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A comparison of associations of body mass index and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry measured percentage fat and total fat with global serum metabolites in young women

Title
A comparison of associations of body mass index and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry measured percentage fat and total fat with global serum metabolites in young women
Authors
Dorgan, Joanne F.Ryan, Alice S.LeBlanc, Erin S.Van Horn, LindaMagder, Laurence S.Snetselaar, Linda G.Zhang, YujiDallal, Cher M.Jung, SeungyounShepherd, John A.
Ewha Authors
정승연
SCOPUS Author ID
정승연scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
OBESITY
ISSN
1930-7381JCR Link

1930-739XJCR Link
Citation
OBESITY vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 525 - 536
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
ObjectiveBody mass index (BMI) does not directly measure adiposity, whereas dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) provides valid direct estimates of adiposity. Therefore, this study evaluated usefulness of BMI as a measure of adiposity in serum metabolomics studies. MethodsA cross-sectional analysis was conducted of 202 women aged 25 to 29 years in the Dietary Intervention Study in Children Follow-Up Study. Heights and weights were measured, and body composition was quantified using clinical DXA protocols. Serum metabolomic profiling was performed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Partial correlations of BMI, percentage fat (%FAT), and total fat (TOTFAT) with log transformed serum metabolites were calculated. ResultsThere was significant overlap in the 93 metabolites that correlated with BMI, %FAT, and/or TOTFAT; 9 differently correlated with BMI and %FAT, whereas 15 differently correlated with BMI and TOTFAT. Even for these metabolites, absolute differences were modest. Metabolite set enrichment analysis identified diacylglycerol and sphingolipid metabolism as overrepresented among metabolites significantly correlated with all three measures of adiposity. ConclusionsBMI can be a good proxy for DXA measured %FAT and TOTFAT in descriptive metabolomic studies of healthy, young White women. Larger studies in more diverse populations are needed to endorse more generalized conclusions.
DOI
10.1002/oby.23619
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신산업융합대학 > 식품영양학과 > Journal papers
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