Protein intake, physical activity and grip strength in European and North American community-dwelling older adults: A pooled analysis of individual participant data from four longitudinal ageing cohorts

Nuno M.P. Mendonça, Linda M. Hengeveld, Nancy Presse, Helena Canhão, Eleanor Simonsick, Stephen B. Kritchevsky, Samaneh Farsijani, Pierrette Gaudreau, Carol Jagger, Marjolein Visser*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Higher dietary protein, alone or in combination with physical activity (PA), may slow the loss of age-related muscle strength in older adults. We investigated the longitudinal relationship between protein intake and grip strength, and the interaction between protein intake and PA, using four longitudinal ageing cohorts. Individual participant data from 5584 older adults (52 % women; median: 75 years, IQR: 71·6, 79·0) followed for up to 8·5 years (mean: 4·9 years, SD: 2·3) from the Health ABC, NuAge, LASA and Newcastle 85+ cohorts were pooled. Baseline protein intake was assessed with food frequency questionnaires and 24-h recalls and categorized into < 0·8, 0·8-<1·0, 1·0-<1·2 and ≥ 1·2 g/kg adjusted body weight (aBW)/d. The prospective association between protein intake, its interaction with PA, and grip strength (sex- and cohort-specific) was determined using joint models (hierarchical linear mixed effects and a link function for Cox proportional hazards models). Grip strength declined on average by 0·018 SD (95 % CI: -0·026, -0·006) every year. No associations were found between protein intake, measured at baseline, and grip strength, measured prospectively, or rate of decline of grip strength in models adjusted for sociodemographic, anthropometric, lifestyle and health variables (e.g., protein intake ≥ 1·2 v· < 0·8 g/kg aBW/d: β = -0·003, 95 % CI: -0·014, 0·005 SD per year). There also was no evidence of an interaction between protein intake and PA. We failed to find evidence in this study to support the hypothesis that higher protein intake, alone or in combination with higher PA, slowed the rate of grip strength decline in older adults.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1221-1231
Number of pages11
JournalBritish Journal of Nutrition
Volume129
Issue number7
Early online date7 Jul 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Apr 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society.

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Institute on AgingZIAAG000971

    Keywords

    • Handgrip strength
    • Joint models
    • Older adults
    • One-stage meta-analysis
    • Physical activity
    • PROMISS
    • Protein

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