Citation

BibTex format

@article{Shah:2015:10.13187/ejm.2015.10.214,
author = {Shah, SIMRANA and Jin, ANDI and Wilson, HANNAHCP and Abel, PAULD and Price, PATRICIAM and Hansen, ULRICHN and Abel, RICHARDL},
doi = {10.13187/ejm.2015.10.214},
journal = {European Journal of Medicine},
pages = {214--220},
title = {Novel Computed Tomography-based Metric Reliably Estimates bone Strength, Offering Potentially Meaningful Enhancement in Clinical Fracture Risk Prediction},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.13187/ejm.2015.10.214},
volume = {10},
year = {2015}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Osteoporosis with resultant fractures is a major global health problem with huge socioeconomicimplications for patients, families and healthcare services. Areal (2D bone mineraldensity (BMD) assessment is commonly used for predicting such fracture risk, but is unreliable,estimating only about 50% of bone strength. By contrast, computed tomography (CT) basedtechniques could provide improved metrics for estimating bone strength such as bone volumefraction (BVF; a 3D volumetric measure of mineralised bone), enabling cheap, safe and reliablestrategies for clinical application, and to help divert resources to patients identified as most likelyto benefit, meeting an unmet need.Here we describe a novel method for measuring BVF at clinical-CT like low-resolution(550µm voxel size). Femoral heads (n=8) were micro-CT scanned ex-vivo. Micro-CT data weredowngraded in resolution from 30µm to 550µm voxel size and BVF calculated at high and lowresolution. Experimental mechanical testing was applied to measure ex vivo bone strength ofsamples. BVF measures collected at high-resolution showed high correlation (correlationcoefficient r2=0.95) with low-resolution data. Low-resolution BVF metrics showed high correlation(r2=0.96) with calculated sample strength. These results demonstrate that measuring BVF at lowresolution is feasible, which also predicts bone strength. Measures of BVF should be useful for clinically estimating bone strength and fracture risk. The method needs to be validated using clinical CT scans.
AU - Shah,SIMRANA
AU - Jin,ANDI
AU - Wilson,HANNAHCP
AU - Abel,PAULD
AU - Price,PATRICIAM
AU - Hansen,ULRICHN
AU - Abel,RICHARDL
DO - 10.13187/ejm.2015.10.214
EP - 220
PY - 2015///
SN - 2310-3434
SP - 214
TI - Novel Computed Tomography-based Metric Reliably Estimates bone Strength, Offering Potentially Meaningful Enhancement in Clinical Fracture Risk Prediction
T2 - European Journal of Medicine
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.13187/ejm.2015.10.214
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/48936
VL - 10
ER -

Contact us

The Biomechanics Group
Mechanical Engineering
Imperial College London

South Kensington Campus
City & Guilds Building
Exhibition Road
London SW7 2AZ

+44 (0) 20 7589 5111