| Literature DB >> 29609665 |
Maciej M Misiura1, João A N Filipe1, Carrie L Walk2, Ilias Kyriazakis1.
Abstract
Ca digestibility and utilisation in growing pigs are not well understood, and are usually neglected in diet formulation. This has implications not only for the accurate determination of its requirements but also for its interactions with other nutrients. A systematic review and meta-analysis (meta-regression) of published trials was carried out to quantify factors affecting Ca absorption and utilisation, and to derive an estimate of Ca endogenous excretion. The analysis was carried out on the data from forty studies, corresponding to 201 treatments performed on 1204 pigs. The results indicated that although Ca absorption and retention (g/kg of body weight per d) increased with increasing Ca intake (P<0·001), non-phytate-P intake (P<0·001) and exogenous phytase supplementation (P<0·001), these values decreased with increasing phytate-P intake (P<0·05). Interactions between exogenous phytase and Ca intake, indicating reduced efficacy of this enzyme (P<0·001), and between phytate-P intake and exogenous phytase, counteracting the direct negative effect of phytate-P (P<0·05) on Ca absorption and retention, were also detected. There were no effects of animal-related characteristics, such as pig genotype in Ca absorption and retention. The large amount of variance explained in Ca absorption (90 %) and retention (91 %) supported our choice of independent variables. Endogenous Ca losses obtained via linear regression were 239 mg/kg of DM intake (95 % CI 114, 364). These outcomes advance the current understanding of Ca digestibility and utilisation, and should contribute towards establishing requirements for digestible Ca. Consequently, pig diets will be more correctly formulated if digestible Ca values are used in estimating requirements for Ca.Entities:
Keywords: BW body weight; DMI DM intake; ExPhyt exogenous phytase intake; FTU phytase units; LMER linear mixed effects regression; NPP non-phytate-P; PP phytate-P; TCa total Ca intake; TP total P intake; Calcium; Digestibility; Phosphorus; Phytase; Pigs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29609665 PMCID: PMC5960347 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114518000612
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Outline of keyword searches used in the systematic review
| Components | Keywords |
|---|---|
| Subject | ∙ Calcium ∙ Calcium AND Phosp* ∙ Calcium AND Vitamin D ∙ Calcium AND Phytase |
| Response | ∙ digest* OR utilisation OR utilization OR absor* OR metabol* OR require* OR level* OR concentration* ∙ ratio OR percent* OR rate OR proportion |
| Population | (pig NOT guinea pig) OR swine |
Fig. 1Study selection process. BW, body weight.
Descriptive statistics for the main continuous variables included in the meta-analysis (Mean values and standard deviations; medians and minimum and maximum values)
| Variables |
| Mean |
| Median | Min | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unscaled data | ||||||
| Dependent variables | ||||||
| Ca absorption (g/d) | 201 | 6·00 | 2·33 | 5·99 | 0·29 | 13·50 |
| Ca retention (g/d) | 201 | 5·33 | 2·37 | 5·22 | 0·24 | 13·26 |
| Independent variables | ||||||
| TCa (g/d) | 201 | 10·7 | 4·34 | 10·5 | 1·82 | 26·3 |
| TP (g/d) | 201 | 7·56 | 3·16 | 7·08 | 2·39 | 19·1 |
| PP (g/d) | 201 | 3·88 | 1·97 | 3·61 | 0·94 | 9·92 |
| NPP (g/d) | 201 | 3·68 | 2·08 | 3·13 | 0·76 | 14·4 |
| ExPhyt (phytase units/d) | 201 | 431 | 784 | 0·00 | 0·00 | 3858 |
| Data scaled by the initial BW | ||||||
| Dependent variables | ||||||
| Ca absorption (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·178 | 0·085 | 0·169 | 0·007 | 0·543 |
| Ca retention (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·158 | 0·080 | 0·153 | 0·006 | 0·533 |
| Independent variables | ||||||
| TCa (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·313 | 0·154 | 0·271 | 0·046 | 1·04 |
| TP (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·222 | 0·113 | 0·183 | 0·074 | 0·794 |
| PP (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·110 | 0·066 | 0·091 | 0·032 | 0·499 |
| NPP (g/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 0·111 | 0·069 | 0·094 | 0·023 | 0·367 |
| ExPhyt (phytase units/kg of BW per d) | 201 | 10·8 | 20·3 | 0·00 | 0·00 | 99·2 |
TCa, total Ca intake; TP, total P intake; PP, phytate-P intake; NPP, non-phytate-P intake; ExPhyt, exogenous phytase intake; BW, body weight.
