We congratulate Nicole Fitt and colleagues on their paper on the influence of bone densitometry on the treatment of osteoporosis.1 We concur with their recommendation that “physicians not merely tell their patients results but that they also facilitate an understanding of the results” and thus we feel obliged to draw attention to inappropriate use of the terms “bone loss” and “no bone loss” in the article.
“Bone loss” implies change over time. As Fitt and colleagues will certainly agree, “bone loss” is not synonymous with “low bone mass,” just as “weight loss” is not synonymous with “thin.” Unfortunately, the authors used the term “bone loss” to group subjects classified as having osteopenia or osteoporosis by a single dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scan. Similarly, they equated normal DXA scores with “no bone loss.” Thus, they implicitly attributed a change vector to the DXA absorptiometry results.
A patient with osteoporosis or osteopenia is not necessarily losing any more bone than her counterparts with normal bone mass.2 But if this patient is told she has a DXA score that represents “bone loss” she might very reasonably misinterpret this to mean that the DXA scan reveals a recent trend for bone loss, and this might influence her choice of therapy. Thus, as physicians, we must be very cautious not to use language that may mislead the patient about our technology's ability to interpret the state of their bone mineral metabolism.
Please do not interpret this as a criticism of the excellent work of Fitt and colleagues. We agree entirely that patients and doctors must understand DXA results,3 as they must the results of any medical investigation,4 and thus it is important that physicians use accurate terminology when they report results to patients.