Pitfalls in the measurement of muscle mass: a need for a reference standard (2024)

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Pitfalls in the measurement of muscle mass: a need for a reference standard (1)

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J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle. 2018 Apr; 9(2): 269–278.

Published online 2018 Jan 19. doi:10.1002/jcsm.12268

PMCID: PMC5879987

PMID: 29349935

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Abstract

Background

All proposed definitions of sarcopenia include the measurement of muscle mass, but the techniques and threshold values used vary. Indeed, the literature does not establish consensus on the best technique for measuring lean body mass. Thus, the objective measurement of sarcopenia is hampered by limitations intrinsic to assessment tools. The aim of this study was to review the methods to assess muscle mass and to reach consensus on the development of a reference standard.

Methods

Literature reviews were performed by members of the European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis working group on frailty and sarcopenia. Face‐to‐face meetings were organized for the whole group to make amendments and discuss further recommendations.

Results

A wide range of techniques can be used to assess muscle mass. Cost, availability, and ease of use can determine whether the techniques are better suited to clinical practice or are more useful for research. No one technique subserves all requirements but dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry could be considered as a reference standard (but not a gold standard) for measuring muscle lean body mass.

Conclusions

Based on the feasibility, accuracy, safety, and low cost, dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry can be considered as the reference standard for measuring muscle mass.

Keywords: Lean mass, Muscle mass, Lean body mass, Reference standard

Background

The term sarcopenia was first used by Rosenberg et al. in 19891 to refer to a progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass with advancing age. Baumgartner, defined sarcopenia as appendicular skeletal muscle mass (kilogram)/height2(metre2) being less than two standard deviations below the mean of a reference group.2 Since then, the conceptual definition of sarcopenia has expanded to include impaired muscle strength and/or physical performance. In turning a conceptual definition to an operational definition, several have been proposed,2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 but no consensus has yet been reached. The multidimensional nature of sarcopenia implies that its domains should be objectively assessed.11, 12 Therefore, valid, standardized, reliable, accurate, and cost‐effective tools are necessary for the identification of sarcopenia.13, 14 Currently, all the proposed definitions include the measurement of muscle mass but the techniques used to assess it vary. In recent years, four main techniques have been commonly used to estimate muscle mass: bioelectric impedance (BIA), dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry (DXA), computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to replace anthropometry.15, 16, 17 In addition to these, several emerging techniques for the assessment of muscle mass are now available. Each rely on different technologies and assess different aspects of muscle mass (e.g. total body muscle mass, appendicular muscle mass, or mid‐thigh muscle cross‐sectional area) (Figure1). At the organizational level, the body can be separated into chemical or anatomical distinct compartments. The 2‐compartment model divides the body weight into fat mass and fat free mass or FFM.18 Body composition techniques are based on these organizational levels. Therefore, the objective measurement of sarcopenia is hampered by limitations intrinsic to assessment tools.11, 19 From a clinical and epidemiological point of view, it is important to have a consensual technique. The use of different diagnostic methods may lead to different prevalence of sarcopenia and may therefore have significant consequences on preventive or therapeutic strategies.

Pitfalls in the measurement of muscle mass: a need for a reference standard (3)

Body compartments based on reference man.

Matiegka reported in 1921 what was to become a classic anthropometric approach to quantifying skeletal muscle mass.20 Matiegka's method divided body weight into four parts: skeleton, skeletal muscle, skin plus subcutaneous adipose tissue, and the remainder. Others that followed Matiegka were limited by a lack of reference standards for skeletal muscle mass measurement until the introduction of CT by Hounsfield.21 After this phase, CT, MRI, and DXA were being used to measure muscle mass (so a more specific muscle assessment compared with the general FFM). Subsequently, BIA equations were developed to predict muscle mass (instead of FFM). The availability of DXA systems, with modest scan cost, low radiation exposure, short scan time, and extensive information provided from a whole body scan makes this approach the most widely used in sarcopenia research at the present time.17, 22 Indeed, imaging methods such as MRI and CT are expensive methods and are not accessible to the majority of clinicians and researchers.23 Nevertheless, the literature has not established consensus on the ‘best’ technique to measure muscle mass. Because of the need for consensus and standardization for both clinicians and researchers, the widely used techniques measuring muscle mass are reviewed in the succeeding text and recommendations derived therefrom.

Methods

The European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis working group on frailty and sarcopenia consists of clinical scientists and experts in the field of musculoskeletal diseases. Different members of the working group were asked to prepare a literature review on the role of lean mass measurement in the assessment of sarcopenia (M.C.), the measurement of Lean Body Mass with DXA (M.V. and K.E.), with bioimpedance (S.M.), and with emerging techniques (R.F.). The topic ‘how to produce reference standards for the assessment of Lean Body Mass’ was also discussed (E.D.). Each member prepared a list of the most important papers based on their literature search and made a set of preliminary recommendations. For each item, a complete literature search was performed to identify new or additional randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews/meta‐analysis, if any, not used in the existing guidelines. The MEDLINE (pubmed) database was searched using the name of each technique for measuring body composition as a search term, together ‘with lean body mass’, limiting results to ‘humans’, ‘randomized controlled trials’, ‘meta‐analysis’, ‘systematic reviews’, and ‘guidelines’. A similar search was adapted for the Embase database, and each item was also searched in the Cochrane Database of systematic reviews. The reference list of relevant retrieved articles was hand‐searched for additional resources when member of the working group were interrogated for their knowledge on articles or congress abstract in press. A free web search was also performed and considered. Searches were performed from the year 2000 and updated until September 2016, with the additional evidence constantly provided to the working group members for selection of the best evidence according to the panel.

The subsequent step was a face‐to‐face meeting for the whole group to make amendments and discuss further recommendations. The plan of the manuscript was also discussed and shared conclusions were reached.

Results

First, it seems important to clarify several terms. Skeletal muscle mass is the largest component of adipose tissue–free body mass in humans.24 Lean mass also known as lean body mass is a fat‐free and bone mineral–free component that includes muscle and other components such as skin, tendons, and connective tissues (Figure2). Appendicular lean soft tissue is the sum of lean soft tissue from both arms and legs.26 A large proportion of total‐body skeletal muscle is found in the extremities, and a large proportion of appendicular lean soft tissue is skeletal muscle (Figure1).25

Measurement of lean body mass and muscle mass with imaging techniques

Dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry

Dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry is the most widespread technique for measuring body composition.27 DXA uses two different energy spectra to differentiate two materials: either bone or soft tissue, which is the basis for the measurement of bone mineral density (BMD) and content or lean soft tissue mass and fat mass in locations where bone is absent. Taken together, DXA provides an estimate of three body compartments, that is, lean, bone, and fat. At bone locations, lean and soft tissue are interpolated from the surroundings. These measurements can be performed for the whole body and for several regions (e.g. trunk, arms, and legs).28, 29 The principle of using DXA for measurement of body composition is based on the notion that when a beam of X‐rays is passed through a complex material, the beam is attenuated in proportion to the composition and thickness of the material. The use of two different energy spectra is the basis to separately quantify the amount of bone mineral and soft tissue or of fat and lean mass. Lean soft tissue and adipose tissue are mostly comprised by water and organic compounds, which restrict the flux of X‐rays less than bone.15, 30 DXA is able to assess total body lean soft tissue mass (which includes skeletal muscle mass as well as the mass of all other organs) and appendicular lean soft tissue mass (i.e. an estimate of the muscle mass contained in the limbs, which represents about 75% total body skeletal muscle mass).27

Appendicular lean soft tissue mass measured by DXA is highly correlated with both MRI (r=0.88; P<0.001) and CT (r=0.77–0.95, P<0.0001) measures of skeletal muscle volume.25, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39In vivo precision errors depend on DXA equipment, population, local versus whole body measurements, age, and degree of obesity. Recently published values for appendicular lean soft tissue mass range from below 1–3.0%. Higher errors of 4% were reported for bilateral muscle mass of the arms. Precision of DXA is high.40 According to Hangartner, the precision error, expressed in %CV, for lean body mass was 1.2%40.

Strengths and weakness of the DXA technique are summarized in Table1.