Descriptive statistics for the main categorical variables included in the meta-analysis
| Variables |
|
|---|---|
| Genotype | |
| Group 1 (LW, L, LW and L crosses) | 107 |
| Group 2 (D and D crosses) | 49 |
| Group 3 (commercial pig lines) | 45 |
| Sex | |
| Barrows | 143 |
| Gilts | 30 |
| Gilts and barrows | 24 |
| Boars | 4 |
LW, Large White; L, Landrace; D, Duroc.
Main significant fixed effects and their two-way interactions in the final linear mixed effects regression model for calcium absorption (Parameter estimates (β) with their standard errors)
| Variables | Estimate ( |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | −0·00159 | 0·00668 | <0·001 |
| TCa | 0·596 | 0·0293 | <0·001 |
| PP | −0·253 | 0·0574 | <0·05 |
| NPP | 0·106 | 0·0524 | <0·001 |
| ExPhyt | 0·00172 | 0·000305 | <0·001 |
| TCa×ExPhyt | −0·00693 | 0·00101 | <0·001 |
| TCa×PP | – | – | NS |
| TCa×NPP | – | – | NS |
| PP×ExPhyt | 0·0121 | 0·00312 | <0·001 |
| PP×NPP | – | – | NS |
| NPP×ExPhyt | – | – | NS |
| Pig genotype | – | – | NS |
| Pig sex | – | – | NS |
TCa, total Ca intake; PP, phytate-P intake; NPP, non-phytate-P intake; ExPhyt, exogenous phytase intake.
Fig. 2Change in calcium absorption with increasing exogenous phytase intake (ExPhyt) at three different levels of total calcium intake (TCa), to illustrate the interaction between TCa and ExPhyt identified in the final linear mixed effects regression model for calcium absorption. At higher TCa (: TCa set to its mean+sd from the data set), calcium absorption remains relatively unchanged with increasing ExPhyt. At lower TCa (: TCa set to its mean value from the data set; : TCa set to its mean−sd from the data set), calcium absorption increases with increasing ExPhyt. The remaining variables (non-phytate-P intake and phytate-P intake) were fixed and set to their mean values from the data set. BW, body weight.
Fig. 3Change in calcium absorption with increasing phytate-P intake (PP) at three different levels of exogenous phytase intake (ExPhyt), to illustrate the interaction between PP and ExPhyt identified in the final linear mixed effects regression model for calcium absorption. At higher ExPhyt (: ExPhyt set to its mean+sd from the data set), calcium absorption increases with increasing PP. Lower ExPhyt (: ExPhyt set to its mean value from the data set) and no additional ExPhyt () lead to an overall decrease in calcium absorption with increasing PP. The remaining variables (total calcium intake and non-phytate-P intake) were fixed and set to their mean values from the data set. BW, body weight.
Fig. 4Predicted effects of different phytate-P intake (PP) concentrations expressed as a percentage of total P intake (TP) on calcium absorption for diets containing no additional exogenous phytase intake. , 25 % of TP derived from PP (low PP); , 50 % of TP (medium PP); , 75 % of TP derived from PP (high PP). TP was set to its mean value from the data set; it is assumed that TP=PP+non-phytate-P intake (NPP), and hence the remaining TP originates from NPP. BW, body weight.
Main significant fixed effects and their two-way interactions in the final linear mixed effects regression model for calcium retention (Parameter estimates (β) with their standard errors)
| Variables | Estimate ( |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | −0·0179 | 0·00954 | <0·001 |
| TCa | 0·430 | 0·0298 | <0·001 |
| PP | −0·0188 | 0·0815 | <0·01 |
| NPP | 0·313 | 0·0524 | <0·001 |
| ExPhyt | 0·00157 | 0·000298 | <0·001 |
| TCa×ExPhyt | −0·00431 | 0·000870 | <0·001 |
| TCa x PP | – | – | NS |
| TCa×NPP | – | – | NS |
| PP×ExPhyt | 0·00553 | 0·00258 | <0·05 |
| PP×NPP | – | – | NS |
| NPP×ExPhyt | – | – | NS |
| Pig genotype | – | – | NS |
| Pig sex | – | – | NS |
TCa, total Ca intake; total P intake; PP, phytate-P intake; NPP, non-phytate-P intake; ExPhyt, exogenous phytase intake.
