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Incidence and mortality of osteoporotic fracture in rheumatoid arthritis in South Korea using nationwide claims dataopen access

Authors
Kwon, Hye-YoungKim, Hyun-HoSung, Yoon-KyoungHa, Yong-Chan
Issue Date
May-2019
Publisher
Korean Society for Bone and Mineral Research
Keywords
Arthritis, rheumatoid; Incidence; Mortality; Osteoporotic fractures
Citation
Journal of Bone Metabolism, v.26, no.2, pp.97 - 104
Indexed
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
Journal of Bone Metabolism
Volume
26
Number
2
Start Page
97
End Page
104
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/14138
DOI
10.11005/jbm.2019.26.2.97
ISSN
2287-6375
Abstract
Background: To investigate incidence and mortaltiy of osteoporotic fractures (including hip, spine, distal radius, and proximal humerus) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients and compare them with those in the genearal population. Methods: Data provided by National Health Insurance Service were used to identify osteoporotic fractures in patients aged >50 years between 2010 and 2012. Patients with RA were identified by the diagnostic code for seropositive RA. Standardized mortality ratios (SMRs; observed/expected deaths) of osteoporotic fractures were calculated based on age and gender-specific rates in the entire Korean population. Incidence, mortality, and SMR of osteoporotic fractures in RA patients and the general population were calculated and compared. Results: Osteopororic fractures in the general population and RA patients were increased by 11.6% and 17.4% over 3 years (195,271 and 1,356 in 2010; 217,985 and 1,592 in 2012), respectively. Mean age-specific incidence of osteoporotic fracture in women and men with RA increased from 932.1/100,000 and 306.1/100,000 for aged 50 to 59 year to 9,377.0/100,000 and 3,700.9/100,000 for aged ≥80 years, respectively. Cumulative mortality rate in the first year after osteoporotic fracture in patients with RA was higher than that in the general population (7.8% in RA and 6.6% in the general population). SMR of osteoporotic fracture in RA patients was 1.4 times higher in men and 1.3 times higher in women than that for the general population. Conclusions: This study demonstated that incidence, 1-year mortality, and SMR of osteoporotic fracture in RA patients aged 50 years and older were higher than those in the general papulation.
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