Abstract
We examined whether the effect of caloric restriction (CR) on gait speed change in older adults (67.3±5.27 years) varied by BMI and interleukin 6 (IL-6). Data from eight six-month randomized controlled trials were pooled, with 1268 participants randomized to CR (n=710) and non-CR (n=558) conditions. Baseline BMI/IL-6 subgroups were constructed using BMI≥35 kg/m2 and IL-6>2.5 pg/dL, and participants were jointly classified as high/high (n=395), high/low (n=208), low/high (n=271), or low/low (n=344). Overall treatment effects showed significant improvements in gait speed in CR versus non-CR [mean difference: 0.02 m/s (95% CI: 0.01, 0.04)]; however, CR assignment significantly interacted with BMI/IL-6 subgroup (p=0.03). Greatest gait speed improvement was observed in the high/high CR subgroup [+0.06 m/s (0.03, 0.09)] and appeared to be driven by no gait speed change among the high/high non-CR subgroup. Gait speed response to CR was greatest in older adults with elevated baseline BMI and IL-6.
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