Table 1

Strengths and weakness of measuring muscle mass by dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry

StrengthsWeaknesses
Non‐invasive with small doses of radiation (<1μSv for whole‐body scans).41Projectional technique, individual muscles cannot be assessed separately.
Relatively cheap, compared with CT scan or MRI.Not portable, which may preclude its use in large‐scale epidemiological studies and studies in the home setting.
RapidAvailability is limited in some care settings.
Allows measurement of three body compartments.Body thickness and abnormalities in hydration status (e.g. water retention, heart, kidney, or liver failure) can affect muscle mass measure.42
Low precision errorsVery tall and very obese people cannot be measured.
Cannot quantify fatty infiltration of muscle. It is a bias in the diagnosis of sarcopenia obesity.
Does not measure skeletal muscle mass in non‐limb regions of the body (e.g. trunk).
Several devices and several software packages and software versions resulting in different results.

CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.

Note that DXA half‐body analysis in obese subjects appears to be closely comparable to whole‐body analysis for fat mass, non‐bone lean mass, and percent fat, though there are no data on the comparability at appendicular sites.43

Dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry is a candidate for providing a reference technology for assessing lean mass (as a proxy of muscle mass) and body composition in research and clinical practice. There is however a need for standardization. Standardization can be approached using phantoms or humans. Existing body composition phantoms are not anthropometric and cannot be used as absolute reference standards for soft‐tissue composition. Therefore, a recent International Society for Clinical Densitometry report concluded that ‘No phantom has been identified to remove systematic difference in body composition when comparing in vivo results across manufacturers’. As a consequence, ‘an in vivo cross‐calibration study is necessary when comparing in vivo results across manufacturers’.41

Still for a unique standardization, the use of phantoms would be preferable because an in vivo cross calibration is influenced by age, gender, ethnicity, healthy versus diseased subjects, and so on.44 Ideally, the calibration materials and equations used to derive lean mass should be standardized across manufacturers or cross‐manufacturer algorithms should be developed by industry to standardize the output. It is also important to standardize the local regions of interest, such as trunk, arms, and legs, which are significantly different across manufacturers.45, 46

Computed tomography

Computed tomography (CT) was the first method introduced that could quantify regional skeletal muscle mass with high accuracy.17 CT determines the cross‐sectional distribution of the X‐ray absorption coefficient, which after normalization to the absorption of air and water is called CT value and measured in Hounsfield units (HU). CT slices of predefined width can be analysed for different tissues, using manual segmentation or automated software. For example, muscle area, or in case of the analysis of a stack of images, volume of individual muscles, or a group of muscles can be determined. By definition, the HU value of air is −1000 and of water 0. Bone, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, and visceral organs have specific Hounsfield unit ranges, allowing for their identification in the cross‐sectional images. The tissue area/volume (cm2/cm3) of the cross‐sectional/stack of images is subsequently calculated by multiplying the number of pixels/voxels for a given tissue by the pixel area/voxel size. Muscle mass can be derived by multiplying muscle volume by 1.04 that is the assumed constant density (kg/cm3) of adipose tissue‐free skeletal muscle.47

Compared with DXA, CT is a 3D imaging technique that allows for quantitative assessment of individual muscles. Moreover, the muscle tissue composition can be quantified, either by separate segmentation of muscle and adipose tissue or by analysing muscle density, that is, the HU distribution within the segmented muscle.48

In vivo precision errors for muscle volume or mass measurements have rarely been reported, but reanalysis precision errors are low due to its high resolution (typically 50 microns or less).49 This is important because with advanced 3D imaging, precision of muscle area and mass depend more on image segmentation than on repositioning. For reanalysis, intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) between 0.98 and 1.00 (P<0.001)50 in quantifying both adipose tissue and muscle mass51 were reported.

Major disadvantages of CT are limited access to the radiological departments that operate it and considerably higher cost and radiation exposure than for DXA. Despite calibration of HU to water, calibration of CT across models and scanner manufacturers is still required when comparing scans from different devices. In addition, very obese patients may not fit into the scanner and image quality will be poor. Also, the operation of a CT scanner requires highly qualified personnel. The widespread implementation of CT imaging in the field of sarcopenia has been hampered by the previously mentioned limitations. An alternative to whole body clinical CT scanners may be the use of CT scanners dedicated and limited to peripheral investigations, which is cheaper and has lower exposure to radiation is presently better suited for small‐scale research studies in which accurate measurements of muscle quantity and quality are needed.

