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Serum bone turnover markers offer limited insight into metabolic activity at the individual vertebra level in osteoporosis. This study introduces a novel image-derived bone turnover marker for individual vertebrae to address this limitation, utilizing volumetric density-adjusted quantitative bone single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) with 99mTcTc-DPD. This retrospective study included 177 lumbar vertebrae from 55 postmenopausal South Korean women. The mean standardized uptake value (SUVmean, g/cm3) and volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD, mg/cm3) were determined within a 2-cm³ volume of interest in the trabecular portion of each vertebra using quantitative SPECT and CT. The density-adjusted mean standardized uptake value (dSUVmean) was calculated by dividing the SUVmean by the vBMD and multiplying by 1,000. SUVmean correlated positively with vBMD (r = 0.60, p < 0.001). Conversely, dSUVmean correlated negatively with vBMD (ρ = −0.66, p < 0.001), highlighting the inverse relationship between bone mass and turnover after density adjustment of SUVmean. Patients with major osteoporotic fractures had lower vBMD (62.5 ± 29.4 vs. 92.3 ± 27.4 mg/cm³, p = 0.001) but higher dSUVmean (100.8 ± 60.7 vs. 62.6 ± 17.5, p = 0.001) compared to those without fractures, reinforcing the association between fracture prevalence, low bone mass, and high bone turnover. Volumetric density-adjusted quantitative bone SPECT/CT offers a novel image-derived bone turnover marker for assessing bone turnover in osteoporosis. This method provides a precise assessment of fragility at the individual vertebra level, which may enhance personalized osteoporosis management.
Lee et al. (Sun,) studied this question.