Bone turnover markers after the menopause: T-score approach
- 01Bone turnover increases significantly after menopause and remains elevated for several decades
- 02Bone resorption increases more than formation, leading to a negative overall bone balance
- 03Rapid bone loss is most closely associated with a high overall rate of bone turnover
- 04Hip bone loss may begin early in adulthood but doubles after the onset of menopause
Postmenopausal bone loss is driven by both an increased rate of bone turnover and an imbalance where resorption exceeds formation.
Bone turnover increases at the menopause and is associated with accelerated bone loss. However, it is not known to what extent there is an imbalance between the processes of bone resorption and bone formation, nor whether it is the rate of bone turnover or the bone balance that is most closely associated with the rate of bone loss. We studied 657 healthy women ages 20 to 79 from five European cities (the OPUS Study) and divided them into two premenopausal age groups, 20 to 29 (n=129), 30 to 39years (n=183), and three postmenopausal groups 1 to 10years (n=91), 11 to 20years (n=131) and 21+ years since menopause (n=123). We measured collagen type I C-telopeptide (CTX, a marker of bone resorption) and procollagen I N-propeptide (PINP, a marker of bone formation). We used these two markers to calculate the overall bone turnover and the difference between bone formation and resorption (bone balance) using the results from the women ages 30 to 39years to calculate a standardised score (T-score). We found that the CTX and PINP levels were higher in the women ages 20 to 29 and in the women in the three menopausal groups as compared to women ages 30 to 39years (p<0.001). For example, the CTX and PINP levels were 80 and 33% higher in women 1 to 10years since menopause as compared to women ages 30 to 39years. In this group of postmenopausal women, the bone turnover expressed as a T-score was 0.72 (0.57 to 0.88, 95%CI) and the bone balance was -0.37 (-0.59 to -0.16). There was greater rate of bone loss from the total hip in all the groups of women after the menopause compared to women before the menopause. We conclude that the bone loss after the menopause is associated with both an increase in bone turnover and a negative bone balance and that bone loss was most clearly associated with overall bone turnover.
- APA
- Fatma Gossiel, Hibatallah Altaher, David M Reid, Christian Roux, Dieter Felsenberg, Claus-C Glüer, & Richard Eastell (2018). Bone turnover markers after the menopause: T-score approach. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/bone-turnover-markers-after-the-menopause-t-score-approach/
- MLA
- Fatma Gossiel, et al. "Bone turnover markers after the menopause: T-score approach." 2018, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/bone-turnover-markers-after-the-menopause-t-score-approach/.
- Chicago
- Fatma Gossiel et al. 2018. "Bone turnover markers after the menopause: T-score approach.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/bone-turnover-markers-after-the-menopause-t-score-approach/
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