Magnetic resonance imaging

The introduction of MRI in the 1980s expanded the initial use of CT as a means of developing 3‐dimensional images of skeletal muscle, adipose tissue, and other organs. This development is usually referred to as structural or anatomic imaging.17 The resolution is very high, and MRI is safe without any radiation exposure. With the advancement of the MRI technique, the time for reliable image acquisition has decreased significantly. In addition, most modern MRI scanners can accommodate obese subjects. Limitations in the use of MRI in clinical and research settings are largely related to the high cost, the technical expertise required for analysis, and the effect of respiratory motion on image quality for whole‐body assessments. Multiple slices are required to assess the composition of the total body, including total body skeletal muscle mass.52 Finally, the existence of multiple protocols for data acquisition impacts the standardization of this technique for the study of muscle mass.42 Bearing all these considerations in mind, MRI is presently better suited for small‐scale research studies in which accurate measurements of muscle quantity and quality are needed.

Estimation of lean body mass and muscle mass with bioimpedance analysis

Bioimpedance analysis (BIA) was pioneered in the 1950s and 1960s by Hoffer, Nyboer, and Thomasset.53, 54, 55 Since then, BIA has become a broadly applied approach used in body composition measurements and healthcare assessment systems.56

BIA is based on the notion that tissues rich in water and electrolytes (i.e. skeletal muscle) are less resistant to the passage of an electrical current than lipid‐rich adipose tissue (i.e. bone).17, 57 All BIA systems exploit these tissue‐specific conductivity differences to quantify body‐compartments. In bioimpedance measurements, the human body is divided into five inhom*ogeneous segments, two for the upper limbs, two for the lower limbs, and one for the trunk.56 Many available BIA system designs range from single to multiple frequency, employ contact or gel electrodes, and measure whole‐body electrical or segmental pathways.17 All BIA systems measure impedance and/or its two components, resistance (caused by the total water across the body) and reactance (due to capacitance of cell membrane). These electrical measurements in turn can be incorporated into body composition prediction equations that are population specific.17 Advantages and disadvantages of BIA are listed in Table2.

Table 2

Strengths and weakness of estimating muscle mass by BIA

StrengthsWeaknesses
Inexpensive and easy to use4Measurements are sensitive to subjects' conditions such as hydration, recent activity, and time being horizontal58, 59
Precise measurement of body resistance and reactanceLarge individual prediction error for estimated muscle mass
Safe and non‐invasive method17Need of age, gender, and ethnic‐specific prediction equation to estimate muscle mass
Portable tool and can be used in most environments57No BIA‐specific equations validated in patients with extreme BMI
Does not require highly trained personnelMultiple devices with different body composition outputs

BIA, bioelectrical impedance analysis; BMI, body mass index.

Due to the large number of factors conditioning BIA reliability: instrument related factors (i.e. intra‐instrumental and inter‐instrumental variability, electrode quality, and electrode positioning), technician‐related factors (i.e. intra‐operator and inter‐operator variability), subject‐related factors (i.e. subject preparation such as position, overnight fast or empty bladder, body temperature, skin conductibility, age, and ethnicity), and environment‐related factors (i.e. temperature), BIA does not seem to be ideal for measuring lean body mass, mainly due to the problem of the individual prediction error. A recent study showed that the reliability of BIA to assess appendicular lean mass was high, with an ICC of 0.89 (95%CI: 0.86–0.92) when performed by the same operator, and an ICC of 0.77 (95%CI: 0.72–0.82) when performed by two different operators. Nevertheless, in this study, agreement between appendicular lean mass assessed by DXA and predicted by BIA was low [ICC=0.37 (95%CI: 0.25–0.48)].57 There is a potential large prediction error on the individual level with BIA. Indeed, there is a systematic positive bias with an overall underestimation of lean body mass measurements by BIA.60 It is, however, one of the few alternatives when other more precise techniques are not feasible.

