Effect of Baseline BMI and IL-6 Subgroup Membership on Gait Speed Response to Caloric Restriction in Older Adults with Obesity. Hsieh KL, et al, J Nutr Health Aging 2023.
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Résumé et points clés
Background: Prior work shows caloric restriction (CR) can improve physical function among older adults living with obesity. However, the contribution of starting weight and inflammatory burden to CR-associated functional improvements is unclear. The primary purpose of this study was to determine if CR-associated gait speed change varied by body mass index (BMI) and plasma interleukin 6 (IL-6) at baseline and secondarily to determine the contribution of BMI change and IL-6 change to gait speed change. DESIGN, SETTING,
Participants: Data from eight randomized control trials were pooled, with 1184 participants randomized to CR (n=661) and No CR (n=523) conditions. All studies assessed outcomes before and five or six months after assignment to CR or No CR.
Measurements: BMI and IL-6 were assessed at baseline using standard procedures. Gait speed was assessed with the six-minute walk test or 400m walk test. Baseline BMI/IL-6 subgroups were constructed using BMI≥35 kg/m2 and IL-6>2.5 pg/mL thresholds. Participants with BMI≥35 kg/m2 were grouped into class 2+ obesity and BMI<35 kg/m2 into class 1- obesity; IL-6>2.5 pg/mL were grouped into high IL-6, and <2.5 pg/mL as low IL-6 (class 2+ obesity/high IL-6: n=288, class 2+ obesity/low IL-6: n=143, class 1- obesity/high IL-6: n=354, or class 1- obesity/low IL-6: n=399). All analyses used adjusted general linear models.
Results: Gait speed significantly improved with CR versus non-CR [mean difference: +0.02 m/s (95% CI: 0.01, 0.04)]. CR assignment significantly interacted with BMI/IL-6 subgroup membership (p=0.03). Greatest gait speed improvement was observed in the class 2+ obesity/high IL-6 subgroup [+0.07 m/s (0.03, 0.10)]. No other subgroups observed significant gait speed change. For each unit decrease in BMI, gait speed change increased by +0.02 m/s (p<0.001; R2=0.26), while log IL-6 change did not significantly affect gait speed change [+0.01 m/s (p=0.20)].
Conclusions: Only the class 2+ obesity/high IL-6 subgroup significantly improved gait speed in response to CR. Improvement in gait speed in this subgroup was driven by a larger decrease in BMI, but not IL-6, in response to CR. Individuals with class 2+ obesity and high IL-6 are most likely to show improved gait speed in response to CR, with improvement predominantly driven by reductions in BMI.
Références de l'article
- Effect of Baseline BMI and IL-6 Subgroup Membership on Gait Speed Response to Caloric Restriction in Older Adults with Obesity.
- Effect of Baseline BMI and IL-6 Subgroup Membership on Gait Speed Response to Caloric Restriction in Older Adults with Obesity.
- Hsieh KL, Neiberg RH, Beavers KM, Rejeski WJ, Messier SP, Nicklas BJ, Beavers DP
- The journal of nutrition, health & aging
- 2023
- J Nutr Health Aging. 2023;27(4):285-290. doi: 10.1007/s12603-023-1909-1.
- Humans, Aged, Body Mass Index, *Walking Speed, *Interleukin-6, Caloric Restriction, Obesity
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- DOI: 10.1007/s12603-023-1909-1
- PMID: 37170436
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