학술논문

Discrepancy between DXA and CT-based assessment of spine bone mineral density
Document Type
Article
Source
Spine Deformity; 20230101, Issue: Preprints p1-7, 7p
Subject
Language
ISSN
2212134X; 22121358
Abstract
Purpose: Adequate bone mineral density (BMD) is necessary for success in spine surgery. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is the gold standard in determining BMD but may give spuriously high values. Hounsfield units (HU) from computed tomography (CT) may provide a more accurate depiction of the focal BMD encountered during spine surgery. Our objective is to determine the discrepancy rate between DXA and CT BMD determinations and how often DXA overestimates BMD compared to CT. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 93 patients with both DXA and CT within 6 months. DXA lumbar spine and overall Tscores were classified as osteoporotic (TScore  ≤ − 2.5) or non-osteoporotic (TScore > −2.5). L1 vertebral body HU were classified as osteoporotic or non-osteoporotic using cutoff thresholds of either ≤ 135 HU or ≤ 110 HU. Corresponding DXA and HU classifications were compared to determine disagreement and overestimation rates. Results: Using lumbar Tscores, the CT vs DXA disagreement rate was 40–54% depending on the HU threshold. DXA overestimated BMD 97–100% of the time compared to CT. Using overall DXA Tscores, the disagreement rate was 33–47% with DXA greater than CT 74–87% of the time. In the sub-cohort of 10 patients with very low HU (HU < 80), DXA overestimated BMD compared to CT in every instance. Conclusions: There is a large discrepancy between DXA and CT BMD determinations. DXA frequently overestimates regional BMD encountered during spine surgery compared with CT. While DXA remains the gold standard in determining BMD, CT may play an important role in defining the focal BMD pertinent to spine surgery.