Opportunistic assessment of bone mineral density using computed tomography in pediatric liver transplant recipients
Nurullah Dag, Sevgi Tasolar, Hilal Er Ulubaba, Mehmet Candur, Sezai Yilmaz

TL;DR
This study explores using CT scans to assess bone health in children who had liver transplants, finding that CT measurements can provide useful supplementary information when traditional DXA scans are not available.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that CT-derived sagittal vertebral Hounsfield unit values can moderately correlate with DXA z-scores in pediatric liver transplant recipients.
Findings
Sagittal Hounsfield unit values showed a moderate correlation with DXA z-scores (r = 0.429).
A threshold of 188 HU had 83% sensitivity and 68% specificity for identifying low bone mineral density.
Axial HU values showed weaker correlation compared to sagittal measurements.
Abstract
Pediatric liver transplant (LT) recipients are at increased risk of impaired bone mineral accrual due to chronic liver disease, growth disturbances, and post-transplant metabolic factors. Although dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) remains the reference method for evaluating bone mineral density (BMD), opportunistic assessment using routine abdominal computed tomography (CT) has emerged as a potential adjunct tool. This study aimed to evaluate the potential of using routine abdominal CT scans to assess bone health in pediatric LT recipients by comparing lumbar vertebral Hounsfield unit (HU) values with those obtained using DXA. This retrospective study included 62 pediatric LT recipients who underwent both abdominal CT and lumbar spine DXA within a 3-month period. HU values were measured at vertebral levels L1–L4 in both the sagittal and axial planes. DXA z-scores were classified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone health and osteoporosis research · Organ Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes · Bone and Joint Diseases
