Sex-Stratified Skeletal Treatment Effects from the INVEST in Bone Health Randomized Clinical Trial
Kristen Beavers, Delanie Lynch, Marjorie Howard, Leon Lenchik, Ashley Weaver, Sarah Wherry, Barbara Nicklas, Daniel Beavers

TL;DR
This study found that adding a weighted vest to weight loss helped older women reduce bone loss, but had different effects in men.
Contribution
The study reports sex-specific skeletal treatment effects of weight loss interventions in older adults.
Findings
In women, WL+VEST reduced total hip vBMD loss and increased bone formation marker P1NP.
In men, WL+VEST worsened femoral neck aBMD loss compared to weight loss alone.
Weight loss plus resistance training also increased P1NP in women.
Abstract
The main goal of the INVEST in Bone Health Trial (NCT04076618) was to compare effects of weight loss (WL) alone (caloric restriction targeting 10% WL), WL plus weighted vest use (WL+VEST; 8 hours/day, weight replacement titrated up to 10% total WL), or WL plus progressive resistance training (WL+RT; 3 supervised sessions/week) on bone health indicators in older adults. As women are more likely to develop osteoporosis and experience fractures, the purpose of this secondary analysis was to present 12-month skeletal treatment effects [including: volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD), areal (a)BMD, and biomarkers of bone turnover (procollagen type 1 N-terminal propeptide (P1NP) and C-terminal cross-linked telopeptide (CTX))] stratified by sex. 150 (74.7% women) older adults (66.4±4.6 years; 68.6% White) living with overweight or obesity (BMI: 33.6±3.3kg/m2) were randomized (n = 50/group)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone health and osteoporosis research · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Vitamin D Research Studies
