Title: Thomas G. Travison, Ph.D.
1Body Composition, Sex Steroids and Proximal
Femur Geometry in Men
- Thomas G. Travison, Ph.D.
New England Research Institutes, Watertown, MA
02472 ttravison_at_neriscience.com Supported by
the NIH (DK56842, AG20727) and GlaxoSmithKline,
USA
2Introduction
- Osteoporosis is an emerging public health concern
for aging men - United States 2 million men1
- Unexpectedly high mortality following
osteoporotic fracture2 - Elevated bone mineral content (BMC) and bone
mineral density (BMD) protect against fracture - Body Mass Index (BMI) and circulating estradiol
(E2) and testosterone (T) associated with
increased BMD - BMI cannot differentiate between lean and fat
mass - BMD not a direct measure of bone strength
- Material (captured by BMC/BMI)
- Architectural Arrangement
1Looker et al. Osteoporos Int 8(5) 46889.
2Seeman E. Rev Endocr Metab Disord 2(1) 25-64.
3Role of Lean vs. Fat Mass Lack of Consensus
- Many authors Fat mass of primary importance1
- Others Lean mass of
- greater importance in women2,
- men3, or both4
(2) Aloia et al. Am J Clin Nutr 1995. Li S et al.
Maturitas 2004. Wang MC et al. Bone 2005.
(1) Stewart et al. J Intern Med 2002. Reid et
al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1992. Reid et al. J
Clin Endocrinol Metab 1992. Khosla et al. J Bone
Miner Res 1996. Ravn et al. J Bone Miner Res
1999. Pluijm et al. J Bone Miner Res 2001. Wu et
al. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 2002. Reid. Bone
2002. Lim et al. Bone 2004. Wang MC et al. Bone
2005.
(3) Reid et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab
1992. Taaffe et al. J Bone Miner Res 2001. Van
Langendonck et al. Am J Hum Biol 2002. Lim et al.
Bone 2004.
(4) Ferretti JL et al. Bone 1998. Bakker et al. J
Clin Endocrinol Metab 2003. Capozza et al. Bone
2004. Hsu et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2006. Zhao et al.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2007.
4Objective
- Using measures of bone material and architectural
arrangement, assess competing influences of - Body Composition (lean and fat mass)
- Circulating Sex Hormones (T and E2)
- on bone strength at the proximal femur.
5Methods
- Boston Area Community Health/Bone Study
(BACH/Bone) - Randomly-selected, community-dwelling subjects
- N 1,219
- BMC, Body Composition by DXA
- B.U. School of Medicine (Michael Holick, MD, PhD)
- Lean mass Nonfat mass bone mass
- Total T and SHBG by competitive
electrochemiluminescence immunoassay. Total E2 by
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. - Calculated Free T and E2 by mass action
equations1,2 - Hip geometry by Hip Structural Analysis (HSA)3
-
1Sodergard, J Steroid Biochem 1982 2Vermeulen, J
Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999 3 Beck Curr
Osteoporos Rep 2007
6Methods HSA
- Use engineering principles1 to understand
proximal femurs capacity to resist failure
- From DXA Images, obtain
- BMD
- Material
- Cross-Sectional Area (CSA)
- Width
- Outer Diameter (OD)
- Bending Strength
- Section Modulus (Z)
- Resistance to Buckling
- Average Buckling Ratio (ABR)
- Measurement Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
(Thomas Beck, ScD)
1Martin RB, Burr DB J Biomech 17(3)195-201
7Threshold association
Results BMI and BMC
BMC (g)
Corr BMI, LM .62
Corr BMI, LM .20
Association driven by LM?
Travison et al, Osteoporos Int. 2008
8Results Threshold Models1
Positive associations between fat mass / BMI and
BMC removed by control for lean mass
1 Multiple linear regression, controlling for
age, race/ethnicity, physical activity, and
height (for models excluding BMI).
9Results Hip Structural Analysis
- Control for lean mass removes fat mass
associations
- Control for fat mass does not affect lean mass
associations
Travison et al, J Bone Miner Res 2008
10Summary Results Body Composition
- In BACH/Bone, Lean Mass accounts for
cross-sectional associations between - BMI or Fat Mass and
- bone material, architectural strength at the hip
11Exploratory Results Circulating Sex Hormones
E2, but not T, demonstrates age-adjusted
association with BMC and BMD
Results similar for HSA measures of geometric
strength
12Results Body Comp Accounts for E2 Effect at
Most Sites
Significant Age-Adjusted Associations
Removed by Control for Body Composition
13Results Summary
- Control for total body lean mass removes Positive
association between BMI / fat and conventional
BMD, or HSA measures - 2. Control for age removes T ? BMD/HSA
association, but not E2 ? BMD/HSA association - Results suggest that body composition can account
for influence of E2
14Implications
- It is likely that elevated lean mass accompanying
elevated BMI accounts for protective influence of
obesity for fracture risk - Maintenance of proportionate lean mass (and not
only weight) is a promising strategy for
maintaining bone strength - Aspects of body composition may mediate the
protective influence of circulating E2 on male
bone strength - Future Longitudinal Data, Path / Causal Modeling