4.0 Article

Validity of total body water measured by multi-frequency bioelectrical impedance devices in a multi-ethnic sample

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION ESPEN
Volume 54, Issue -, Pages 187-193

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnesp.2023.01.026

Keywords

Body composition; Agreement; Racial groups; Ethnicity; Deuterium oxide; Bioimpedance

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This study aimed to assess the validity of two bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy devices for measuring total body water (TBW) compared to the deuterium dilution criterion in a multi-ethnic sample. The results showed that these devices can produce reliable TBW estimates compared to the deuterium dilution method in a multi-ethnic sample.
Background & aims: Total body water (TBW) is the largest component of fat free mass and therefore is commonly used in multi-compartment body composition models and as a stand-alone method to assess body composition. Previous literature has not validated bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy device estimates of TBW in racial and ethnic minority populations; previous studies have focused on bioelec-trical impedance analysis devices that rely on proprietary algorithms and participant characteristics for accuracy. The purpose of this study was to assess the validity of two bioelectrical impedance spectros-copy devices for measures of TBW compared to a deuterium dilution criterion in a multi-ethnic sample. Methods: 109 individuals (55% female, Age: 26.6 +/- 6.9 yrs, BMI: 25.3 +/- 4.0 kg/m2) identifying as Asian, African American/Black, Caucasian/White, Hispanic, and Multi-racial were enrolled. After a 12 h fast, participants provided a saliva sample for the criterion baseline TBW measure and completed two bioelectrical impedance device (BIS, IB) measurements of TBW. Participants then ingested deuterium oxide (D2O). After an equilibration period, participants provided a second saliva sample for analysis of TBW. Results: For the total multi-ethnic sample, BIS estimates demonstrated good to fairly good agreement (Total error [TE] = 2.56 L, R2 = 0.951) and IB estimates were excellent to very good (TE = 1.95 L, R2 = 0.975). Validity results did not vary meaningfully between race and ethnicity. Conclusions: The results suggest the BIS and IB devices evaluated can produce valid TBW estimates compared to D2O in a multi-ethnic sample. TBW estimates from the IB may have better agreement with D2O compared to the BIS when using the default settings. (c) 2023 European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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