Nutrients (Dec 2022)

Establishing the Prevalence of Osteomalacia in Arab Adolescents Using Biochemical Markers of Bone Health

  • Nasser M. Al-Daghri,
  • Sobhy Yakout,
  • Shaun Sabico,
  • Kaiser Wani,
  • Syed Danish Hussain,
  • Naji Aljohani,
  • Suma Uday,
  • Wolfgang Högler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14245354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 24
p. 5354

Abstract

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Nutrition-acquired osteomalacia is a bone mineralization disorder associated with dietary calcium and/or solar vitamin D deficiency, risk factors considered common in the Middle Eastern region. Establishing less invasive, cheap, and widely available diagnostic markers for this underdiagnosed entity is essential, in particular for screening in high-risk groups. This study assessed the prevalence of biochemical osteomalacia in Arab adolescents. In this cross-sectional study performed between September 2019 and March 2021, adolescents aged 12–17 years from 60 different secondary and preparatory year schools in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia were included. Anthropometrics and fasting blood samples were collected. Biochemical osteomalacia was defined as any two of the following four serum markers of hypomineralization, namely low 25 hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD p p p p < 0.001). Overall, girls were 4.6 times (95% CI 3.3–6.4) more likely to have biochemical osteomalacia than boys. Screening of apparently healthy Arab adolescents revealed a high prevalence of deranged mineralization markers suggestive of biochemical osteomalacia, which was significantly more common in girls than boys and was likely associated with Arab traditional clothing and diet. The proposed combination of typically altered mineralization markers for the diagnosis of osteomalacia is, at best, suggestive until further comparisons with established diagnostic tools (histological analysis of bone biopsies) are conducted.

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