Sex differences in lifetime prevalence of low back pain: A multinational study of opposite-sex twin pairs

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Abstract

Background: Low back pain (LBP) is more likely to occur in people with a family history of this condition, highlighting the importance of accounting for familial factors when studying the individual risk of LBP. We conducted a study of opposite-sex twin pairs investigating sex differences in LBP while accounting for (genetic and shared environmental) familial factors. Methods: We applied a matched co-twin control design to study 795 adult opposite-sex pairs from Australia, Spain, and the United States (US). We used mixed-effects logistic regression to assess the within-pair association between female sex and lifetime prevalence of LBP in unadjusted and adjusted models for body-mass-index, and depression, as well as interactions between female sex and age (

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Calais-Ferreira, L., Pozzobon, D., Pinheiro, M. B., Blyth, F. M., Ordoñana, J. R., Duncan, G. E., … Ferreira, M. L. (2023). Sex differences in lifetime prevalence of low back pain: A multinational study of opposite-sex twin pairs. European Journal of Pain (United Kingdom), 27(10), 1150–1160. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejp.2146

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