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Factors Associated With Future Fractures in Middle-aged Men and Women

Factors Associated With Future Fractures in Middle-aged Men and Women. A Prospective Cohort Study From Malmö Dietary Cancer Cohort

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04151732
Acronym
MDCFract
Enrollment
30351
Registered
2019-11-05
Start date
2018-11-06
Completion date
2020-06-30
Last updated
2020-10-08

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Fractures, Bone, Fragility, Life Style

Brief summary

From prospectively collected health and life-style data and anthropometric data in the Malmo Diet and Cancer (MDC) cohort identify factors that predicts or are associated with forthcoming fracture in middle-aged men and women.

Detailed description

In adults, the incidence of fractures increases with age. In predisposed individuals, even a minor trauma can result in a fracture. Such an injury is known as low-energy fracture or fragility fracture, and the risk increases with age. Fragility fractures may be preventable, either by changes in lifestyle or by medication of underlying diseases. Fragility fractures also put a burden both on the affected individual and on society. As the population age, more individuals are at risk, and the absolute numbers of fragility fractures increase. Therefore, identification of individuals at risk before fracture occurs would be ideal.In the prospectively collected Malmo Diet and Cancer (MDC) cohort a large number of health and life style variables have been gathered from randomly invited men and women in a city of 350,000 inhabitants in the 1990s'. The MDC database the investigators use for this study comprises 30,351 participants. Outcome is updated via crosslinking with the National Patient Register in Sweden. MDC PhysFract - investigation of the following factors Socioeconomical factors: Level of education, employment status in middle age, physical activity / work load, living alone, stress, number of friends, feeling of loneliness. Life style factors: Tobacco use, alcohol use. Summary of physical and psychological well-being. MDC CardFract - investigation of the following factors Comorbidities: Hypertension, syncope/orthostatism, diabetes, coronary artery disease, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, ischemic stroke and others. Pharmaceutical drugs associated with fracture risk. Cardiovascular blood tests. MDC HormFract - investigation of the following factors Body composition: Weight at 20 yrs, weight change pattern, weight difference middle age minus 20 yrs. Hormonal/gynecological status - women: Date for menarche and menopause, number of children, intake of oral contraceptives / hormonal replacement therapy, surgical menopause.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALPhysical activity, alcohol, tobacco

Physical activity, alcohol, tobacco - selfreported in the 1990's

OTHERHormonal factors

Hormonal factors - selfreported in the 1990's

OTHERCardiovascular disease

Cardiovascular disease - selfreported in the 1990's

Height, length, BMI

Sponsors

Region Skane
CollaboratorOTHER
Lund University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Invited population based cohort from 1990's

Exclusion criteria

* None

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Any fracture1992 - 2017Number of patients who suffered any fracture during follow-up (ICD-10 codes S12.x, S22.x, S32.x, S42.x, S52.x, S62.x, S32.x, S72.x, M48.4, M84.3, and M96.6)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Multiple fractures1992 - 2017Number of patients who suffered multiple fractures during follow-up (ICD-10 codes S12.x, S22.x, S32.x, S42.x, S52.x, S62.x, S32.x, S72.x, M48.4, M84.3, and M96.6)
Death1992 - 2017Number of patients who died during follow-up

Countries

Sweden

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 14, 2026