Emerging techniques for the assessment of muscle mass

Because of the limitations of the current techniques to assess lean mass (cost, accuracy, feasibility), new techniques have appeared. Among these techniques, creatine (methyl‐d3) dilution (D3‐creatine) is of some interest.61

Creatine is present predominantly (∼95%) in skeletal muscle. Roughly 2% of creatine is converted to creatinine per day, via an irreversible, non‐enzymatic mechanism, so that ∼2g per day of creatine are replaced in the whole body. Based on the assumption that conversion of creatine to creatinine is constant among and within subjects, the daily excretion rate of creatinine has been used as a metric of whole body creatine pool size.62 Reviews of this method show that a relatively broad range of muscle mass per gram of urinary creatinine (17–22kg) has been used to estimate muscle mass, leading to large variability in muscle mass estimates between studies, and further suggest limitations to this method in certain patient groups, such as those affected by renal failure.63 Furthermore, there are inherent limitations to this method (in addition to the problem of inaccurate 24‐h urine collections): pH and temperature affect the non‐enzymatic conversion rate of creatine to creatinine, and there is degradation and metabolic removal of creatinine in the body, so all creatinine produced is not excreted in the urine.64 The results are also dependent on the intake of meat that increases the excretion of creatinine. Thus, accurate assessment requires a meat‐free diet for about 1–2weeks.

Electrical impedance myography is a non‐invasive, painless approach to muscle assessment based on the application and measurement of high‐frequency, low‐intensity electrical current. Measurements are made over a small area of interest, with energy being applied to the body and the resultant surface patterns analysed. Several parameters are obtained, including the tissue's reactance, resistance, and phase angle that can provide a quantitative measure of muscle condition.65 The central concept of electrical impedance myography is that skeletal muscle can be modelled as a network of resistors and capacitors. The intracellular and extracellular matrices of muscle tissue act as resistors, and any atrophy that reduces the cross‐sectional area of muscle tissue would be expected to increase the resistance. The lipid bilayers that constitute muscle membranes act as capacitors, and as muscle atrophies, the cumulative capacitance of the muscle membranes increases.66 Electrical current is used, and the output is a set of quantitative parameters describing muscle state, with presently little emphasis on imaging (though this remains possible).67

Ultrasound is an imaging technique that can determine thickness and cross‐sectional areas of superficial muscles. In particular, with ultrasound analysis, it is possible to measure key parameters of muscle architecture, such as muscle volume, fascicle length, and pennation angle. Fascicle length, which is an estimate of muscle fibre length, is defined as the length of a line coincident with the fascicle between the deep and superficial aponeuroses. Fascicle length indicates the range of lengths over which the muscle is capable of actively producing force, known as the excursion potential. Pennation angle represents the angle of the muscle fibres that constitute a muscle fascicle relative to the force‐generating axis, and directly affects both the force production and the excursion; larger angles of pennation limiting the excursion potential.68 Ultrasound has the advantage of being portable and involves no ionizing radiation. A number of studies have confirmed the reliability of this technique for measuring the size of the quadriceps muscle in health. For example, an ICC of 0.97 (95%CI: 0.92–0.99) was found for the test–retest reliability of ultrasound at the rectus femoris.69 However, a major problem is the impact of the applied pressure on the probe on the measurement result. Even though, this method of body composition analysis is not widely used for sarcopenia screening and staging,70, 71 in the near future, it may become a valid method to assess muscle in different settings.72

Biomarkers are another way to assess muscle mass. Previous studies have shown that the serum levels of the Collagen type III propeptide correlate well with whole body lean mass.73 As do the circulating levels of Collagen type VI peptides containing the IC6 epitope.74 Nedergaard et al. shown that the anabolic response to reloading the following immobilization was inversely related to the levels of the matrix‐metalloproteinase‐generated Collagen type VI fragment C6M.74Both Collagen types III and VI are known to be important constituents of the extracellular matrix of skeletal muscle.75, 76 Therefore, fragments produced during muscle tissue turnover may be correlated with lean body mass.73 Dysregulation of microRNAs may also contribute to reduced muscle plasticity with aging.77

Towards a reference standard

The considerations above indicate that no currently available technique serves all the requirements for the measurement of muscle mass. Each has limitations and in particular, there is a dearth of information on accuracy. Moreover, none are fully standardized. Thus, there is at present no gold standard. Notwithstanding, there is need to develop a reference standard against which alternative techniques can be evaluated.

