Diagnostic accuracy of FRAX in predicting the 10-year risk of osteoporotic fractures using the USA treatment thresholds: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Publication/Presentation Date
6-1-2017
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis on the performance of the WHO's Fracture Risk Assessment (FRAX) instrument in predicting 10-year risk of Major Osteoporotic Fractures (MOF) and Hip Fractures (HF), using the USA treatment thresholds, in populations other than their derivation cohorts.
DESIGN: EMBASE and MEDLINE database were searched with search engine PubMed and OVID as well as Google Scholar for the English-language literature from July 2008 to July 2016. Limiting our search to articles that analyzed only MOF and/or HF as an outcome, 7 longitudinal cohorts from 5 countries (USA, Poland, France, Canada, New Zealand) were identified and included in the meta-analysis. SAS NLMIXED procedure (SAS v 9.3) was applied to fit the Hierarchical Summary Receiver Operating Characteristics (HSROC) model for meta-analysis. Forest plot and HSROC plot was generated by Review Manager (RevMan v 5.3).
RESULTS: Seven studies (n=57,027) were analyzed to assess diagnostic accuracy of FRAX in predicting MOF, using 20% as the 10-year fracture risk threshold for intervention, the mean sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) along with their 95% confidence intervals (CI) were 10.25% (3.76%-25.06%), 97.02% (91.17%-99.03%) and 3.71 (2.73-5.05), respectively. For HF prediction, using 3% as the 10-year fracture risk threshold, six studies (n=50,944) were analyzed. The mean sensitivity, specificity, and DOR along with their 95% confidence intervals (CI) were 45.70% (24.88%-68.13%), 84.70% (76.41%-90.44%) and 4.66 (2.39-9.08), respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, using the 10year intervention thresholds of 20% for MOF and 3% for HF, FRAX performed better in identifying patients who will not have a MOF or HF within 10years, than those who will. A substantial number of patients who developed fractures, especially MOF within 10years of follow up, were missed by the baseline FRAX assessment.
Volume
99
First Page
20
Last Page
25
ISSN
1873-2763
Published In/Presented At
Jiang, X., Gruner, M., Trémollieres, F., Pluskiewicz, W., Sornay-Rendu, E., Adamczyk, P., & Schnatz, P. F. (2017). Diagnostic accuracy of FRAX in predicting the 10-year risk of osteoporotic fractures using the USA treatment thresholds: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Bone, 99, 20–25. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2017.02.008
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
28274799
Department(s)
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Document Type
Article