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Observational Study
Fragility spinal fractures among cirrhotic liver transplant candidates in Croatia.
- Andrija Jurina, Valentina Delimar, Zlatko Giljević, Tajana Filipec Kanižaj, Andro Matković, Dinko Vidović, Nikolina Jurjević, Vinko Vidjak, Željko Duić, Mario Ćuk, Mladen Japjec, Tomislav Dujmović, Andrea Radeljak, Mirjana Marjana Kardum Paro, Marijana Vučić-Lovrenčić, and Mario Starešinić.
- Division of general and sport traumatology and orthopaedics, Department of surgery, Merkur University Hospital, Zajčeva 19, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia.
- Injury. 2024 Feb 1; 55 (2): 111171111171.
IntroductionExisting data on fragility spinal fractures prevalence in liver transplant candidates are scarce and inconsistent. This may be due to other comorbidities, besides hepatic osteodystrophy (HO), that contribute to bone loss and fragility fracture prevalence in chronic liver disease (CLD).ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of spinal thoracic and lumbar fragility fractures among cirrhotic, non-chronic kidney disease (CKD), non-diabetic liver transplant candidates and to explore their relationship with clinical characteristics, laboratory markers and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) results.Material And MethodsThis cross-sectional observational study was conducted at Merkur University Hospital, Croatia, between February 2019 and May 2023. Adult patients with liver cirrhosis referred for liver transplantation were included. Patients with acute infection, CKD, diabetes mellitus, malignancies, inflammatory bone diseases and those on corticosteroid or antiresorptive therapy were excluded. Clinical, laboratory and radiological assessment was carried out and patients were accordingly allocated into non-fractured and fractured group for the purpose of statistical analysis.ResultsA total of 90 patients were included in the study. There was 123 fractures, 87 (70.7 %) in the thoracic and 36 (29.3 %) in the lumbar region. Eighty-nine (72.4 %) fractures were grade 1, 31 (25.2 %) were grade 2 and 3 (2.4 %) were grade 3. Patients in the fractured group were significantly older (p < 0.001). No significant differences between fractured and non-fractured group according to laboratory and DXA parameters were noted. Subgroup with lumbar fractures had significantly lower bone mineral density values at L1-L4 region. Statistically significant negative correlation between bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BALP) and hip total BMD (rho = -0.414, p < 0.001) and spine total BMD (rho = -0.258, p = 0.014) values was found.ConclusionPresent study confirmed detrimental impact of CLD and HO on bone strength. DXA measurement correlated with the presence of lumbar fragility fractures. A combination of standard X-ray imaging and DXA is needed for adequate bone evaluation in pretransplant period and BALP could be useful for detecting HO in CLD. Searching for other risk factors and implementing bone turnover markers and additional imaging techniques for bone loss evaluation in liver transplant candidates is needed.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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