Major disadvantages of CT are limited access to the radiological departments that operate it, considerably higher cost and radiation exposure than for DXA. Limitations in the use of MRI in clinical and research settings are largely related to the high cost and the technical expertise required for analysis and limited access. The main challenge for BIA is the availability of population‐specific equations to predict lean mass (or other body composition parameters) according to the reference standard used to validate the BIA equation. In fact, several good equations are available; but many clinicians rely on the outputs generated by the device itself (which is using an in‐built equation, most often kept ‘hidden’ by the manufacturer).

These considerations suggest that, despite many limitations,78 DXA may be considered the current reference technique for assessing muscle mass and body composition in research and clinical practice. An important reason for preferring DXA above BIA is that DXA measures body composition on an individual level, whilst BIA uses a prediction equation (so it estimates muscle instead of measuring it), and is hampered by large prediction error on the individual level. Also, BIA standardization will be more complicated than DXA standardization due to the multitude of available BIA devices.

In addition, DXA has been used successfully to estimate skeletal muscle mass as part of RCT's.79, 80, 81 Currently, it is the preferred and effective measurement technique in this context.

To ensure the accuracy of DXA measurement, standardization is needed. Calibration materials and equations used to derive lean mass should be standardized across manufacturers. An important item on the research agenda is to standardize the local regions of Interest, such as trunk, arms, legs, that are significantly different across manufacturers. Finally, consensus is required in adopting a reference population in much the same way as has been achieved for the use of DXA in osteoporosis.82

It is important to note that the adoption of a reference standard does not proscribe the use of any of the techniques in clinical research or clinical practice. Indeed, this is to be encouraged. There is a useful analogy with the use of BMD in the assessment of osteoporosis. The reference standard is BMD at the femoral neck,83 but in clinical research and clinical practice many assessment tools are widely used (e.g. BMD at other skeletal sites, CT, quantitative ultrasound, and trabecular bone score). The caveat is that where the opportunity arises BMD should also be reported using the reference technology applied to a reference population and is now a requirement in many of the bone journals.

The adoption of DXA as a reference standard with a defined normal range provides a platform on which the performance characteristics of less well‐established and new methodologies can be compared. It also permits comparisons between studies and between countries.

Different indices to express lean body mass

Skeletal muscle index (SMI) is a measure to express lean mass in relation to height or weight. Unfortunately, the common use and terminology of SMI is inconsistent.84 It is either defined as appendicular skeletal muscle mass divided by height2 and measured in kg/m22 or as skeletal muscle mass divided by body mass×100, which is a unitless index,24 although some authors distinguish them as appendicular lean mass/ht2 and SMI.85 SMI can be derived from BIA or from DXA measurements. Both SMI definitions have previously been shown to predict disability and functional limitations in large, epidemiologic studies of older adults.8, 86, 87 However, the classification of community‐dwelling older adults as sarcopenic or non‐sarcopenic differed markedly for the two definitions.85 The weight based SMI classified significantly more community‐dwelling older adults as sarcopenic than the height based index, a trend more deep‐seated in men than women. More recently even a third definition, the application lifecycle management/BMI index was proposed.8, 85 Due to the discrepancies observed, a clearer terminology should be developed, and it seems necessary to use that index that can best describe the associations between muscle mass and important clinical outcomes in epidemiological studies.

Discussion

More and more attention is being paid to the measurement of muscle mass in different contexts and populations. Over the last few years, sarcopenia has come into the spotlight in biogerontology and research. In this context, the establishment of an international consensus on an accurate, reliable, and cost‐effective method to assess muscle mass across research and clinical settings is of utmost importance. As shown above, a wide range of techniques can be used to estimate or measure muscle mass.9 Cost, availability, and ease of use can determine whether the techniques are better suited to clinical practice or are more useful for research. Reference standards are well established in the pharmaceutical industry and laboratory settings, and refer to ‘a universal reference method that performs equally and reproducibly between platforms’. In the field of musculoskeletal disorder, there is no reference method for measuring muscle mass, and this paper aims to begin filling this gap.