Fig. 5Predicted effects of increasing non-phytate-P intake (NPP) on calcium retention for diets containing no additional exogenous phytase intake. , NPP set to its mean+sd from the data set; , mean NPP from the data set; , NPP equivalent to its mean−sd from the data set. Phytate-P intake was set to its mean value from the data set for the purposes of this illustration. BW, body weight.
Summary of endogenous calcium losses (mg/kg of body weight (BW) per d) reported in the literature along with the estimated study-specific endogenous calcium excretion and obligatory calcium losses based on the meta-regression*
| References | Method | Dietary intake | Reported endogenous | Estimated | Estimated | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First author | Type of estimation | TCa (g/kg of BW per d) | TP (g/kg of BW per d) | ExPhyt (phytase units/kg of BW per d) | Ca losses (mg/kg of BW per d) | endogenous Ca losses (mg/kg of BW per
d) | obligatory Ca losses (mg/kg of BW per
d) |
| González-Vega | Linear regression | – | 0·258 | – | 7·18 | 9·47 | 21·8 |
| González-Vega | Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 0·00844 | 0·152 | – | 8·46 | 15·4 | 21·52 |
| Merriman & Stein(
| Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 0·00784 | 0·172 | – | 12·8 | 15·6 | 21·2 |
| González-Vega | Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 0·0142 | 0·227 | – | 17·1 | 15·1 | 17·43 |
TCa, total Ca intake; TP, total P intake; ExPhyt, exogenous phytase intake; LMER, linear mixed effects regression.
References are presented from smallest to largest reported values.
Calculated by dividing the reported intakes of Ca and P (g/d) and exogenous phytase (phytase units/d) by the reported initial BW (kg) at the start of each experiment.
Calculated by dividing the reported endogenous loss (mg/d) by the reported initial BW (kg).
Calculated based on the following population level LMER equation: Ca absorption=−0·0205+0·527TCa+0·0428TP+0·00192ExPhyt−0·0112TCa×ExPhyt + 0·0105TP×ExPhyt; all variables are expressed on g/kg of BW per d basis.
Calculated based on the following population level LMER equation: Ca retention=−0·0286+0·365TCa+0·0266TP+0·00202ExPhyt−0·00779TCa×ExPhyt + 0·00493TP×ExPhyt; all variables are expressed on g/kg of BW per d basis.
Summary of endogenous calcium losses (mg/kg of DM intake (DMI)) reported in the literature along with the estimated endogenous calcium excretion and obligatory calcium losses based on the meta-regression*
| References | Method | Estimated endogenous Ca losses | Estimated obligatory Ca losses | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First author | Type of estimation | Initial BW range (kg) | (mg/kg of DMI) | (mg/kg of DMI) |
| González-Vega | Linear regression | 14·2–19·2 | 160 | – |
| González-Vega | Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 17·1–21·2 | 220 | – |
| This study | Meta-regression | 19·9–75·0 | 239† | 287 |
| Merriman & Stein(
| Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 14·7–16·1 | 329 | – |
| González-Vega | Semi-synthetic Ca-free diet based on maize starch, potato protein isolate, soyabean oil and sucrose | 18·4–20·4 | 396 | – |
BW, body weight; LMER, linear mixed effects regression; TCa, total Ca intake; TP, total P intake; ExPhyt, exogenous phytase intake.
References are presented in order of the estimated magnitude.
Calculated based on the following population level LMER equation: Ca absorption=−0·239+0·541TCa+0·0171TP+0·00151ExPhyt−0·0000483TCa×ExPhyt + 0·000113TP×ExPhyt; all variables are expressed on g/kg of DMI basis.
Calculated based on the following population level LMER equation: Ca retention=−0·287+0·455TCa+0·111TP+0·000440ExPhyt−0·000157TCa×ExPhyt + 0·000220TP×ExPhyt; all variables are expressed on g/kg of DMI basis.