| Literature DB >> 27716195 |
Charlotte Beaudart1, Eugène McCloskey2,3, Olivier Bruyère4, Matteo Cesari5,6, Yves Rolland7, René Rizzoli8, Islène Araujo de Carvalho9, Jotheeswaran Amuthavalli Thiyagarajan9, Ivan Bautmans10, Marie-Claude Bertière11, Maria Luisa Brandi12, Nasser M Al-Daghri13, Nansa Burlet4, Etienne Cavalier14, Francesca Cerreta15, Antonio Cherubini16, Roger Fielding17, Evelien Gielen18, Francesco Landi19, Jean Petermans20, Jean-Yves Reginster4, Marjolein Visser21,22, John Kanis2,23, Cyrus Cooper24,25.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sarcopenia is increasingly recognized as a correlate of ageing and is associated with increased likelihood of adverse outcomes including falls, fractures, frailty and mortality. Several tools have been recommended to assess muscle mass, muscle strength and physical performance in clinical trials. Whilst these tools have proven to be accurate and reliable in investigational settings, many are not easily applied to daily practice.Entities:
Keywords: Assessment; Daily practice; Management; Sarcopenia; Tools
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716195 PMCID: PMC5052976 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0349-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Applicability of the existing tools for the assessment of muscle mass, muscle strength and physical performance in research and clinical settings
| Applicable in research settings | Applicable in specialist clinical settings | Applicable in primary care settings | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment of muscle mass | |||
|
| +++ | +++ | + |
|
| + | ++ | ++ |
|
| +++ | ++ | + |
|
| +++ | ++ | + |
|
| ++ | ++ | + |
| Assessment of muscle strength | |||
|
| +++ | +++ | +++ |
|
| +++ | ++ | + |
|
| + | + | ++ |
| Assessment of physical performance | |||
|
| +++ | +++ | +++ |
|
| ++ | + | + |
|
| + | + | + |
|
| ++ | + | + |
|
| ++ | + | + |
|
| ++ | + | + |
|
| +++ | ++ | + |
SPPB Short Physical Performance Battery
Nb. The group has chosen to attribute to each tool +++ (best recommended tool) or ++ (best alternative tool) or + (less recommended tool) based on the availability and the costs of the tool, the required time for the examination and the availability of robust cut-off points
The Red Flag method
| Red flags | |
|---|---|
| Clinician’s observation | General weakness of the subject |
| Visual identification of loss of muscle mass | |
| Low walking speed | |
| Subject’s presenting features | Loss of weight |
| Loss of muscle strength, in arms or in legs | |
| General weakness | |
| Fatigue | |
| Falls | |
| Mobility impairment | |
| Loss of energy | |
| Difficulties in physical activities or activities of daily living | |
| Clinician’s assessment | Nutrition |
| Body weight | |
| Physical activity |
Nb. Red flags have been identified through reviewed papers identified by members of the group
Pharmacological agents in development with potential for treating sarcopenia
| Mechanism of action | Drug name | Drug Developer | Indication sought | Study phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I. Myostatin Antagonists | ||||
| Activin receptor trap | ACE-031 | Acceleron | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | Phase 3 (trial terminated early) |
| Myostatin antibody | REGN-1033 | Regeneron/Sanofi | Sarcopenia | Phase 2 |
| LY-2495655 | Eli Lilly | Hip arthroplasty | Phase 2 | |
| Elderly Fallers | ||||
| Cancer Cachexia | ||||
| PF-06252616 | Pfizer | Inclusion body myositis | Phase 1 | |
| Activin receptor inhibitor | Bimagrumab (BMY338) | Novartis | Sarcopenia | Phase 2 and 3 |
| Hip fracture | Phase 2 | |||
| Cancer and COPD cachexia | ||||
| II. Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators | Enobasarm (Ostarine) | GTx | Cancer Cachexia | Phase 3 (did not meet primary endpoint) |
| III. Skeletal Troponin Activators | Tirasemtiv | Cytokinetics | ALS | Phase 2,3 |
| CK-2017357 | Myasthenia Gravis | |||