Affiliation:
1. Department of Nutritional Sciences, College of Health and Human Development, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Background
An optimal blood sampling time for application of the retinol isotope dilution (RID) method for predicting vitamin A total body stores (TBS) (i.e., vitamin A status) has not been established.
Objectives
Objectives were to identify sampling times that provide accurate estimates of TBS by RID in groups and individuals by applying compartmental modeling to data for theoretical adults and children.
Methods
We selected previously generated hypothetical adults and children (20 per group) that had a wide range of assigned values for TBS and vitamin A kinetic parameters. We used the Simulation, Analysis and Modeling software to simulate individual kinetic responses; then we calculated geometric mean values for the RID equation coefficients and each individual's plasma retinol specific activity at various times, using those values to predict group mean and individual subject TBS. Predicted values for TBS were compared with assigned values.
Results
Accurate estimates of group mean TBS were obtained at all sampling times from 1 to 30 d in both adults and children. For individuals, correlations between RID-predicted TBS and assigned values increased with time in the adults (R2 = 0.80 at day 14, 0.96 at day 21, and 0.99 at day 28); a similar trend was observed for the children, with R2 = 0.82 at day 7 and increasing to 0.97 at days 21 and 28 (P < 0.001 for all comparisons).
Conclusions
Although no single, unique time provided the most accurate prediction of TBS for all individuals within these groups, applying the RID method at 21 or 28 d yielded predictions that were within 25% of assigned values for 90% or 95% of adults, respectively; corresponding values for children were 80% from 10 to 20 d, and 85% at 21 and 28 d. For most subjects, early times (<14 d for adults and <10 d for children) provided less accurate predictions.
Funder
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
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