Should Perimenopausal Women Be Screened for Osteoporosis?
Abstract
The increasing availability of noninvasive methods for measuring bone mass raises the issue of whether perimenopausal women should routinely have such measurements to identify those at risk for osteoporotic fractures of the hip, wrist, and spine. Although the mortality and morbidity caused by hip fractures would warrant routine screening, measurement of bone mass has uncertain value in assessing the risk for hip fracture. Wrist fractures generally cause only transient disability, and measurement of bone mass may not reliably predict risk. Measurements of bone density of the spine might be better able to assess a woman's risk for vertebral fractures, but the value of screening depends on whether the findings would affect a woman's decision about using estrogen therapy after menopause. Serial measurements of bone mass to estimate a woman's rate of bone loss are relatively imprecise, increase the cost of screening, and have at best a limited role in screening women to assess risk for osteoporotic fractures.
Article and Author Information
-
▸From the Departments of Medicine and Epidemiology and International Health and the Clinical Epidemiology Program, University of California, San Francisco; San Francisco, California.
-
Grant support: in part by Administration on Aging Grant #90-AP0003. Dr. Cummings is a recipient of the Kaiser Family Foundation Faculty Fellowship in General Internal Medicine.
-
▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Steven R. Cummings, M.D.; University of California, San Francisco, 400 Parnassus Avenue, Box 0320, A-405; San Francisco, CA 94143.
- © 1986 American College of Physicians
RSS Feeds









