| Literature DB >> 35628399 |
Angela Polito1, Lorenzo Barnaba1, Donatella Ciarapica1, Elena Azzini1.
Abstract
Osteosarcopenia (OS) is defined by the concurrent presence of osteopenia/osteoporosis and sarcopenia. The pathogenesis and etiology of OS involve genetic, biochemical, mechanical, and lifestyle factors. Moreover, an inadequate nutritional status, such as low intake of protein, vitamin D, and calcium, and a reduction in physical activity are key risk factors for OS. This review aims to increase knowledge about diagnosis, incidence, etiology, and treatment of OS through clinical studies that treat OS as a single disease. Clinical studies show the relationship between OS and the risk of frailty, falls, and fractures and some association with Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) pathologies such as diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease. In some cases, the importance of deepening the related mechanisms is emphasized. Physical exercise with adequate nutrition and nutritional supplementations such as proteins, Vitamin D, or calcium, represent a significant strategy for breaking OS. In addition, pharmacological interventions may confer benefits on muscle and bone health. Both non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions require additional randomized controlled trials (RCT) in humans to deepen the synergistic effect of exercise, nutritional interventions, and drug compounds in osteosarcopenia.Entities:
Keywords: clinical studies; interventions; osteosarcopenia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35628399 PMCID: PMC9147376 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23105591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Pathogenesis and etiology of osteosarcopenia.
Relevant results in main clinical studies on Osteosarcopenia (OS).
| Author, Year [Ref] | Sample Size | % of OS | Relevant Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Huo, 2015 [ | 680 | 38% | OS subjects were older, mostly women, with a body mass index (BMI) below 25 and at higher risk of depression and malnutrition |
| Reiss, 2019 [ | 141 | 14.2% | BMI and Mini Nutritional Assessment-Short form were lower in OS compared to sarcopenia or osteoporosis alone ( |
| Okayama, 2022 [ | 61 W | 39.3% | Patients with OS had lower quality of life scores, greater postural instability, and a higher incidence of falls. |
| Park, 2021 [ | 885 | 19.2% | Disability (17.5, 95% CI: 14.8–20.1), frailty (3.0, 95% CI: 2.6–3.4), and depression mean score (4.6, 95% CI: 3.9–5.4) were statistically significantly higher in the OS group compared the other groups. |
| Pourhassan, 2021 [ | 572 | 8% | OS patients were older and frailer and had lower BMI, fat, muscle mass, handgrip strength, and T-score compared to non-OS patients. |
| Salech, 2020 [ | 1119 | 16.4% | OS increases with age from 8.9% at 60–69.9 years), to 33.7% (>80 years) ( |
| Fahimfar, 2022 [ | 341 M | 100% | Risk of falls: positively associated with age (OR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.04–1.14), fasting blood glucose, an increase of 10 mg/dL increased the chance of falling by 14% (OR = 1.14, 95% CI = 1.06–1.23); negatively associated with triglyceridemia (OR = 0.33, CI 95% = 0.12 to 0.89). |
| Di Monaco, 2020 [ | 350 W2 | 65.7% | Significant difference in Spine Deformity Index (SDI) scores across the 3 groups (no osteoporosis and sarcopenia; osteoporosis or sarcopenia and osteosarcopenia ( |
| Drey, 2016 [ | 68 pre-frail older | 41% | OS participants showed significantly reduced hand-grip increased chair rising time, and STS power time as well as significantly increased bone turnover markers. |
| Saeki, 2020 [ | 291 | 16.8% | OS and vertebral fracture were often seen in patients with frailty than in those without frailty (48.1% vs. 4.8% and 49.4% vs. 18.1%, respectively; |
| Inoue, 2021 [ | 495 | 11.1% | Logistic regression analysis revealed that OS was significantly associated with social frailty (pooled OR: 2.117; 95%CI: 1.104–4.213) |
| Inoue, 2022 [ | 432 patients | 10.2% | Logistic regression analysis revealed that OS was independently associated with cognitive frailty with a higher odds ratio (OR: 8.246, 95% CI 3.319−20.487) than osteoporosis or sarcopenia alone. |
| Liu, 2021 [ | 150 (80 M and 70 W) patients with T2DM aged ≥50 yrs. | 29% | Patients with OS had lower body mass index, waist circumference, body fat percentage ( |
| Pechmann, 2021 [ | T2DM group | 11.9% (T2DM group); | T2DM group versus the control group had higher rates fractures (29.9% vs. 18.5%, respectively, |
| Park, 2018 [ | 1344 | 24.1% | Pro-inflammatory diet was associate with increased odds for osteopenic obesity (OR = 2.757, 95% CI: 1.398–5.438, |
| Bazdyrev, 2021 [ | 387 stable coronary artery disease | 6.5% | Patients with OS had a higher score on the SARC-F questionnaire, low handgrip strength, small area of muscle tissue, low musculoskeletal index, as well as low values of bone mineral density. |
| Fahimfar, 2020 [ | 2353 | 34% | OS increases with age (from 14.3% in aged 60–64 years to 59.4% in aged ≥75 years in men and from 20.3% in aged 60–64 years to 48.3% in aged ≥75 years in women- |
| Hassan, 2020 [ | 558 community-dwelling | 36% | OS patients on average had 6.3 g/L lower Hb levels compared to controls ( |
W = women; M = men; T2DM = Type 2 diabetes mellitus; STS = Sit-to stand test.
Relevant results on Osteosarcopenia (OS) subjects in Non-Pharmacological Interventions.
| Author, Year [Ref] | Sample Size | Type of Intervention | % of OS | Relevant Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gomez, 2018 [ | 106 | Multifactorial interventions: e.g., vitamin D/calcium supplement, osteoporosis medications, supervised group exercise programs; protein supplement, etc | 53% | At 6-month follow-up, the multidisciplinary interventions reduce falls by more than 80% and 50% fracture risk. In addition, 65% of patients had a reduced risk for falling and a 57% reduction in 10-year fracture probability. |
| Lichtenberg, 2019 [ | 43 M | FROST Study 18 months trial | 100% | The results show a significant effect of the exercise intervention on the sarcopenia Z-score ( |
| Kemmler, 2020 [ | 43 M | FROST Study 18 months high-intensity dynamic resistance exercise (HIT-DRT), whey protein supplement (up to 1.5 g/kg/day in HIT-DRT and 1.2 g/kg/day in CG); vitamin D supplements (up to 800 IE/day). | 100% | After 12 months the lumbar spine (LS) BMD was maintained in the EG and decreased significantly in the CG ( |
| Kemmler, 2021 [ | 43 M | FROST Study 6 months of detraining after 18 months of intervention. | 100% | During detraining, the EG group lost approximately one-third of the HIT-DRT-induced gain and showed a significantly ( |
W = women; M = men; BMD = Bone Mineral Density.