Muscle quality, physical performance, and comorbidity are predicted by circulating procollagen type III N-terminal peptide (P3NP): the InCHIANTI follow-up study

Author:

Pellegrino RaffaelloORCID,Paganelli RobertoORCID,Di Iorio AngeloORCID,Bandinelli StefaniaORCID,Moretti AntimoORCID,Iolascon GiovanniORCID,Sparvieri EleonoraORCID,Tarantino DomizianoORCID,Ferrucci LuigiORCID

Abstract

AbstractSarcopenia is characterized by skeletal muscle quantitative and qualitative alterations. A marker of collagen turnover, procollagen type III N-terminal peptide (P3NP), seems to be related to those conditions. This study aims to assess the predictive role of P3NP in muscle density and physical performance changes. In the InCHIANTI study, a representative sample from the registry lists of two towns in Tuscany, Italy, was recruited. Baseline data was collected in 1998, and follow-up visits were conducted every 3 years. Out of the 1453 participants enrolled at baseline, this study includes 1052 participants. According to P3NP median levels, population was clustered in two groups; 544 (51.7%) of the 1052 subjects included were classified in the low median levels (LM-P3NP); at the baseline, they were younger, had higher muscle density, and performed better at the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), compared to the high-median group (HM-P3NP).LM-P3NP cases showed a lower risk to develop liver chronic diseases, CHF, myocardial infarction, and osteoarthritis. HM-P3NP levels were associated with a longitudinal reduction of muscle density, and this effect was potentiated by the interaction between P3NP and leptin. Moreover, variation in physical performance was inversely associated with high level of P3NP, and directly associated with high fat mass, and with the interaction between P3NP and muscle density. Our data indicate that P3NP is associated with the aging process, affecting body composition, physical performance, and clinical manifestations of chronic degenerative age-related diseases.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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