| Literature DB >> 20392703 |
Alfonso J Cruz-Jentoft1, Jean Pierre Baeyens, Jürgen M Bauer, Yves Boirie, Tommy Cederholm, Francesco Landi, Finbarr C Martin, Jean-Pierre Michel, Yves Rolland, Stéphane M Schneider, Eva Topinková, Maurits Vandewoude, Mauro Zamboni.
Abstract
The European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People (EWGSOP) developed a practical clinical definition and consensus diagnostic criteria for age-related sarcopenia. EWGSOP included representatives from four participant organisations, i.e. the European Geriatric Medicine Society, the European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism, the International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics-European Region and the International Association of Nutrition and Aging. These organisations endorsed the findings in the final document. The group met and addressed the following questions, using the medical literature to build evidence-based answers: (i) What is sarcopenia? (ii) What parameters define sarcopenia? (iii) What variables reflect these parameters, and what measurement tools and cut-off points can be used? (iv) How does sarcopenia relate to cachexia, frailty and sarcopenic obesity? For the diagnosis of sarcopenia, EWGSOP recommends using the presence of both low muscle mass + low muscle function (strength or performance). EWGSOP variously applies these characteristics to further define conceptual stages as 'presarcopenia', 'sarcopenia' and 'severe sarcopenia'. EWGSOP reviewed a wide range of tools that can be used to measure the specific variables of muscle mass, muscle strength and physical performance. Our paper summarises currently available data defining sarcopenia cut-off points by age and gender; suggests an algorithm for sarcopenia case finding in older individuals based on measurements of gait speed, grip strength and muscle mass; and presents a list of suggested primary and secondary outcome domains for research. Once an operational definition of sarcopenia is adopted and included in the mainstream of comprehensive geriatric assessment, the next steps are to define the natural course of sarcopenia and to develop and define effective treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20392703 PMCID: PMC2886201 DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afq034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Age Ageing ISSN: 0002-0729 Impact factor: 10.668
Criteria for the diagnosis of sarcopenia
| Diagnosis is based on documentation of criterion 1 plus (criterion 2 or criterion 3) |
|---|
| 1. Low muscle mass |
| 2. Low muscle strength |
| 3. Low physical performance |
Figure 1Mechanisms of sarcopenia.
Sarcopenia categories by cause
| Examples | |
|---|---|
| Primary sarcopenia | |
| Age-related sarcopenia | No other cause evident except ageing |
| Secondary sarcopenia | |
| Activity-related sarcopenia | Can result from bed rest, sedentary lifestyle, deconditioning or zero-gravity conditions |
| Disease-related sarcopenia | Associated with advanced organ failure (heart, lung, liver, kidney, brain), inflammatory disease, malignancy or endocrine disease |
| Nutrition-related sarcopenia | Results from inadequate dietary intake of energy and/or protein, as with malabsorption, gastrointestinal disorders or use of medications that cause anorexia |
EWGSOP conceptual stages of sarcopenia
| Stage | Muscle mass | Muscle strength | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Presarcopenia | ↓ | ||
| Sarcopenia | ↓ | ↓ | Or ↓ |
| Severe sarcopenia | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ |
Measurements of muscle mass, strength, and function in research and practice
| Variable | Research | Clinical practice |
|---|---|---|
| Muscle mass | Computed tomography (CT) | BIA |
| Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) | DXA | |
| Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) | Anthropometry | |
| Bioimpedance analysis (BIA) | ||
| Total or partial body potassium per fat-free soft tissue | ||
| Muscle strength | Handgrip strength | Handgrip strength |
| Knee flexion/extension | ||
| Peak expiratory flow | ||
| Physical performance | Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) | SPPB |
| Usual gait speed | ||
| Usual gait speed | Get-up-and-go test | |
| Timed get-up-and-go test | ||
| Stair climb power test |
Please refer to the text for a description and references on these measurement techniques.
