and nonsmoker controls, and to relate bone attenuation to clinical parameters, inflammatory biomarkers, and outcomes in a large, well‐characterized COPD cohort. We studied 1634 COPD subjects, 259 smoker controls, and 186 nonsmoker controls who participated in a large longitudinal study (ECLIPSE). We measured bone attenuation, extent of emphysema, and coronary artery calcification (Agatston score) on baseline CT scans, and clinical parameters, inflammatory biomarkers, and outcomes. Bone attenuation was lower in COPD subjects compared with smoker and nonsmoker controls (164.9 ± 49.5 Hounsfield units [HU] versus 183.8 ± 46.1 HU versus 212.1 ± 54.4 HU, p  < 0.001). Bone attenuation was not significantly different between COPD subjects and smoker controls after adjustment for age, sex, and pack‐years of smoking. In the COPD subjects, bone attenuation correlated positively with forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV 1 , r  = 0.062, p  = 0.014), FEV 1 /forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio ( r  = 0.102, p  < 0.001), body mass index ( r  = 0.243, p  < 0.001), fat‐free mass index (FFMI, r  = 0.265, p  < 0.001), and C‐reactive protein ( r  = 0.104, p  < 0.001), and correlated negatively with extent of emphysema ( r  = −0.090, p  < 0.001), Agatston score ( r  = −0.177, p  < 0.001), and interleukin‐8 ( r  = −0.054, p  = 0.035). In a multiple regression model, older age, lower FFMI and higher Agatston score were associated with lower bone attenuation. Lower bone attenuation was associated with higher exacerbation ( r  = −0.057, p  = 0.022) and hospitalization ( r  = −0.078, p  = 0.002) rates but was not associated with all‐cause mortality. In conclusion, CT‐measured bone attenuation was lower in COPD subjects compared with nonsmoker controls but not compared with smoker controls, after adjustment for age, sex, and pack‐years of smoking. In the COPD subjects, bone attenuation was associated with age, body composition, and coronary artery calcification but was not associated with all‐cause mortality.

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