| Literature DB >> 22777757 |
Sapna S Patel1, Miklos Z Molnar, John A Tayek, Joachim H Ix, Nazanin Noori, Deborah Benner, Steven Heymsfield, Joel D Kopple, Csaba P Kovesdy, Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Higher muscle mass is associated with better outcomes and longevity in patients with chronic disease states. Imaging studies such as dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) are among the gold standard methods for assessing body fat and lean body mass (LBM), approximately half of which is comprised of skeletal muscle mass. Elaborate imaging devices, however, are not commonly available in routine clinical practice and therefore easily accessible and cost-effective, but reliable muscle mass biomarkers are needed. One such marker is serum creatinine, derived from muscle-based creatine, which is inexpensive and ubiquitously available, and it can serve as a biomarker of skeletal muscle mass in human subjects. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22777757 PMCID: PMC3581614 DOI: 10.1007/s13539-012-0079-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle ISSN: 2190-5991 Impact factor: 12.910
Fig. 1Schematic presentation of creatinine metabolism and the pathway of breakdown of creatine phosphate in the muscle (adapted from Heymsfield et al. [13])
Demographic and clinical characteristics of 725 HD patients in the main NIR cohort and 118 HD patients in the DEXA sub-cohort upon body composition measurement
| Main NIR cohort ( | DEXA sub-cohort ( | |
|---|---|---|
| AGE | 54 ± 15 | 49 ± 12 |
| Men (%) | 53 | 57 |
| Diabetes (%) | 53 | 52 |
| African-American (%) | 31 | 40 |
| Weight (kg) | 72.4 ± 18.9 | 74.5 ± 18.4 |
| Height (inch) | 65.2 ± 4.3 | 65.3 ± 4.1 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 26.5 ± 6.1 | 27.0 ± 6.0 |
| DEXA LBM (kg) | n/a | 49.8 ± 9.9 |
| NIR LBM (kg) | 51.9 ± 10.9 | n/a |
| Dialysis vintage (months) | 30.8 ± 33.6 | 41.1 ± 32.9 |
| Dialysis dose (K | 1.6 ± 0.3 | 1.7 ± 0.3 |
| nPNA (gr/kg/day) | 1.06 ± 0.24 | 1.1 ± 0.2 |
| Blood hemoglobin (gr/dl) | 12.0 ± 0.9 | 12.2 ± 0.7 |
| Serum albumin (gr/dl) | 3.8 ± 0.4 | 4.0 ± 0.3 |
| Creatinine (mg/dl) | 10.2 ± 3.3 | 10.8 ± 3.0 |
| Urea nitrogen (mg/dl) | 63.3 ± 15.1 | 63.0 ± 16.2 |
Values are presented as mean ± standard deviation or percentage
nPNA Normalized protein nitrogen appearance
Difference plot (based on modified Bland-Altman tests) comparing DEXA-measured LBM and each of the three estimates of the LBM using serum creatinine, MAMC and HGS in 118 HD patients
| LBM (kg) estimated by variables | Limits of agreement | Mean difference (95 % CI) | Correlation* ( | Correlation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All ( | ||||
| SCr | −6.7 to 6.7 | 0.0 (−0.6,0.6) | 0.34 | <0.001 |
| MAMC | −7.0 to 7.0 | 0.0 (−0.7, 0.7) | 0.35 | <0.001 |
| HGS | −7.0 to 7.0 | 0.0 (−0.6, 0.6) | 0.35 | <0.001 |
*Pearson correlation between difference and DEXA values.
DEXA Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry, MAMC mid-arm muscle circumference, HGS handgrip strength, SCr serum creatinine
Fig. 2Association between LBM and serum creatinine in 118 hemodialysis patients
Fig. 3Spline model with 95 % confidence interval reflecting correlation between the LBM-measured by DEXA and estimated LBM values by a regression equation using serum creatinine (SCr) in 118 long-term hemodialysis patients (adapted from Noori et al. [12])
Selected studies where serum creatinine (SCr) concentration has been used as a muscle mass surrogate
| Authors, year | Population | Study goals | Findings/conclusions | Better biomarker for muscle mass |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keshaviah et al. [ | 17 (healthy), 27 (HD) and 71 (PD) patients | To compare different techniques to assess LBM | There was no statistical difference between the total body water and creatinine kinetics techniques, but the bio-impedance values were systematically higher than those obtained by the kinetic technique. | |
| Heimburger et al. [ | 115 CKD patients | 1. To assess the prevalence of malnutrition and to study the relationship between various nutritional parameters in CKD patients. | 1. HGS showed a strong correlation with DEXA measured LBM and low HGS was the factor with the strongest independent association with malnutrition. | HGS > albumin, transthyretin, urine creatinine |
| Kaizu et al. [ | 46 anuric HD patients | To examine the validity of the creatinine kinetic method for determining creatinine production by comparing it with the direct dialysate creatinine quantification method as a means to assess protein nutritional status of hemodialysis patients. | 1. The creatinine kinetic model is a method to calculate the creatinine production rate using pre and postdialysis creatinine and was found to correlate with muscle mass estimated by Cr in dialysate and CT thigh muscle though there was some overestimation particularly in females perhaps due to no sex specific formulas or accurate volume of distribution calculation. | SCr = Cr in dialysate = CT thigh muscle > MAMC, 3 methyl-histadine |
