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. 2025 Apr 21;28(1):e95.
doi: 10.1017/S1368980025000503.

Prediction of fat-free mass and fat mass from bioimpedance spectroscopy and anthropometry: a validation study in 7- to 9-year-old Kuwaiti children

Affiliations

Prediction of fat-free mass and fat mass from bioimpedance spectroscopy and anthropometry: a validation study in 7- to 9-year-old Kuwaiti children

Tareq Al-Ati et al. Public Health Nutr. .

Abstract

Objective: Childhood obesity is increasing in many countries, including Kuwait. Currently, adiposity is most commonly assessed from simple anthropometric measurements, e.g. height and weight or combined as body mass index (BMI). This is despite these surrogate measurements being poor indices of adiposity. Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) is a popular method for the assessment of body composition providing a measurement of adiposity as absolute fat mass (FM) or FM expressed as a percentage of body weight (%BF). BIA is, however, an indirect predictive method. This study developed a BIA-based prediction equation for body composition assessment in Kuwaiti children and, additionally, a prediction equation for %BF based on sum of skin-fold (SSF) thickness measurements.

Design: A cross-sectional design was used with primary school recruitment.

Setting: School population in Kuwait City; in-clinic assessments.

Participants: 158 Kuwaiti children aged 7-9 years. Body composition assessed using bioimpedance spectroscopy and skin-folds with prediction equations generate against deuterium dilution measurement of total body water and fat-free mass (FFM) as reference.

Results: The newly developed and cross-validated BIA equation predicted FFM with minimal bias (< 1%) and acceptable 2 sd limits of agreement (±1·6 kg equivalent to ±10%) improving on the predictive performance of comparable published equations. Similarly, SSF predicted %BF with small bias (0·2 %BF) but relatively wide limits of agreement (±7 %BF).

Conclusions: These new equations are suitable for practical use for nutritional assessment in Kuwaiti children, particularly in epidemiological or public health settings although their applicability in other populations requires further research.

Keywords: Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA); Body composition analysis; Children; Deuterium dilution; Fat-free mass; Kuwait; Percentage body fat; Sum of skin-folds; Total body water.

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Conflict of interest statement

Author L.C.W provides consultancy services to ImpediMed Ltd. ImpediMed Ltd. had no involvement in the conception and execution of this study or in the preparation of the manuscript. All other authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Comparison of body composition predicted by skin-fold-based anthropometric and impedance-based algorithms compared to the reference method of deuterium dilution. Panel A: Fat-free mass (kg). Panel B: Fat mass (kg). Panel C: Percentage body fat (%BF). Key formula image: Female participants. formula image: Male participants. formula image: Limits of agreement (± 1·96 sd). formula imageRegression line. formula image: Bias.

References

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