The potential of digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) in the assessment of osteopenia in children with chronic inflammatory bowel disease.

Journal: Pediatric Radiology
Published:
Abstract

Background: Loss of bone mass is a known complication of chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in children. The gold standard in the evaluation of bone mineral density (BMD) is dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA).

Objective: In this preliminary study we evaluated digital X-ray radiogrammetry (DXR) which estimates BMD (DXR-BMD) from hand radiographs in children with IBD.

Methods: A total of 26 children with IBD (10 girls, 16 boys; age range 10-18 years) underwent DXR for the calculation of DXR-BMD and metacarpal index (DXR-MCI) using the Pronosco X-posure system. The results were compared with a local reference database and correlated with the results of DXA.

Results: DXR-BMD was 0.36-0.56 g/cm(2) (median 0.46 g/cm(2)) in Crohn disease patients and 0.38-0.63 g/cm(2) (median 0.48 g/cm(2)) in ulcerative colitis patients. DXR-MCI was 0.29-0.49 in Crohn disease patients and 0.28-0.53 in ulcerative colitis patients. The Z-scores were reduced to <-1 SD in five Crohn disease patients and in six ulcerative colitis patients. The coefficients (r) for the correlations between DXR-BMD and DXA-BMD were 0.78 for the lumbar spine and 0.61 for the proximal femur (P<0.01), and between DXR-MCI and DXA-BMD were 0.78 for the lumbar spine and 0.51 for the proximal femur (P<0.01).

Conclusions: DXR seems to be able to estimate cortical osteopenia in children with chronic IBD. The DXR results showed a positive correlation with DXA results.

Authors
Hans-joachim Mentzel, Joerg Blume, Joachim Boettcher, Gabriele Lehmann, Diana Tuchscherer, Alexander Pfeil, Anika Kramer, Ansgar Malich, Eberhard Kauf, Gert Hein, Werner Kaiser