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Optimized nutrition in mitochondrial disease correlates to improved muscle fatigue, strength, and quality of life

Authors :
Donna DiVito
Amanda Wellik
Jessica Burfield
James Peterson
Jean Flickinger
Alyssa Tindall
Kimberly Albanowski
Shailee Vishnubhatt
Laura MacMullen
Isaac Martin
Colleen Muraresku
Elizabeth McCormick
George Ibrahim-Sankoh
Shana McCormack
Amy Goldstein
Rebecca Ganetzky
Marc Yudkoff
Rui Xiao
Marni J. Falk
Maria Mascarenhas
Zarazuela Zolkipli-Cunningham
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2023.

Abstract

We sought to prospectively characterize the nutritional status of adults ≥ 19 years (n=22, 27% males) and children (n=38, 61% male) with genetically-confirmed primary mitochondrial disease (PMD) to guide development of precision nutritional support strategies to be tested in future clinical trials. We excluded subjects who were exclusively tube-fed. Daily caloric requirements were estimated using World Health Organization (WHO) equations to predict resting energy expenditure (REE) multiplied by an activity factor (AF) based on individual activity levels. We developed a Mitochondrial Disease Activity Factors (MOTIVATOR) score to encompass fatigue typical of PMD. PMD cohort daily diet intake was estimated to be 1,143 ± 104.1 Kcal in adults (mean ± SEM, 76.2% of WHO-MOTIVATOR predicted requirement), and 1,114 ± 62.3 Kcal in children (86.4% predicted). A total of 11/22 (54.5%) adults and 18/38 (47.4%) children with PMD consumed ≤75% predicted daily Kcal needs. Malnutrition was identified in 16/60 (26.7%) PMD subjects. Increased protein and fat intake correlated with improved muscle strength in those with insufficient daily Kcal intake (£75% predicted); higher protein and fat intake correlated with decreased muscle fatigue; and higher protein, fat and CHO intake correlated with improved quality of life (QoL). These data demonstrate the frequent occurrence of malnutrition in PMD and emphasize the critical need to devise nutritional interventions to optimize clinical outcomes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0173c631fb7c9d96b4e745092e724997
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2666831/v1