Diagnosis of sarcopenia: measurable variables and cut-off points
| Criterion | Measurement method | Cut-off points by gender | Reference group defined | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muscle mass | DXA | Skeletal muscle mass index (SMI) | Based on 2 SD below mean of young adults (Rosetta Study) | [ |
| (Appendicular skeletal muscle mass/height2) | ||||
| Men: 7.26 kg/m2 | ||||
| Women: 5.5 kg/m2 | ||||
| SMI (ASM/height2) | Based on sex-specific lowest 20% of study group ( | [ | ||
| Men: 7.25 kg/m2 | ||||
| Women: 5.67 kg/m2 | ||||
| SMI (ASM/height2) | Based on sex-specific lowest 20% (Health ABC Study) | [ | ||
| Men: 7.23 kg/m2 | ||||
| Women: 5.67 kg/m2 | ||||
| Residuals of linear regression on appendicular lean mass adjusted for fat mass as well as height | Based on sex-specific lowest 20% (Health ABC Study) | [ | ||
| Men: −2.29 | ||||
| Women: −1.73 | ||||
| BIA | SMI using BIA predicted skeletal muscle mass (SM) equation (SM/height2) | Based on 2 SD below mean of young adults in study group ( | [ | |
| Men: 8.87 kg/m2 | ||||
| Women: 6.42 kg/m2 | ||||
| SMI using absolute muscle mass, not appendicular muscle mass | Based on statistical analysis of NHANES III data on older (≥60 years) men and women | [ | ||
| (absolute muscle mass/height2) | ||||
| Men: | ||||
| Severe sarcopenia ≤8.50 kg/m2 | ||||
| Moderate sarcopenia 8.51–10.75 kg/m2 | ||||
| Normal muscle ≥10.76 kg/m2 | ||||
| Women: | ||||
| Severe sarcopenia ≤5.75 kg/m2 | ||||
| Moderate sarcopenia 5.76–6.75 kg/m2 | ||||
| Normal muscle ≥6.76 kg/m2 | ||||
| Muscle strength | Handgrip strength | Men: <30 kg | Based on statistical analysis of study group ( | [ |
| Women: <20 kg | ||||
| Men: | Based on quartiles of study group ( | [ | ||
| BMI ≤ 24 ≤ 29 kg | ||||
| BMI 24.1–26 ≤ 30 kg | ||||
| BMI 26.1–28 ≤ 30 kg | ||||
| BMI > 28 ≤ 32 kg | ||||
| Women: | ||||
| BMI ≤ 23 ≤ 17 kg | ||||
| BMI 23.1–26 ≤ 17.3 kg | ||||
| BMI 26.1–29 ≤ 18 kg | ||||
| BMI > 29 ≤ 21 kg | ||||
| Physical performance | SPPB | SPPB ≤8 | SPPB score is a summation of scores on three tests: Balance, Gait Speed and Chair Stand. Each test is weighted equally with scores between 0 and 4—quartiles generated from Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (EPESE) data ( | [ |
| SPPB 0–6 Low performance | ||||
| SPPB 7–9 Intermediate performance | ||||
| SPPB 10–12 High Performance | ||||
| Gait speed | 6-m course | Based on statistical analysis of Health ABC participant data | [ | |
| GS <1 m/s | ||||
| 6-m course | Based on ROC curves analysis of Health ABC data | [ | ||
| GS <1.175 m/s | ||||
| 15-ft (4.572 m) course | Based on quartiles of study group ( | [ | ||
| Men: | ||||
| Height ≤ 173 cm ≥ 7 s (GS < 0.65 m/s) | ||||
| Height > 173 cm ≥ 6 s (GS < 0.76 m/s) | ||||
| Women: | ||||
| Height ≤ 159 cm ≥ 7 s (GS < 0.65 m/s) | ||||
| Height > 159 cm ≥ 6 s (GS < 0.76 m/s) | ||||
| 4-m course | Based on statistical analysis of study group ( | [ | ||
| GS <0.8 m/s | ||||
| 8-ft (2.438 m) course | Based on SPPB values | |||
| Quartiles of performance: | ||||
| ≤0.43 m/s | ||||
| 0.44–0.60 m/s | ||||
| 0.61–0.77 m/s | ||||
| ≥0.78 m/s |
Figure 2EWGSOP-suggested algorithm for sarcopenia case finding in older individuals.
Suggested primary and secondary outcome domains for intervention trials in sarcopenia
| Primary outcome domains |
| • Physical performance |
| • Muscle strength |
| • Muscle mass |
| Secondary outcome domains |
| • Activities of daily living (ADL; basic, instrumental) |
| • Quality of life (QOL) |
| • Metabolic and biochemical markers |
| • Markers of inflammation |
| • Global impression of change by subject or physician |
| • Falls |
| • Admission to nursing home or hospital |
| • Social support |
| • Mortality |