MedPath

Functioning of Elder Muscle; Understanding Recovery

Recruiting
Conditions
Frailty Syndrome
Registration Number
NCT04764617
Lead Sponsor
University of Nottingham
Brief Summary

As people get older, the amount of skeletal muscle in the body can decrease. When the amount of this muscle in the body gets very low, there is an increased risk of falling, and not only is recovery to any injury slower, but more complications can be experienced following surgery, and patients may end up being more dependent on the help of others for meeting daily activities. However, it is not clear whether it is simply the amount of muscle that is in the body that is important for health, or whether it is the ability of muscle to function properly which is important.

This research study is looking at the way muscles of frail older people function; not just how strong they are, but the amount of fats and protein that there are in muscle cells, and how the genes in the muscles are being expressed (genes being a collection of chemical information that carry the instructions for making the proteins a cell will need to function).

We will also investigate whether recovery from hip fracture is impacted by the amount of muscle that there is in the body, and/or the functioning of this muscle.

Detailed Description

Sarcopenia is the age-associated loss of skeletal muscle mass, muscle quality and strength, and is a contributive factor to frailty in older individuals. Meta-analyses suggest that individuals with sarcopenia appear to be at greater risk of hospitalisation (all cause), falls and fracture, with hip fracture following a fall being both a serious consequence of sarcopenia, as well as a risk factor for frailty syndrome. The short and longer term outcomes for patients who have a hip fracture following a fall are poor (post-operative complications, increased length of hospital stay, and increased mortality risk, institutionalisation and dependency, respectively), and these are understood to be largely due to the underlying vulnerability (frailty) of the people who sustain hip fractures, with poor recovery being compounded by the reduced muscle strength and low muscle mass common in those who are frail.

As a consequence of research on the physiology of ageing muscles and sarcopenia, increasingly there is the possibility that novel agents (such as anabolic agents) could help to alleviate the frailty state in these patients and hence improve shorter and longer term outcomes. However, before novel interventions can be applied to patients with frailty and sarcopenia, such as those sustaining a hip fracture following a fall, an understanding of how the muscles of these patients are functioning at the cellular level, both in the injured and uninjured state is needed; which metabolic pathways are active and which are inactive, those which are enhanced and those which are impaired, so that treatments that are appropriate for the specific metabolic state of these patients can be selected. In recent years there have been advances in the understanding of the cellular physiology of the muscles of older people. However, few of the research studies carried out to date have analysed muscle collected from individuals who are as frail as the patients who present with hip fractures, or probed the metabolic changes which occur in the muscle following injury in this cohort. Findings from cross-sectional investigations on the healthy older person and prospective studies which try and mimic the muscle wasting seen in sarcopenia (using immobilisation or bed rest protocols) could prove useful in this endeavour. However, it is possible that results from these studies may not be generalizable to those who are frail (who may have other clinical problems and take multiple medications) and it is important that deep phenotyping of muscle from these patients is undertaken to address this knowledge gap.

Across the whole study, including a cohort subset, a range of people with frailty, including those with cognitive impairment will be studied. Those with dementia or severe cognitive impairment tend to be those who are most frail and represent a high proportion of patients admitted with a hip fracture. If such patients are excluded, there is a risk of only observing muscle metabolic and histological changes seen in milder levels of frailty, which may not provide a comprehensive picture of sarcopenia. This is a frequent criticism and limitation of previous studies carried out in this field.

