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RecruitingNCT06630949

D3-Creatine and Skeletal Muscle in Older Adults

Using a Novel Method to Diagnose the Prevalence and Health Impact of Muscle Loss in Older Adults

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
350 (estimated)
Sponsor
McMaster University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The age-related decline in muscle mass and strength are collectively referred to as sarcopenia. However, the tools currently employed to assess skeletal muscle mass (SMM) (e.g., Dual-energy Xray Absorptiometry; DXA) have substantial drawbacks, and it is known that DXA-lean soft tissue (LST) is generally not associated with health outcomes of interest. Thus, the investigators propose using a novel, non-invasive, stable isotope-labelled probe (Deuterium (D)-labelled creatine (D3-creatine; D3-Cr)) to measure skeletal muscle mass in a large cohort of older individuals. The development and employment of new methods to accurately quantify the biological substrate of sarcopenia, skeletal muscle, are critical for the measure to remain clinically relevant. The plan is to measure 350 persons from the recently established (M3) prospective cohort. There will be measurement of lean soft tissue LST and appendicular LST (aLST) using DXA and compared to D3-Cr-measured SMM (D3-Cr-SMM) at baseline, 12mo, and 24mo (2yr) of follow-up. Physical mobility will also be measured (using various instruments).

Detailed description

The tools currently employed to assess skeletal muscle mass (SMM), including DXA, have substantial drawbacks. DXA does not measure muscle per se but provides an assessment of lean soft tissue (LST) as a proxy for skeletal muscle. Even if confined to the appendages (aLST), DXA assessments include many non-muscle constituents (e.g., connective tissue, water), which are poorly and inconsistently related to mobility and falls with aging. As a superior measure to DXA, the investigators will use a novel, stable isotope-labelled probe to measure SMM. This method uses the oral ingestion of a small dose of deuterium (D)-labelled creatine (D3-creatine; D3-Cr), which is irreversibly converted to creatinine when taken up by skeletal muscle. The dilution of the labelled creatinine provides a safe, non-invasive, and highly accurate measure of SMM. The utilization of D3-Cr-measured SMM (D3-Cr-SMM) requires no specific diet and requires only the collection of a spot urine sample. The plan is to recruit a sub-sample of older Canadians between 60 and 80 living in the greater Hamilton-Toronto area. Participants will be recruited through the MacM3 (M3) cohort study. MacM3 will enroll a sample of 2,000 participants from a pre-recruited representative sample of more than 10,000 older adults living in the greater Hamilton and Toronto areas who consented to be contacted for further research as part of a larger research platform. From this pool of 2000 individuals in MacM3, the plan is to recruit 350 people. Participants will be classified across the three levels of mobility limitations based on the MacM3 screening criteria of preclinical mobility limitation (i.e., able to manage without difficulty - no mobility limitation, able to manage without difficulty but sometimes with task modification - early mobility limitation, and able to manage with minor difficulty - minor mobility limitation, which will provide valuable insight into whether changes in D3-Cr-SMM are associated with a change in categorical mobility status. The proposed research design is a prospective cohort study including 350 older (65-80 y) men and women. All participants will undergo muscle mass assessments via D3-Cr, body composition (LST, aLST, fat mass) via DXA, and dietary intake by 24h recall (ASA24) at baseline, 1y and 2y of follow-up. Performance-based assessments of physical function, mobility status and muscular strength will also be conducted at baseline, 1y and 2y of follow-up. During the quarterly follow-up phone calls, all participants will be screened limitation screening questions (see inclusion criteria), allowing us to capture changes in mobility status (i.e., no, early, minor or major mobility limitation) over time.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2023-10-01
Primary completion
2026-12-31
Completion
2027-06-30
First posted
2024-10-08
Last updated
2024-10-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06630949. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.