Geriatrics (Oct 2023)

Can Leucine Supplementation Improve Frailty Index Scores?

  • Cristina Buigues,
  • Olga Theou,
  • Rosa Fonfría-Vivas,
  • Francisco M. Martínez-Arnau,
  • Kenneth Rockwood,
  • Omar Cauli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics8050102
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. 102

Abstract

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Sarcopenia and frailty are important conditions that become increasingly prevalent with age. There is partial overlap between the two conditions, especially in terms of the physical aspects of the frailty phenotype: low grip strength, gait speed, and muscle mass. This study examined whether administration of the essential branched-chain amino acid leucine, besides improving sarcopenia, may reduce frailty assessed by frailty index (FI) in older institutionalized people living in nursing homes. We conducted a secondary analysis of a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind design study (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03831399). The study included fifty males and females aged 65 and over who were living in nursing homes and did not have dementia. The participants were randomized to a parallel group intervention of 13 weeks’ duration, with a daily intake of leucine (6 g/day) or placebo (lactose, 6 g/day). The outcome of this study was to evaluate whether there was a change in the level of a 95 item FI compared to the baseline and to compare the effect of the leucine group versus the placebo group. A significant inverse correlation was found between FI and performance of the activities of daily life, cognitive function, gait and balance, muscle function parameters, and nutritional status (p p = 0.316, Cohen’s d: 0.04). This pilot study showed that a nutritional supplementation with leucine did not significantly modify the frailty index in older nursing home residents.

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