4.6 Article

Fetuin-A and BMD in Older Persons: The Health Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 514-521

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1359/JBMR.081017

Keywords

fetuin-A; BMD; elderly

Funding

  1. American Diabetes Association (ADA)
  2. Atlantic Philanthropies
  3. John A. Hartford Foundation
  4. ASP
  5. American Heart Association Fellow to Faculty Transition Award (JHI) [N01-AG-6-2101, N01-AG-6-2103, N01-AG6-2106]
  6. Intramural Research Program from the National Institutes on Aging (NIA)

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Fetuin-A is a hepatic secretory protein that promotes bone mineralization in vitro. Whether fetuin-A levels are associated with BMD in humans is unknown. The Health Aging and Body Composition study enrolled 3075 well-functioning black and white persons 70-79 yr of age and measured BMD. This cross-sectional study measured serum fetuin-A using ELISA among a random sample of 508 participants within sex and race strata. Multivariate linear regression analysis evaluated the associations of fetuin-A with BMD. Among women (n = 257), higher fetuin-A levels were significantly associated with higher total hip (p = 0.02), lumbar spine (p = 0.03), and whole body BMD (p = 0.01) in models adjusted for age, race, diabetes, alcohol and tobacco use, physical activity, body mass index, C-reactive protein levels, calcium supplement, and estrogen use. For example, each SD (0.38 g/liter) higher level of fetuin-A was associated with 0.0.16 g/cm(2) higher total hip area] BMD. The association was of similar magnitude and direction for femoral neck BMD but did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.11). In contrast, among men (n = 251), fetuin-A had no significant associations with total hip (p = 0.79), lumbar spine (p = 0.35), whole body (p = 0.46), or femoral neck BMD (p = 0.54) in multivariable models. We conclude that higher fetuin-A levels are independently associated with higher BMD among well-functioning community-dwelling older women but not older men. Future studies should evaluate whether fetuin-A may refine fracture risk assessment in older women.

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