| Oterdoom et al. [ | 604 renal transplant patients | To investigate determinants of 24-h creatinine excretion in urine and prospectively to investigate whether 24-h creatinine excretion in urine, as measure of muscle mass is associated with mortality and graft loss in renal transplant recipients. | Urinary creatinine excretion as measure of muscle mass is associated with mortality and graft loss after renal transplantation. | UrCr |
| Donadio et al. [ | 27 HD patients | To assess correlation of BIA with DEXA-measured LBP. | There was no difference between LBM estimated by BIA and DEXA and both correlated well with SCr. | SCr = BIA = DEXA |
| Noori et al. [ | 742 HD patients | 1. To examine and compare the sex-specific mortality predictability of LBM and FM, assessed by the NIR interactance. | 1. In men, the lowest quartile of FM was associated with an increased risk of death where higher FM, and not LBM was associated with greater survival. | FM > LBM |
| 2. In women, higher FM and LBM was associated with greater survival. | ||||
| 3. The excess FM relative to LBM was linearly associated with greater survival in all subjects. | ||||
| 4. FM is superior to LBM in conferring survival advantages of large body size to HD patients. | ||||
| Noori et al. [ | 792 HD patients | 1. To examine the correlations of anthropometric and biochemical measures with DEXA-measured LBM in HD patients to determine which serves as a better surrogate for LBM. | 1. MAMC ( | MAMC > SCr |
| 2. To study the outcome predictability of LBM estimated by MAMC and SCr and compare them with TSF. | 2. Patients with highest MAMC reported better mental health score. | |||
| 3. To examine the association of MAMC with QoL. | 3. Decreased risk of death was observed in hemodialysis patients with higher MAMC, higher SCr and higher TSF. | |||
| 4. High MAMC are associated with greater survival in patients with low TSF and in patients with high TSF thickness, thus suggesting that muscle mass may possibly be more important than peripheral body fat mass in predicting survival in HD patients. | ||||
| Kalantar-Zadeh et al. [ | 121,762 HD patients | 1. To validate 3-month averaged pre-HD SCr as a marker for muscle mass in subgroup of 117 patients. | 1. Higher BMI (up to 45) and a higher SCr are each independently and incrementally associated with greater survival even after adjustment for nutritional status and inflammation. | SCr > BMI |
| 2. To study adjusted dry weight and SCr concentration and their changes over time as predictors of mortality in HD patients. | 2. A gain in dry weight accompanied by a concurrent increase in muscle mass (SCr) is associated with the greatest survival, whereas weight loss accompanied by loss in muscle mass bears the highest mortality. A weight loss with gain of muscle mass confers higher survival than weight gain with loss of muscle mass. | |||
| Noori et al. [ | 118/612 (Development/validation cohort) HD patients | 1. To examine correlation between DEXA-measured LBM with SCr (3-month averaged), albumin, prealbumin, anthropometric measurements, nPNA and subjective assessment. | 1. LBM calculated by SCr, MAMC, and handgrip strength had the highest correlations with LBM calculated by DEXA and when validated by NIR interactance. | SCr > MAMC |
| 2. To develop equations to estimate LBM and compare to DEXA-measured LBM. | 2. Serum albumin and prealbumin levels did not correlate well with DEXA-measured LBM. | |||
| 3. To test validity of equations in validation cohort compared to NIR technique. | 3. LBM calculated by HGS, MAMC, SCr underestimated LBM particularly at LBM > 50 kg. | |||
| Streja et al. [ | 10,090 renal transplant patients | 1. To examine the relationship of pretransplant BMI and SCr and post-transplant patient and graft survival. | 1. Patients with lower 3-month averaged pretransplant creatinine had higher risk of death after adjustment for inflammation and transplant data as well as higher risk of graft failure. | Cr > BMI |
| Molnar et al. [ | 14,632 waitlisted renal transplant patients | To examine associations of BMI, pretransplant SCr as a surrogate marker of muscle mass and changes in weight with mortality in a large national cohort of transplant-waitlisted dialysis patients. | Transplant waitlisted hemodialysis patients with lower muscle mass and/or unintentional weight or muscle loss have higher mortality in this observational study. | SCr |
| Moreau-Gaudry et al. [ | 1,205 MHD patients from Europe | To analyze the association between SCr and mortality. | BMI should not be used by itself but in conjunction with SCr as a surrogate of LBM to improve its morbid-mortality predictive power. | SCr > BMI |
| Walther et al. [ | 81 Dialysis patients | To analyze the association between predialysis SCr and change in SCr between midweek dialysis sessions and nutritional markers and mortality. | Predialysis creatinine and interdialytic change in creatinine are both strongly associated with proxies of nutritional status and mortality in hemodialysis patients and are highly correlated. | SCr |
nPNA Normalized protein nitrogen appearance