Lipidomic signatures from physically frail and robust older adults at hospital admission
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer
Materia
Frailty Lipidomic Ceramides Cholesterol Phosphatidylcholines Biomarker Older adults
Date
2022-02-04Referencia bibliográfica
Ramírez-Vélez, R... [et al.]. Lipidomic signatures from physically frail and robust older adults at hospital admission. GeroScience (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s11357-021-00511-1]
Sponsorship
Gobierno de Navarra project Resolucion grant 2186/2014; Spanish Government PI17/01814; Instituto de Salud Carlos III III -CP18/0150; La Caixa Foundation 100010434 LCF/PR/PR15/51100006; Universidad Publica de Navarra 420/2019; CRUE-CSIC agreement; Springer NatureAbstract
Identifying serum biomarkers that can predict
physical frailty in older adults would have tremendous
clinical value for primary care, as this condition is
inherently related to poor quality of life and premature
mortality. We compared the serum lipid profile of physically
frail and robust older adults to identify specific
lipid biomarkers that could be used to assess physical
frailty in older patients at hospital admission. Fortythree
older adults (58.1% male), mean (range) age 86.4
(78–100 years) years, were classified as physically frail
(n = 18) or robust (n = 25) based on scores from the
Short Physical Performance Battery (≤ 6 points). Nontargeted
metabolomic study by ultra-high performance
liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (UHPLC-MS) analysis with later bioinformatics data
analysis. Once the significantly different metabolites
were identified, the KEGG database was used on
them to establish which were the metabolic pathways
mainly involved. Area under receiver-operating curve
(AUROC) analysis was used to test the discriminatory
ability of lipid biomarkers for frailty based on the Short
Physical Performance Battery. We identified a panel of
five metabolites including ceramides Cer (40:2), Cer
(d18:1/20:0), Cer (d18:1/23:0), cholesterol, and phosphatidylcholine
(PC) (14:0/20:4) that were significantly
increased in physically frail older adults compared with
robust older adults at hospital admission. The most
interesting in the physically frail metabolome study
found with the KEGG database were the metabolic
pathways, vitamin digestion and absorption, AGERAGE
signaling pathway in diabetic complications, and insulin resistance. In addition, Cer (40:2) (AUROC
0.747), Cer (d18:1/23:0) (AUROC 0.720), and cholesterol
(AUROC 0.784) were identified as higher values
of physically frail at hospital admission. The non-targeted
metabolomic study can open a wide view of the
physically frail features changes at the plasma level,
which would be linked to the physical frailty phenotype
at hospital admission. Also, we propose that metabolome
analysis will have a suitable niche in personalized
medicine for physically frail older adults.