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Submitted on July 2, 2007
Accepted on March 13, 2008
New England Research Institutes, Inc., Watertown, MA 02472; Endocrine Unit, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: aaraujo{at}neriscience.com.
Context: The relationship between hormones and bone mineral density (BMD) in men has received considerable attention. However, most studies have been conducted in homogenous populations, and it is not known whether differences in hormones impact race and ethnic differences in BMD.
Objective: To examine associations of testosterone, estradiol, and sex hormone-binding globulin with BMD in a racially and ethnically diverse population.
Design: Population-based, observational survey.
Participants: 976 Black, Hispanic, and white randomly-selected men ages of 30–79 years from the Boston Area Community Health/Bone (BACH/Bone) Survey.
Outcome: BMD at the hip, wrist, and spine.
Results: Mean age of the sample was 46.7±12.4 y. BMD levels were highest in black men, followed by Hispanic and then white men. Associations between hormones and BMD were consistent across race and ethnic group. Total/free testosterone were not correlated with BMD in age- or multivariate-adjusted models. Sex hormone-binding globulin was inversely correlated with total hip and ultradistal radius BMD after age adjustment but not with multivariate adjustment for age, lean mass, fat mass, physical activity, self-rated health, and smoking. Total/free estradiol levels were positively and significantly correlated with femoral neck and total hip BMD even with multivariate adjustment (partial correlations ranged between 0.11–0.16). However, estradiol levels failed to account for race and ethnic differences in hip BMD.
Conclusions: In our diverse population, neither serum total nor free testosterone levels were associated with BMD. Correlations between BMD and estradiol were significant, but did not appear to account for any of the observed race and ethnic differences in BMD. These findings suggest that differences in hormone levels are not a major contributor to the observed differences in BMD between black, Hispanic, and white men.
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