Participants will be older individuals admitted to Nottingham University Hospital (UK) with a fractured hip sustained following a fall. In all participants, a muscle sample will be taken from their injured leg during the surgical repair to their hip, with the option for a muscle biopsy to be taken, whilst in theatre, from their uninjured leg using the Bergstrom technique. These samples will be analysed for intramyocellular lipid content and messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression of 384 gene targets spanning a number of cellular functions. In the week following surgery, measurements of thigh muscle thickness (Ultrasound imaging) and hand grip strength will be made, and an optional assessment of whole body muscle mass using the D3-creatine method will be offered. After discharge from hospital, patient-related outcomes measures will be obtained from medical notes and Three months after surgery, a set of questionnaires will be sent to the participant or their carer to complete. These will assess current mobility, dependency and wellbeing.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
200
Inclusion Criteria
  • Clinical Frailty Score (assessed as part of standard care) ≥ 4
  • Fractured hip, sustained following a fall, that requires surgery
  • Good understanding of spoken and written English language
  • Able to give informed consent, or availability of a legally acceptable surrogate to provide consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • Those who fell and sustained their hip fracture greater than 12 hours prior to hospitalisation.
  • Those who have fallen and sustained a hip fracture whilst an in-patient in hospital
  • Those who sustained the hip fracture as a result of high impact trauma (e.g. road traffic accident)
  • Surgery carried out later than 96 hrs after fall
  • Chronic neurological, inflammatory or musculoskeletal disorders which result in muscle wasting, e.g. Multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, rheumatoid arthritis
  • Any co-morbidity which precludes hip surgery
  • Those with a compromised swallowing reflex which would prevent the participant from taking fluids orally, will be excluded.
  • Those taking diabetes medication

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Skeletal Muscle messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression (injured leg)On recruitment

mRNA expression of 384 gene targets spanning a number of cellular functions, in a vastus lateralis muscle biopsy taken from the injured leg

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Body weighton recruitment

body mass (kg)

Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) questionnaire90 days post operative

Groningen Frailty Indicator Score: minimum value (no frailty) indicated by a score of 0, increasing to a maximum value of 15 (completely disabled). Frailty is indicated by a score ≥4, with lower scores indicating better outcomes

Rivermead Mobility Index (RMI) Questionnaire90 days post operative

Rivermead Mobility Index score: minimum value (immobile) indicated by a score of 0, increasing to a maximum value of 15. Higher scores indicate better mobility and better outcomes

EuroQoL health-related quality of life questionnaire (EQ-5D)90 days post operative

EuroQoL health-related quality of life questionnaire score: across each of 5 domains, a minimum value of 1 indicates no problems, increasing to a maximum value of 5 indicating an inability to do a task, or an extreme experience of a sensation. Lower scores indicate better outcomes

Whole body muscle mass3 days post operative

whole body muscle mass assessed using the D3-Creatine method

Clinical outcomes; surgical complicationsfrom date of surgery to date of discharge from hospital; up to 90-days after hip surgery

occurrence of surgical complications audited from patient notes prior to discharge

Intramyocellular lipid density (uninjured leg)On recruitment

Intra-myocellular lipid density in a vastus lateralis muscle biopsy taken from the uninjured leg

Grip Strengthup to 3 days post surgery

Hand grip strength measured on dominant arm - highest of 3 attempts

Clinical outcomes; length of stayat discharge from hospital; up to 90 days post hip surgery

Length of hospitalisation period audited from patient notes prior to discharge

Skeletal Muscle mRNA expression (un-injured leg)On recruitment

mRNA expression of 384 gene targets spanning a number of cellular functions, in a vastus lateralis muscle biopsy taken from the uninjured leg

Intramyocellular lipid density (injured leg)On recruitment

Intra-myocellular lipid density in a vastus lateralis muscle biopsy taken from the injured leg

Barthel Index for Activities of Daily Living (BADL) questionnaire90 days post operative

Barthel Index for Activities of Daily Living score: minimum value (totally independent) indicated by a score of 0, increasing to a maximum value of 60 (totally dependent). Lower scores indicate better outcomes

Vastus lateralis muscle thickness - injured leg3 days post operative

Vastus lateralis muscle thickness measured at the midpoint using ultrasonography

Clinical outcomes; adverse events during period of hospitalisationfrom date of recruitment to date of discharge from hospital; up to 90-days post operative.

occurrence of adverse events collected throughout period of hospitalisation

Clinical outcomes; discharge locationat discharge from hospital; up to 90 days post hip surgery

discharge location audited from patient notes prior to discharge

Vastus lateralis muscle thickness - uninjured leg3 days post operative

Vastus lateralis muscle thickness measured at the midpoint using ultrasonography

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Queens Medical Centre; Department of Orthopaedics

🇬🇧

Nottingham, United Kingdom

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