| Literature DB >> 33680500 |
Justin Carrard1, Chiara Guerini1, Christian Appenzeller-Herzog2, Denis Infanger1, Karsten Königstein1, Lukas Streese1, Timo Hinrichs1, Henner Hanssen1, Hector Gallart-Ayala3, Julijana Ivanisevic3, Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A low cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a strong and independent predictor of cardiometabolic, cancer and all-cause mortality. To date, the mechanisms linking CRF with reduced mortality remain largely unknown. Metabolomics, which is a powerful metabolic phenotyping technology to unravel molecular mechanisms underlying complex phenotypes, could elucidate how CRF fosters human health. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This study aims at systematically reviewing and meta-analysing the literature on metabolites of any human tissue sample, which are positively or negatively associated with CRF. Studies reporting estimated CRF will not be considered. No restrictions will be placed on the metabolomics technology used to measure metabolites. PubMed, Web of Science and EMBASE will be searched for relevant articles published until the date of the last search. Two authors will independently screen full texts of selected abstracts. References and citing articles of included articles will be screened for additional relevant publications. Data regarding study population, tissue samples, analytical technique, quality control, data processing, metabolites associated to CRF, cardiopulmonary exercise test protocol and exercise exhaustion criteria will be extracted. Methodological quality will be assessed using a modified version of QUADOMICS. Narrative synthesis as well as tabular/charted presentation of the extracted data will be included. If feasible, meta-analyses will be used to investigate the associations between identified metabolites and CRF. Potential sources of heterogeneity will be explored in meta-regressions. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: No ethics approval is required. The results will be published in a peer-reviewed journal and as conference presentation. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: CRD42020214375. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) [year]. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: aerobic fitness; metabolism; physical fitness; sports & exercise medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 33680500 PMCID: PMC7898858 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsem-2020-001008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med ISSN: 2055-7647
The Population, Exposure, Comparison, Outcome, Study design process
| Item | Specification |
| Population or participants and conditions of interest | Humans (any age, any sex and any health condition). |
| Exposure | Metabolites derived from metabolomics or multiomics studies applying metabolomics approaches. |
| Comparisons or control groups | NA |
| Outcomes of interest | CRF measured by means of a cardiopulmonary exercise test (spiroergometry). |
| Study designs | Any study design, only published studies, no editorials, letters, reviews, meta-analyses, case reports or conference abstracts. |
CRF, cardiorespiratory fitness; NA, not available.
Data that will be extracted from every study included in the review
| No | Description |
| 1 | Authors and year of publication. |
| 2 | Country of study. |
| 3 | Study design. |
| 4 | Study population. |
| 5 | Study population demographics (n, age, sex, body mass index, body fat percentage, physical activity levels, cardiorespiratory fitness, medication). |
| 6 | Study completion rate. |
| 7 | Potential health conditions. |
| 8 | Tissue sample. |
| 9 | Sample collection and storage. |
| 10 | Sampling time and nutritional protocol before sampling. |
| 11 | Metabolite extraction method. |
| 12 | Metabolomics analytical technique. |
| 13 | Quality control used to assess data quality. |
| 14 | Data processing and metabolite annotation. |
| 15 | Metabolites associated with CRF. |
| 16 | CPET protocol and exercise exhaustion criteria. |
CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise testing; CRF, cardiorespiratory fitness.