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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: Osteoporos Int. 2020 Mar 16;31(6):1059–1067. doi: 10.1007/s00198-019-05274-2

Table 4. Adjusted hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for incident fracture according to prior fracture status.

Incident fracture Prior fracture High-trauma fracture Low-trauma fracture High-trauma fracture
Referent: No fracture Referent: No fracture Referent: Low-trauma fracture
HR (95%CI) P HR (95%CI) P HR (95%CI) P
Major osteoporotic fracture Any fracture 1.31
(1.08-1.59)
0.005 1.55
(1.47-1.63)
<0.001 0.85
(0.70-1.03)
0.093
Major osteoporotic fracture Hip 1.38
(1.01-1.88)
0.043 1.18
(1.04-1.35)
0.010 1.16
(0.83-1.63)
0.372
Major osteoporotic fracture Major osteoporotic fracture 1.48
(1.17-1.88)
<0.001 1.57
(1.49-1.66)
<0.001 0.94
(0.74-1.19)
0.626
Hip fracture Any fracture 1.35
(0.99-1.84)
0.062 1.34
(1.23-1.47)
<0.001 1.00
(0.73-1.37)
0.988
Any fracture Any fracture 1.39
(1.18-1.64)
<0.001 1.61
(1.54-1.68)
<0.001 0.87
(0.73-1.02)
0.090

Results from Cox regression model. Adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, parental hip fracture, smoking, glucocorticoid use, rheumatoid arthritis, secondary causes of osteoporosis, high alcohol intake, femur neck T-score, rural vs urban residency, lower vs higher income, osteoporosis treatment, diagnosed breast cancer, aromatase inhibitor use, Johns Hopkins ADG comorbidity score. Estimates in bold-face font are statistically significant at α = .05.