# Diagnostic Value of Opportunistic CT-Based Bone Density Assessment in Patients with and Without Sacral Insufficiency Fractures

**Authors:** Julian Ramin Andresen, Guido Schröder, Thomas Haider, Hans-Christof Schober, Reimer Andresen

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15222926 · Diagnostics · 2025-11-19

## TL;DR

This study shows that measuring bone density from routine CT scans can accurately predict sacral insufficiency fractures and osteoporosis.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that opportunistic CT-based HU measurements can serve as a reliable diagnostic tool for SIF and osteoporosis.

## Key findings

- SIF patients had significantly lower HU values in lumbar and femoral regions compared to controls.
- Diagnostic accuracy for SIF and osteoporosis using HU was excellent with AUC values of 0.98.
- Vitamin D deficiency was highly prevalent in SIF patients and associated with lower vitamin D levels.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: This retrospective observational cohort examined whether opportunistic CT-derived Hounsfield units (HU) of the lumbar spine and proximal femur together with serum 25-OH-vitamin D can predict sacral insufficiency fractures (SIF) and osteoporosis. No interventional procedures were performed. Methods: Consecutive suspected SIF cases over 3 years (n = 253) were assigned to SIF (n = 98) or controls without SIF or spine/hip fractures (n = 155). HU were measured using ellipsoidal ROIs at L1–L3 and an irregular area ROI across the entire proximal femoral cancellous bone; vitamin D was quantified; ROC analyses assessed discrimination. HU cut-points were referenced via HU-to-QCT/CTXA conversions. Results: SIF patients had markedly lower HU than controls (lumbar 44.84 vs. 105.66 HU; femoral 47.0 vs. 148.0 HU). Diagnostic performance was excellent (AUC 0.98 for SIF discrimination using lumbar HU; AUC 0.98 for osteoporosis prediction using femoral HU). Vitamin D deficiency (<20 ng/mL) was highly prevalent (92.9%) with lower means in SIF (3.72 vs. 8.24 ng/mL). Within SIF, patients with hip fracture had femoral HU ≈ 14.2 vs. 70.6 without hip fracture; effect sizes were very large. Conclusions: Opportunistic HU assessment from routine CT provides a rapid, reproducible surrogate of bone density that distinguishes SIF with near-perfect accuracy and identifies osteoporosis. HU thresholds around ~96–98 are consistent with osteoporotic ranges and can be implemented to trigger metabolic evaluation and early osteoanabolic therapy where appropriate.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** osteoporosis (MONDO:0005298)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Vitamin D deficiency (MESH:D014808), hip fracture (MESH:D006620), osteoporosis (MESH:D010024), SIF (MESH:D015775), osteoporotic (MESH:D058866)
- **Chemicals:** 25-OH-vitamin D (-), vitamin D (MESH:D014807)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12651797/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12651797