Factors Influencing the Development of Metachronous Fractures in Patients with Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures Treated with Conservative Management or Vertebroplasty
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ruiz Santiago, Fernando; Bueno Caravaca, Lucía; Garrido-Sanz, Francisco; Jiménez Gutierrez, Paula María; Luengo Gómez, David; Rivera Izquierdo, Mario; Benítez Sánchez, José Manuel; Láinez Ramos-Bossini, Antonio JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
osteoporosis fracture spine
Date
2025-01-13Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz Santiago, F. et. al. Diagnostics 2025, 15, 160. [https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics15020160]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (MICINN) under Grant Ref PID2023-151336OB-I00Résumé
Objectives: We aimed to analyze potential predictors for the development of
metachronous fractures (MFs) after osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVFs), with particular
focus on radiological variables obtained at initial X-rays and computed tomography (CT)
examinations, treatment applied (conservative management [CM] versus percutaneous vertebroplasty
[PV]), and fractures located at the thoracolumbar junction (T11-L2). Methods:
We conducted a two-center, observational retrospective study, including patients with
single-level OVFs treated with CM or VP.We collected socio-demographic, radiological and
treatment-related variables. We performed descriptive and contrastive bivariate analyses
based on the presence of MFs and univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses
to obtain adjusted and crude odds ratios (aOR and cOR, respectively) for predicting MFs.
Finally, we performed receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses to determine
the discriminative power of the models obtained. Results: Of the 90 patients included, 20
(22.2%) developed one or more MFs (15 in CM and 5 in PV groups, respectively; p = 0.037).
The treatment group (aOR for PV, 0.087; 95%CI, 0.015–0.379), presence of intravertebral cleft
(aOR, 5.62; 95%CI, 1.84–19.2) and difference in posterior height loss between X-rays and CT
(aOR, 0.926; 95%CI, 0.856–0.992) were identified as significant predictors for MFs, while
Genant’s numerical classification showed a trend toward significance (aOR, 1.97; 95%CI,
0.983–4.19; p = 0.064). A multivariate model combining these four variables showed optimal
fitting and correctly discriminated over 80% of cases (AUC, 0.828; 95%CI, 0.725–0.930).
Factors associated with MFs in thoracolumbar junction OVFs were intravertebral cleft,
CM, posterior height loss in CT, and DGOU OF3 fractures. Conclusions: The presence of
intravertebral cleft, a difference in posterior height loss between X-rays and CT equal to
or lower than 2.4%, higher grades of Genant’s numerical classification, and application of
CM instead of PV are predictors of MFs. These findings improve our understanding of the
factors involved in the development of MFs, but they need to be validated prospectively.