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Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Chronic liver disease is a risk factor for osteoporosis, osteopenia and bone fractures. In this study, prevalence and risk factors of osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency and also their effects on survival were investigated in 218 patients with chronic liver disease. MATERIALS A...

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Autores principales: Gokcan, Hale, Kayhan, Meral Akdogan, Demir, Sibel Ozbudak, Kacar, Sabite, Cam, Pinar, Kaplan, Mustafa, Daylak, Rabia, Oztuna, Derya, Kuran, Sedef Özdal, Ari, Derya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Kare Publishing 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9349342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35949442
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/hf.2020.2020.0007
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author Gokcan, Hale
Kayhan, Meral Akdogan
Demir, Sibel Ozbudak
Kacar, Sabite
Cam, Pinar
Kaplan, Mustafa
Daylak, Rabia
Oztuna, Derya
Kuran, Sedef Özdal
Ari, Derya
author_facet Gokcan, Hale
Kayhan, Meral Akdogan
Demir, Sibel Ozbudak
Kacar, Sabite
Cam, Pinar
Kaplan, Mustafa
Daylak, Rabia
Oztuna, Derya
Kuran, Sedef Özdal
Ari, Derya
author_sort Gokcan, Hale
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIM: Chronic liver disease is a risk factor for osteoporosis, osteopenia and bone fractures. In this study, prevalence and risk factors of osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency and also their effects on survival were investigated in 218 patients with chronic liver disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Prevalence of osteoporosis and vitamin D levels was calculated. Risk factors for osteoporosis (gender, age, body mass index, etiology), serum bilirubin, albumin, 25-hydroxy (OH) vitamin D, parathyroid hormone levels, bone mineral density (BMD) with DEXA, bone formation (osteocalcin) and bone resorption (type 1 collagen) levels, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) Na and Child-Pugh (CP) score were recorded. The effects of vitamin D levels and BMD on survival were evaluated. RESULTS: One hundred forty-seven (67.4%) patients were female (mean age, 50.4±11.7). Patients were Child A by 40.8%, Child B by 47.1%, and Child C by 12.1%. Mean MELD Na score was 8.4±2.8. Data of the BMD were established in 218 patients and 25-OH D levels in 122 patients. Mean serum 25-OH D level was 14.26±9.44 ng/mL. Osteoporosis was identified in 42 (19.3%) and osteopenia in 115 (52.8%) patients, according to BMD. Osteocalcin levels and collagen type 1 levels were high in 25.6% and 12.5% of patients, respectively. No statistically difference was found, including gender (p=0.69), age (p=0.38), etiology (p=0.16), BMI (p=0.32), CP score (p=0.42), MELD (0.14), albumin (p=0.11), total bilirubin (p=0.99), Ca (0.67), PTH (0.88), osteocalcin (0.92), collagen type 1(p=0.25) between osteoporotic and non-osteoporotic patients. Patients were followed-up for a median of 30.07±11.83 months after BMD measurement. Fifty-four (24.8%) patients died during the follow-up period, none of them are related to bone fracture. There was no statistically difference on survival between osteoporosis group (32.2±2.3 months) and non-osteoporosis group (37.2±1.7 months; p=0.26) or when patients with 25-OH D(3) ≤10 ng/mL were compared to patients with 25-OH D(3) >20 ng/mL (34.4±2.0 months vs. 39.1±1.6 months, p=0.308). CONCLUSION: In conclusion, the prevalence of bone disease was found to be higher in cirrhotic patients. Although osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency were found to decrease survival, this effect was not statistically significant. We suggest designing multi-institutional and/or multinational studies with larger and more heterogenous patient groups would enable better testing of this phenomenon.
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spelling pubmed-93493422022-08-09 Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients Gokcan, Hale Kayhan, Meral Akdogan Demir, Sibel Ozbudak Kacar, Sabite Cam, Pinar Kaplan, Mustafa Daylak, Rabia Oztuna, Derya Kuran, Sedef Özdal Ari, Derya Hepatol Forum Research Article BACKGROUND AND AIM: Chronic liver disease is a risk factor for osteoporosis, osteopenia and bone fractures. In this study, prevalence and risk factors of osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency and also their effects on survival were investigated in 218 patients with chronic liver disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Prevalence of osteoporosis and vitamin D levels was calculated. Risk factors for osteoporosis (gender, age, body mass index, etiology), serum bilirubin, albumin, 25-hydroxy (OH) vitamin D, parathyroid hormone levels, bone mineral density (BMD) with DEXA, bone formation (osteocalcin) and bone resorption (type 1 collagen) levels, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) Na and Child-Pugh (CP) score were recorded. The effects of vitamin D levels and BMD on survival were evaluated. RESULTS: One hundred forty-seven (67.4%) patients were female (mean age, 50.4±11.7). Patients were Child A by 40.8%, Child B by 47.1%, and Child C by 12.1%. Mean MELD Na score was 8.4±2.8. Data of the BMD were established in 218 patients and 25-OH D levels in 122 patients. Mean serum 25-OH D level was 14.26±9.44 ng/mL. Osteoporosis was identified in 42 (19.3%) and osteopenia in 115 (52.8%) patients, according to BMD. Osteocalcin levels and collagen type 1 levels were high in 25.6% and 12.5% of patients, respectively. No statistically difference was found, including gender (p=0.69), age (p=0.38), etiology (p=0.16), BMI (p=0.32), CP score (p=0.42), MELD (0.14), albumin (p=0.11), total bilirubin (p=0.99), Ca (0.67), PTH (0.88), osteocalcin (0.92), collagen type 1(p=0.25) between osteoporotic and non-osteoporotic patients. Patients were followed-up for a median of 30.07±11.83 months after BMD measurement. Fifty-four (24.8%) patients died during the follow-up period, none of them are related to bone fracture. There was no statistically difference on survival between osteoporosis group (32.2±2.3 months) and non-osteoporosis group (37.2±1.7 months; p=0.26) or when patients with 25-OH D(3) ≤10 ng/mL were compared to patients with 25-OH D(3) >20 ng/mL (34.4±2.0 months vs. 39.1±1.6 months, p=0.308). CONCLUSION: In conclusion, the prevalence of bone disease was found to be higher in cirrhotic patients. Although osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency were found to decrease survival, this effect was not statistically significant. We suggest designing multi-institutional and/or multinational studies with larger and more heterogenous patient groups would enable better testing of this phenomenon. Kare Publishing 2020-05-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9349342/ /pubmed/35949442 http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/hf.2020.2020.0007 Text en © Copyright 2020 by Hepatology Forum https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/)
spellingShingle Research Article
Gokcan, Hale
Kayhan, Meral Akdogan
Demir, Sibel Ozbudak
Kacar, Sabite
Cam, Pinar
Kaplan, Mustafa
Daylak, Rabia
Oztuna, Derya
Kuran, Sedef Özdal
Ari, Derya
Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title_full Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title_fullStr Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title_short Prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
title_sort prevalence and characteristics of bone disease in cirrhotic patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9349342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35949442
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/hf.2020.2020.0007
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