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Sarcopenia definitions and their association with injurious falls in older Swedish women from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital Prospective Evaluation of Risk of Bone fractures (SUPERB) study

Sarcopenia definitions and their association with injurious falls in older Swedish women from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital Prospective Evaluation of Risk of Bone fractures (SUPERB) study
Sarcopenia definitions and their association with injurious falls in older Swedish women from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital Prospective Evaluation of Risk of Bone fractures (SUPERB) study

Summary: associations between different sarcopenia definitions and the risk of injurious falls were investigated in 75–80-year-old women in the Swedish SUPERB cohort. Only sarcopenia according to the Sarcopenia Definitions and Outcomes Consortium (SDOC) definition was associated with incident injurious falls with and without fractures in older women. 

Purpose: to investigate the association between three commonly used sarcopenia definitions and the risk of injurious falls in a population of older Swedish women. 

Methods: a total of 2,883 75–80-year-old women with complete data on relevant sarcopenia definitions from the Swedish SUPERB cohort were studied. Sarcopenia was defined based on the Sarcopenia Definitions and Outcomes Consortium (SDOC: low handgrip strength and gait speed), revised European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People (EWGSOP2: low appendicular lean mass index (ALMI, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-derived), appendicular lean mass (kg)/height (m 2), hand grip strength (kg), or low chair stand time (s)), and Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia (AWGS: low ALMI and hand grip strength (kg) or low gait speed (m/s)). Questionnaires captured the occurrence of falls in the past 12 months. Incident injurious falls were identified using national registers. Cox regression (hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI)) analyses were performed without adjustment and after adjustment for age, body mass index, previous falls, and the Charlson comorbidity index. 

Results: during a median (IQR) follow-up time of 7.06 (6.2–7.9) years, there were 491 injurious falls without fracture and 962 injurious falls when also including falls resulting in a fracture. Sarcopenia according to EWGSOP2 and AWGS was not associated with an increased risk of injurious falls. Individuals with sarcopenia defined by SDOC had a higher risk of injurious falls with and without fracture (HR 2.11; 95% CI, 1.63–2.73 and HR, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.55–3.02, respectively). 

Conclusion: Sarcopenia definitions confined to muscle function and strength such as SDOC, rather than including DXA-determined ALMI (EWGSOP2 and AWGS), are associated with incident injurious falls with and without fractures in older women.

Falls, Older adults, Sarcopenia
0937-941X
Gandham, Anoohya
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Gregori, Giulia
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Johansson, Lisa
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Larsson, Berit A.M.
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Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Harvey, Nicholas C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Vandenput, Liesbeth
0910d143-4b58-4579-82b0-3810272f1814
McCloskey, Eugene
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Kanis, John A.
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Litsne, Henrik
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Axelsson, Kristian
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Lorentzon, Mattias
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Gandham, Anoohya
f60a43f3-79b8-4cf4-8319-ff757ace34a6
Gregori, Giulia
df66af7e-21a1-497c-973b-19164777ed4e
Johansson, Lisa
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Larsson, Berit A.M.
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Johansson, Helena
04f12338-4dd1-437b-b9bc-e0884130c215
Harvey, Nicholas C.
ce487fb4-d360-4aac-9d17-9466d6cba145
Vandenput, Liesbeth
0910d143-4b58-4579-82b0-3810272f1814
McCloskey, Eugene
6d3df4aa-b438-4a83-bd06-06b6cbe3980f
Kanis, John A.
f1621d8d-8afb-4d97-9679-2165d88a344d
Litsne, Henrik
e95cdd34-5e70-482e-a53c-45189411cd14
Axelsson, Kristian
1b319953-04ae-4f73-b221-dd56fd312993
Lorentzon, Mattias
9d78ed25-2b0c-46c5-a2db-a8b246af0956

Gandham, Anoohya, Gregori, Giulia, Johansson, Lisa, Larsson, Berit A.M., Johansson, Helena, Harvey, Nicholas C., Vandenput, Liesbeth, McCloskey, Eugene, Kanis, John A., Litsne, Henrik, Axelsson, Kristian and Lorentzon, Mattias (2024) Sarcopenia definitions and their association with injurious falls in older Swedish women from the Sahlgrenska University Hospital Prospective Evaluation of Risk of Bone fractures (SUPERB) study. Osteoporosis International. (doi:10.1007/s00198-024-07196-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Summary: associations between different sarcopenia definitions and the risk of injurious falls were investigated in 75–80-year-old women in the Swedish SUPERB cohort. Only sarcopenia according to the Sarcopenia Definitions and Outcomes Consortium (SDOC) definition was associated with incident injurious falls with and without fractures in older women. 

Purpose: to investigate the association between three commonly used sarcopenia definitions and the risk of injurious falls in a population of older Swedish women. 

Methods: a total of 2,883 75–80-year-old women with complete data on relevant sarcopenia definitions from the Swedish SUPERB cohort were studied. Sarcopenia was defined based on the Sarcopenia Definitions and Outcomes Consortium (SDOC: low handgrip strength and gait speed), revised European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People (EWGSOP2: low appendicular lean mass index (ALMI, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA)-derived), appendicular lean mass (kg)/height (m 2), hand grip strength (kg), or low chair stand time (s)), and Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia (AWGS: low ALMI and hand grip strength (kg) or low gait speed (m/s)). Questionnaires captured the occurrence of falls in the past 12 months. Incident injurious falls were identified using national registers. Cox regression (hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI)) analyses were performed without adjustment and after adjustment for age, body mass index, previous falls, and the Charlson comorbidity index. 

Results: during a median (IQR) follow-up time of 7.06 (6.2–7.9) years, there were 491 injurious falls without fracture and 962 injurious falls when also including falls resulting in a fracture. Sarcopenia according to EWGSOP2 and AWGS was not associated with an increased risk of injurious falls. Individuals with sarcopenia defined by SDOC had a higher risk of injurious falls with and without fracture (HR 2.11; 95% CI, 1.63–2.73 and HR, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.55–3.02, respectively). 

Conclusion: Sarcopenia definitions confined to muscle function and strength such as SDOC, rather than including DXA-determined ALMI (EWGSOP2 and AWGS), are associated with incident injurious falls with and without fractures in older women.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 July 2024
Published date: 6 August 2024
Keywords: Falls, Older adults, Sarcopenia

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493198
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493198
ISSN: 0937-941X
PURE UUID: 8daacd45-0019-42bd-b94d-d0a60cc187c8
ORCID for Nicholas C. Harvey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8194-2512

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Date deposited: 27 Aug 2024 16:57
Last modified: 31 Aug 2024 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Anoohya Gandham
Author: Giulia Gregori
Author: Lisa Johansson
Author: Berit A.M. Larsson
Author: Helena Johansson
Author: Liesbeth Vandenput
Author: Eugene McCloskey
Author: John A. Kanis
Author: Henrik Litsne
Author: Kristian Axelsson
Author: Mattias Lorentzon

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