Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0057009 | The accuracy of self-reported fractures among a Belgian cohort of postmenopausal women: The FRISBEE study | BES2018

The accuracy of self-reported fractures among a Belgian cohort of postmenopausal women: The FRISBEE study

Baleanu F , Bergmann P , Kinnard V , Iconaru L , Cappelle SI , Moreau M , Paesmans M , Karmali R , Body JJ

In large population-based epidemiological studies of osteoporotic fractures, self-report is an important way of obtaining information. However, this method is subject to errors of recall and may result in misclassification of fracture status. Surprisingly, the accuracy of self-reported fractures has only rarely been assessed. The purpose of our study was to assess the accuracy of self-reported fractures in the FRISBEE cohort (Brussels, Belgium) of 3560 postmenopausal, aged 60&...

ea0064004 | Misclassification of fractures by self-report: an analysis from the FRISBEE cohort | BES2019

Misclassification of fractures by self-report: an analysis from the FRISBEE cohort

Baleanu F , Moreau M , Kinnard V , Iconaru L , Karmali R , Paesmans M , Bergmann P , Body JJ

Osteoporosis is a major public health problem that is responsible for a considerable morbidity, mortality and health care costs. Evaluation of fracture risk is essential to select patients who will benefit most of interventional strategies. Most prospective cohort studies, with fracture outcomes, rely on participant self-report as the main or only source of information on fracture incidence. Systematic validation by screening of medical files is time-consuming, costly and almo...