TY - JOUR T1 - Trimethylamine N-oxide and hip fracture and bone mineral density in older adults: The cardiovascular health study. JF - Bone Y1 - 2022 A1 - Elam, Rachel E A1 - Bůzková, Petra A1 - Barzilay, Joshua I A1 - Wang, Zeneng A1 - Nemet, Ina A1 - Budoff, Matthew J A1 - Cauley, Jane A A1 - Fink, Howard A A1 - Lee, Yujin A1 - Robbins, John A A1 - Wang, Meng A1 - Hazen, Stanley L A1 - Mozaffarian, Dariush A1 - Carbone, Laura D KW - Absorptiometry, Photon KW - Aged KW - Bone Density KW - Female KW - Hip Fractures KW - Humans KW - Male KW - Methylamines KW - Risk Factors AB -

CONTEXT: Gut microbiota-derived metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) may adversely affect bone by inducing oxidative stress. Whether this translates into increased fracture risk in older adults is uncertain.

OBJECTIVE: Determine the associations of plasma TMAO with hip fracture and bone mineral density (BMD) in older adults.

DESIGN AND SETTING: Cox hazard models and linear regression stratified by sex examined the associations of TMAO with hip fracture and BMD in the longitudinal cohort of the Cardiovascular Health Study.

PARTICIPANTS: 5019 U.S. adults aged ≥65 years.

EXPOSURE: Plasma TMAO.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incident hip fractures; total hip BMD dual x-ray absorptiometry in a subset (n = 1400).

RESULTS: Six hundred sixty-six incident hip fractures occurred during up to 26 years of follow-up (67,574 person-years). After multivariable adjustment, TMAO was not significantly associated with hip fracture (women: hazard ratio (HR) [95% confidence interval (CI)] of 1.00[0.92,1.09] per TMAO doubling; men: 1.12[0.95,1.33]). TMAO was also not associated with total hip BMD (women: BMD difference [95% CI] of 0.42 g/cm*100 [-0.34,1.17] per TMAO doubling; men: 0.19[-1.04,1.42]). In exploratory analyses, we found an interaction between body mass index (BMI) and the association of TMAO with hip fracture (P < 0.01). Higher TMAO was significantly associated with risk of hip fracture in adults with overweight or obesity (BMI ≥ 25) (HR [95% CI]:1.17[1.05,1.31]), but not normal or underweight.

CONCLUSIONS: Among older US men and women, TMAO was not significantly associated with risk of hip fracture or BMD overall. Exploratory analyses suggested a significant association between higher TMAO and hip fracture when BMI was elevated, which merits further study.

VL - 161 ER -