Abstract

BackgroundLean / Fat Free Body Mass (LBM) is metabolically involved in active processes such as resting energy expenditure, glucose uptake, and myokine secretion. Nonetheless, its association with insulin sensitivity / resistance / glucose tolerance and metabolic syndrome remains unclear in childhood.MethodsThe current investigation aimed to examine the differences in fat-free mass /lean body mass according to the presence of insulin sensitivity/insulin resistance/glucose tolerance/metabolic syndrome in children.A systematic search was carried out in Medline/PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and SciELO, covering the period from each database’s respective start to 21 June 2021. Two researchers evaluated 7111 studies according to the inclusion criteria: original human studies, written in English or Spanish, evaluating fat-free mass/lean body mass in children and adolescents including both with and without insulin sensitivity/insulin resistance /glucose tolerance and metabolic syndrome and reported the differences between them in terms of fat free mass/lean body mass.The results of the studies were combined with insulin sensitivity, insulin, resistance, glucose tolerance and metabolic syndrome. The standardized mean difference (SMD) in each study was calculated and combined using the random-effects model. Heterogeneity between studies was tested using the index of heterogeneity (I2), leave-one-out sensitivity analyses were performed, and publication bias was assessed using the Egger and Begg tests.ResultsFinally, 15 studies which compared groups defined according to different glucose homeostasis criteria or metabolic syndrome out of 103 eligible studies were included in this systematic review and 12 studies in the meta-analysis. Meta-analysis showed lower fat-free mass/lean body mass percentage in participants with insulin resistance/glucose tolerance/metabolic syndrome (SMD -0.47; 95% CI, − 0.62 to − 0.32) while in mass units (kg), higher values were found in the same group (SMD, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.43 to 1.60).ConclusionsOur results identified lower values of fat-free mass/lean body mass (%) in children and adolescents with insulin resistance/glucose tolerance/metabolic syndrome and higher values of fat-free mass/lean body mass when these are expressed in kg. The evidence of the impact of lean mass on children’s glucose homeostasis or metabolic syndrome is limited, so future studies research should focus on explaining the effect of fat-free mass/lean body mass on different metabolic outcomes. Moreover, it may be interesting to evaluate the quality (muscle density) or functional (muscle strength) outcomes in addition to both absolute (kg) and relative (%) values in future studies.The systematic review was prospectively registered at PROSPERO (registration number CRD42019124734; available at: http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero [accessed: 05 April 2019]).

Highlights

  • Lean / Fat Free Body Mass (LBM) is metabolically involved in active processes such as resting energy expenditure, glucose uptake, and myokine secretion

  • 15 studies which compared groups defined according to different glucose homeostasis criteria or metabolic syndrome out of 103 eligible studies were included in this systematic review and 12 studies in the metaanalysis

  • Meta-analysis showed lower fat-free mass/lean body mass percentage in participants with insulin resistance/ glucose tolerance/metabolic syndrome (SMD -0.47; 95% confidence intervals (CI), − 0.62 to − 0.32) while in mass units, higher values were found in the same group (SMD, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.43 to 1.60)

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Summary

Introduction

Lean / Fat Free Body Mass (LBM) is metabolically involved in active processes such as resting energy expenditure, glucose uptake, and myokine secretion. Its association with insulin sensitivity / resistance / glucose tolerance and metabolic syndrome remains unclear in childhood. Insulin resistance is recognized as a central component of metabolic syndrome (MetS) [4], characterized by central obesity and, at least, two of the following components: high blood pressure (BP), high triglycerides (TG), reduced HDL cholesterol (HDL-C), and elevated fasting plasma glucose (FPG) [5, 6]. Metabolic syndrome’s relevance to future health is its relationship with the development of Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases [6].To date, defining MetS’s prevalence in children has been challenging, given the different existing criteria described in the literature [6]. In a recent systematic review published by Sharma et al [3], the prevalence of MetS in children and adolescents varied from 3.4% in normal-weight to 29% in the group with obesity

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