Predictive value of sarcopenia components for all-cause mortality: findings from population-based cohorts

Author:

Westbury Leo D.ORCID,Harvey Nicholas C.ORCID,Beaudart CharlotteORCID,Bruyère OlivierORCID,Cauley Jane A.ORCID,Cawthon PeggyORCID,Cruz-Jentoft Alfonso J.ORCID,Curtis Elizabeth M.ORCID,Ensrud KristineORCID,Fielding Roger A.ORCID,Johansson Helena,Kanis John A.ORCID,Karlsson Magnus K.ORCID,Lane Nancy E.ORCID,Lengelé LaetitiaORCID,Lorentzon MattiasORCID,McCloskey EugeneORCID,Mellström DanORCID,Newman Anne B.ORCID,Ohlsson ClaesORCID,Orwoll EricORCID,Reginster Jean-YvesORCID,Ribom EvaORCID,Rosengren Björn E.ORCID,Schousboe John T.ORCID,Dennison Elaine M.ORCID,Cooper CyrusORCID,

Abstract

Abstract Background Low grip strength and gait speed are associated with mortality. However, investigation of the additional mortality risk explained by these measures, over and above other factors, is limited. Aim We examined whether grip strength and gait speed improve discriminative capacity for mortality over and above more readily obtainable clinical risk factors. Methods Participants from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study, Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Study, and the Hertfordshire Cohort Study were analysed. Appendicular lean mass (ALM) was ascertained using DXA; muscle strength by grip dynamometry; and usual gait speed over 2.4–6 m. Verified deaths were recorded. Associations between sarcopenia components and mortality were examined using Cox regression with cohort as a random effect; discriminative capacity was assessed using Harrell’s Concordance Index (C-index). Results Mean (SD) age of participants (n = 8362) was 73.8(5.1) years; 5231(62.6%) died during a median follow-up time of 13.3 years. Grip strength (hazard ratio (95% CI) per SD decrease: 1.14 (1.10,1.19)) and gait speed (1.21 (1.17,1.26)), but not ALM index (1.01 (0.95,1.06)), were associated with mortality in mutually-adjusted models after accounting for age, sex, BMI, smoking status, alcohol consumption, physical activity, ethnicity, education, history of fractures and falls, femoral neck bone mineral density (BMD), self-rated health, cognitive function and number of comorbidities. However, a model containing only age and sex as exposures gave a C-index (95% CI) of 0.65(0.64,0.66), which only increased to 0.67(0.67,0.68) after inclusion of grip strength and gait speed. Conclusions Grip strength and gait speed may generate only modest adjunctive risk information for mortality compared with other more readily obtainable risk factors.

Funder

Medical Research Council

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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