# Adipokines and Associations With Incident Osteoporotic Fracture in Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis

**Authors:** Joshua F. Baker, Bryant R. England, Michael D. George, Hannah Brubeck, Brian Sauer, Aleksander Lenert, Punyasha Roul, Geoffrey M. Thiele, Ted R. Mikuls, Katherine D. Wysham

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/acr.25632 · 2025-11-29

## TL;DR

This study finds that higher levels of certain fat-related proteins in people with rheumatoid arthritis are linked to a higher risk of bone fractures.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific adipokines as independent risk factors for fractures in RA patients, beyond traditional factors like BMI.

## Key findings

- High leptin and FGF-21 levels are significantly associated with increased fracture risk in RA patients.
- Elevated levels of all three adipokines (leptin, FGF-21, adiponectin) double the risk of fracture.
- The association remains after adjusting for BMI, smoking, and prednisone use.

## Abstract

We assessed whether circulating adipokines are associated with incident fractures in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

Three adipokines (adiponectin, leptin, and fibroblast growth factor [FGF]‐21) were measured using banked enrollment serum from participants in a longitudinal RA cohort. Adipokine levels were dichotomized as high/low using median values. Incident osteoporotic fracture was defined based on published algorithms using diagnostic codes and confirmed by chart review. Cox proportional hazard models evaluated adipokines and incident fracture risk adjusting for age, sex, race, smoking status, body mass index (BMI), prednisone use, disease activity, comorbidity score, calendar year, osteoporosis history, and previous fracture.

A total of 2,527 participants were included (89% male, mean age 72 years). There were 228 incident fractures over 27,540 person‐years of follow‐up (8.3 fractures per 1,000 person‐years). After adjustment, the risk of incident fracture was increased for high levels of leptin (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.47; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.15–1.90; P = 0.003), FGF‐21 [HR = 1.39; 95% CI 1.16–1.67; P < 0.001), and adiponectin (HR = 1.21; 95% CI 0.94–1.55), with the latter not achieving significance (P = 0.13). Participants who had elevated levels of all three adipokines experienced twice the risk of fracture compared with those in whom none was elevated (HR = 2.17; 95% CI 1.27–3.70; P = 0.005).

Elevations in adipokines are associated with an increased risk of fracture in patients with RA, independent of other established risk factors including BMI, smoking, and prednisone use. This supports further investigation to understand whether this association is related to altered body composition or disrupted metabolic pathways.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** lepa (leptin a), FGF21 (fibroblast growth factor 21)
- **Diseases:** rheumatoid arthritis (MONDO:0008383)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ADIPOQ (adiponectin, C1Q and collagen domain containing) [NCBI Gene 9370] {aka ACDC, ACRP30, ADIPQTL1, ADPN, APM-1, APM1}, FGF21 (fibroblast growth factor 21) [NCBI Gene 26291], LEP (leptin) [NCBI Gene 3952] {aka LEPD, OB, OBS}
- **Diseases:** Osteoporotic Fracture (MESH:D058866), fracture (MESH:D050723), osteoporosis (MESH:D010024), RA (MESH:D001172)
- **Chemicals:** prednisone (MESH:D011241)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975670/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975670