Abstract

BackgroundLoss of skeletal muscle mass (SMM) increases the risk of frailty and, together with excess fat mass (FM), is a risk factor for cardio‐metabolic disease. However, use of body composition measurements in nutritional surveillance and routine clinical practice is limited by the lack of reference data. Our aim was to produce age‐specific and sex‐specific reference values for SMM and FM in the White ethnic adult population in the UK. Secondary objectives were to examine the tracking over time using a subsample of the population with repeated measures of body composition and to assess the validity of these reference values in different ethnic subgroups.MethodsWe used data from segmental bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) in 390 565 participants, aged 40–69 years, in the UK Biobank, and data from dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry from n = 905 participants to validate the BIA measurements. SMM was calculated as the sum of the predicted muscle mass from the limbs. The LMS method was used to produce percentile curves for the SMM index (SMMI = SMM/height2) and the FM index (FMI = FM/height2). We investigated the validity of the White ethnic reference values by plotting z‐scores (99.7% confidence interval) from Black and Asian groups to check if their confidence interval included zero. Longitudinal trajectories were predicted based on the baseline z‐scores and the correlation between repeated measurements at follow‐up.ResultsThe percentile curves show that SMMI declines in men from the age of 40, whereas in women, SMMI is more stable and decreases only slightly among women in the higher percentiles. FMI increases with age in both men and women. Women have higher FMI and lower SMMI than men in all age groups. The validity of the White‐based reference values for non‐White ethnic groups is poor. Longitudinal trajectories in body composition in the subsample of participants with a follow‐up assessment show regression towards the mean in both men and women, with some evidence of declining SMMI only among men. The predicted 90% limits for the expected 5 year trajectories of SMMI and FMI can be used to identify people with unusual trajectories and in clinical practice to identify and track individuals at risk of excessive loss of SMM.ConclusionsThese body composition reference values developed from BIA in a middle/older‐aged healthy White ethnic population in the UK could be used as a simple assessment tool for nutritional surveillance and to identify individuals with low SMMI or high FMI who may be at increased risk of disease and/or frailty.

Highlights

  • Loss of skeletal muscle mass (SMM), known as sarcopenia, carries an increased risk for poor health outcomes including frailty, increased morbidity, and premature mortality.[1,2,3,4] SMM is an important tissue for the maintenance of glucose homeostasis and is a biomarker for metabolic health.[3,5] On the contrary, fat mass (FM) has been shown to be strongly associated with increased risk of non-communicable diseases, including hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, and insulin resistance.[6]

  • The development of sarcopenia in an aging population may be masked by weight stability, with reductions in muscle mass counterbalanced by increases in FM.[10]

  • We examined the validity of the bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) measurements against dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) as the reference method using the correlation and agreement of body composition measurements obtained from each method in a subsample of participants (n = 905)

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Summary

Introduction

Loss of skeletal muscle mass (SMM), known as sarcopenia, carries an increased risk for poor health outcomes including frailty, increased morbidity, and premature mortality.[1,2,3,4] SMM is an important tissue for the maintenance of glucose homeostasis and is a biomarker for metabolic health.[3,5] On the contrary, fat mass (FM) has been shown to be strongly associated with increased risk of non-communicable diseases, including hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, and insulin resistance.[6]. Our aim was to produce age-specific and sex-specific reference values for SMM and FM in the White ethnic adult population in the UK. Secondary objectives were to examine the tracking over time using a subsample of the population with repeated measures of body composition and to assess the validity of these reference values in different ethnic subgroups

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