A muscle mass measure should provide a diagnostic criterion for sarcopenia, prognostic information, and a baseline to monitor the natural history of treated and untreated patients. To obtain a complete picture of body composition, a 4‐component model comprising total body water, protein, mineral, and fat mass is required. However, this is a highly intensive and costly procedure and does not enable the measurement of muscle mass specifically.88 As a 3‐component model (combining protein and minerals into ‘solids’), DXA is superior to standard densitometry (which differentiates only between fat mass and fat‐free mass), and has been widely adopted.9 DXA is primarily used for diagnosing osteoporosis, assessing fracture risk, and monitoring therapy. However, given its ability to measure soft tissue mass of the arms and legs as an accurate and precise assessment of appendicular skeletal muscle mass, DXA has been suggested as a potential tool for diagnosing sarcopenia.4 Operationally, DXA‐based definitions for sarcopenia have generally used appendicular skeletal muscle mass divided by body height squared.89 However, more recently, the ratio of appendicular skeletal muscle mass divided by BMI is also being suggested.8 Regardless of the choice of outcome measure for clinical trials of sarcopenia, precise methodology is available for the assessment of lean mass, and this may serve as a key defining characteristic of sarcopenia in clinical practice.9

DXA has now largely met that unmet need by providing a measure of muscle mass at relatively low cost and with minimal radiation exposure.32 Thus, it could be considered as the reference standard for measuring muscle mass and for providing a platform on which the performance characteristics of less well‐established and new methodologies can be compared.

We conclude that the adoption of reference standards will contribute to the development of the assessment of muscle mass, in order to make studies comparable and to improve the diagnosis and treatment of sarcopenia, but also to monitor the development of muscle mass in healthy, athletic, and sick subjects. In this sense, DXA provides a precise measure of lean mass, but further standardization is needed to ensure that the assessment and cut points are used accurately on all makes and models of DXA systems. Thus, the European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis working group on frailty and sarcopenia state that DXA is the gold standard for the measurement of muscle mass.

Conflict of Interest

F.B., F.L., M.C., M.V., K.E., S.M., E.D., N.A.‐D., S.A., J.B., I.B., M.‐L.B., O.B., T.C., F.C., A.C., C.C., A.C.‐J., E.M., B.D.‐H., J.‐M.K., A.L., J.P., J.‐Y.R., R.R., S.R., Y.R., R.R., B.V., and J.A.K. declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

The authors certify that they comply with the ethical guidelines for publishing in the Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle: update 2015.90

The working group and this paper were fully funded by the European Society for Clinical and Economic Aspects of Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases (ESCEO), a Belgian not‐for‐profit organization. ESCEO was responsible for the selection of participants to the preliminary meeting and for the choice of the authors of the manuscript, covering all expenses related to the organization of the preliminary meeting and the presentation of outcomes of the working group at the 2017 World Congress on Osteoporosis, Osteoarthritis, and Musculoskeletal Diseases (in Florence). ESCEO also covered all expenses pertaining to the preparation, writing, and submission of the manuscript.

We acknowledge the valuable input of J. Beard, J. Amuthavalli Thiyagarajan, and I. Araujo de Carvalho (World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland). R.A.F.'s participation was partially supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Agricultural Research Service (ARS), under Agreement No. 58–1950–4‐003. The views expressed do not reflect those of the United States Department of Agriculture.

Notes

Buckinx, F., Landi, F., Cesari, M., Fielding, R. A., Visser, M., Engelke, K., Maggi, S., Dennison, E., Al‐Daghri, N. M., Allepaerts, S., Bauer, J., Bautmans, I., Brandi, M. L., Bruyère, O., Cederholm, T., Cerreta, F., Cherubini, A., Cooper, C., Cruz‐Jentoft, A., McCloskey, E., Dawson‐Hughes, B., Kaufman, J.‐M., Laslop, A., Petermans, J., Reginster, J.‐Y., Rizzoli, R., Robinson, S., Rolland, Y., Rueda, R., Vellas, B., and Kanis, J. A. (2018) Pitfalls in the measurement of muscle mass: a need for a reference standard. Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle, 9: 269–278. doi: 10.1002/jcsm.12268. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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