The Radiology of Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures Revisited

J Bone Miner Res, 34(3), 409-418

DOI 10.1002/jbmr.3669 PMID 30645770

Abstract

Until recently there has been little evidence available to validate any method by which to make an accurate diagnosis of an osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVFs) from plain radiographs. In part this reflects a lack of a completely satisfactory "gold standard," but primarily it relates to the absence of well-designed prospective studies in this context. Historically, OVFs were recognized by evidence of macroscopic structural failure in vertebrae using the criteria applied elsewhere in the skeleton. This comprised altered alignment, fragmentation, cortical disruptions, and breaks, among other changes. However, these morphological criteria were replaced by vertebral morphometry, referring to the use of quantitative or quasi-quantitative measurement tools for fracture diagnosis. Vertebral morphometry emerged as an understanding of and treatment for osteoporosis evolved, mainly in response to the need for expeditious assessments of large numbers of spine images for epidemiological and pharmaceutical purposes. Although most of the descriptions of such morphometric tools have stressed that they were not to be applied to clinical diagnosis with respect to individual patients, this constraint has been widely disregarded. Here we review the major attempts to develop a diagnostic strategy for OVF and describe their characteristics in adults and children. Recent evidence suggests that morphometric (quantitative; ie, based on measurement of dimensions and shape description) criteria are inferior to morphologic (qualitative; ie, based on structural integrity) vertebral damage assessment in identifying people with low bone density and at an increased risk of future fracture. Thus there is now an evidentiary basis for suggesting that morphological assessment is the preferred strategy for use in diagnosing OVF from radiographs.

Topics

osteoporotic vertebral fracture radiology diagnosis morphometry, vertebral morphometry versus morphological assessment fracture, osteoporotic vertebral fracture plain radiograph diagnostic criteria, Lentle vertebral fracture radiographic assessment, vertebral body height ratio measurement fracture diagnosis, qualitative morphological vertebral damage assessment bone density, Genant semiquantitative vertebral fracture classification limitations, osteoporosis spine imaging diagnostic strategy review, vertebral fracture assessment adults children radiology, cortical disruption structural failure vertebral fracture identification
PMID 30645770 30645770 DOI 10.1002/jbmr.3669 10.1002/jbmr.3669

Cite this article

Lentle, B., Koromani, F., Brown, J. P., Oei, L., Ward, L., Goltzman, D., Rivadeneira, F., Leslie, W. D., Probyn, L., Prior, J., Hammond, I., Cheung, A. M., Oei, E. H., Vertebral Fracture Research Groups of the CaMos, STOPP, & and Rotterdam Studies (2019). The Radiology of Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures Revisited. *Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research*, *34*(3), 409-418. https://doi.org/10.1002/jbmr.3669

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