Determinants of bone parameters in young paediatric cancer survivors: the iBoneFIT project Marmol-Perez, Andres Ubago Guisado, Esther Llorente Cantarero, Francisco Jesús Vlachopoulos, Dimitris Rodriguez-Solana, Andrea Gil Cosano, José Juan Ruiz, Jonatan R Gracia Marco, Luis Andrés Background: Bone health is remarkably affected by endocrine side effects due to paediatric cancer treatments and the disease itself. We aimed to provide novel insights into the contribution of independent predictors of bone health in young paediatric cancer survivors. Methods: This cross-sectional multicentre study was carried out within the iBoneFIT framework in which 116 young paediatric cancer survivors (12.1 ± 3.3 years old; 43% female) were recruited. The independent predictors were sex, years from peak height velocity (PHV), time from treatment completion, radiotherapy exposure, region-specific lean and fat mass, musculoskeletal fitness, moderate-vigorous physical activity and past bone-specific physical activity. Results: Region-specific lean mass was the strongest significant predictor of most areal bone mineral density (aBMD), all hip geometry parameters and Trabecular Bone Score (β = 0.400-0.775, p ≤ 0.05). Years from PHV was positively associated with total body less head, legs and arms aBMD, and time from treatment completion was also positively associated with total hip and femoral neck aBMD parameters and narrow neck cross-sectional area (β = 0.327-0.398, p ≤ 0.05; β = 0.135-0.221, p ≤ 0.05), respectively. Conclusion: Region-specific lean mass was consistently the most important positive determinant of all bone parameters, except for total hip aBMD, all Hip Structural Analysis parameters and Trabecular Bone Score. Impact: The findings of this study indicate that region-specific lean mass is consistently the most important positive determinant of bone health in young paediatric cancer survivors. Randomised clinical trials focused on improving bone parameters of this population should target at region-specific lean mass due to the site-specific adaptations of the skeleton to external loading following paediatric cancer treatment. After paediatric cancer diagnosis, years from peak height velocity (somatic maturity) is critical for bone development. 2025-04-08T12:06:17Z 2025-04-08T12:06:17Z 2023 journal article Marmol-Perez, A., Ubago-Guisado, E., Llorente-Cantarero, F. J., Vlachopoulos, D., Rodriguez-Solana, A., Gil-Cosano, J. J., ... & Gracia-Marco, L. (2023). Determinants of bone parameters in young paediatric cancer survivors: the iBoneFIT project. Pediatric Research, 94(4), 1538-1546. https://hdl.handle.net/10481/103525 10.1038/s41390-023-02645-8 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ open access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional