Litcius/Paper detail

Novel methods to identify and measure catabolism

Alexandria Page, Luke Flower, John R. Prowle, Zudin Puthucheary

2021Current Opinion in Critical Care19 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Assess current potential catabolism-biomarkers to characterize patients developing prolonged critical illness. RECENT FINDINGS: A raised urea-to-creatinine ratio (UCR) during critical illness is negatively associated with muscle mass with greater increases in UCR seen patients developing persistent critical illness. Similarly, sarcopenia index (a ratio of creatinine to cystatin-c concentrations) correlates well to muscle mass in intensive care populations. Elevated growth/differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15) has been inconsistently associated with muscle loss. Although GDF-15 was a poor marker of feeding tolerance, it has been associated with worse prognosis in intensive care. SUMMARY: UCR is an available and clinically applicable biomarker of catabolism. Similarly, sarcopenia index can be used to assess muscle mass and indirectly measure catabolism based on readily available biochemical measurements. The utility of novel biomarkers, such as GDF-15 is less established.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCatabolismCystatin CSarcopeniaCreatinineBiomarkerCritical illnessMuscle massIntensive careInternal medicinePhysiologyIntensive care medicineCritically illBiochemistryMetabolismBiologyGDF15 and Related BiomarkersNutrition and Health in AgingClinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology