R01AG079975
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Computed Tomography Muscle Size and Composition Associations with Hip and Spine Bone Strength over 4 Years: SOMMA-CT - Project Summary
Osteoporotic fractures are associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and their U.S. economic burden is projected to reach $20 billion by 2025. Aging accelerates the decline of both muscle and bone, increasing fracture risk. Understanding how muscle and bone interact anatomically, mechanically, and biochemically to reduce bone strength could profoundly advance fracture prevention by identifying new fracture risk screening and intervention targets to diagnose and treat age-related musculoskeletal decline.
Computed Tomography (CT) scans hold great promise for assessing regional muscle and bone phenotypes to identify older adults at high risk of fracture. Specifically, bone strength – a CT and finite element modeling assessment of 3D bone morphology, bone mineral density (BMD), and cortical thickness – is a stronger predictor of fracture risk than BMD alone.
Building on the Study of Muscle, Mobility & Aging (SOMMA), the proposed SOMMA-CT ancillary study is uniquely positioned to explore how thigh and trunk muscle properties from CT (via automated and radiomic analysis), D3CR muscle mass (D3-creatine dilution), muscle performance, as well as circulating muscle-bone crosstalk biomarkers, relate to changes in bone strength at the hip and spine (2 clinically-relevant fracture sites).
SOMMA is a prospective study examining aging-related muscle biology contributions to mobility disability (R01 AG059416). This ancillary study in 360 SOMMA older men and women (ages 70-94) will employ an efficient and cost-effective longitudinal design that adds: 1) a 4th-year follow-up CT scan and blood draw, and 2) advanced processing of baseline and 4-year CT scans and blood samples to extract new longitudinal muscle and bone phenotypes.
Specific aims are to:
1) Determine if muscle quantity and composition (CT-derived thigh and trunk muscle area, muscle density, intermuscular fat, and radiomic texture features of muscle heterogeneity; D3CR muscle mass) are associated with changes in hip and spine bone strength over 4 years of aging.
2) Determine if muscle performance (leg extensor specific power; 4-M gait speed; time to complete 5 chair stands) is associated with change in hip and spine bone strength over 4 years of aging. We will also explore how biomarkers of muscle-bone crosstalk (myokines: aminobutyric acids; osteokines: CTX-1, P1NP) relate to bone strength both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, and test if these biomarkers mediate the muscle-bone associations in aims 1-2.
The scientific premise is that thigh and trunk muscle degeneration will be associated with declining hip and spine bone strength, and that circulating biomarkers will offer mechanistic insights on muscle-bone crosstalk contributors to bone strength. This investigation in an aging cohort will increase our knowledge of the dynamic interrelationships and crosstalk between muscle and bone. New discoveries in this area could impact over 158 million older adults worldwide who are at high risk of osteoporotic fracture. This work has strong potential to shift clinical practice paradigms by improving predictive power in fracture risk screening and identifying new phenotypes in muscle and/or bone which could be targeted to prevent fracture.
Osteoporotic fractures are associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and their U.S. economic burden is projected to reach $20 billion by 2025. Aging accelerates the decline of both muscle and bone, increasing fracture risk. Understanding how muscle and bone interact anatomically, mechanically, and biochemically to reduce bone strength could profoundly advance fracture prevention by identifying new fracture risk screening and intervention targets to diagnose and treat age-related musculoskeletal decline.
Computed Tomography (CT) scans hold great promise for assessing regional muscle and bone phenotypes to identify older adults at high risk of fracture. Specifically, bone strength – a CT and finite element modeling assessment of 3D bone morphology, bone mineral density (BMD), and cortical thickness – is a stronger predictor of fracture risk than BMD alone.
Building on the Study of Muscle, Mobility & Aging (SOMMA), the proposed SOMMA-CT ancillary study is uniquely positioned to explore how thigh and trunk muscle properties from CT (via automated and radiomic analysis), D3CR muscle mass (D3-creatine dilution), muscle performance, as well as circulating muscle-bone crosstalk biomarkers, relate to changes in bone strength at the hip and spine (2 clinically-relevant fracture sites).
SOMMA is a prospective study examining aging-related muscle biology contributions to mobility disability (R01 AG059416). This ancillary study in 360 SOMMA older men and women (ages 70-94) will employ an efficient and cost-effective longitudinal design that adds: 1) a 4th-year follow-up CT scan and blood draw, and 2) advanced processing of baseline and 4-year CT scans and blood samples to extract new longitudinal muscle and bone phenotypes.
Specific aims are to:
1) Determine if muscle quantity and composition (CT-derived thigh and trunk muscle area, muscle density, intermuscular fat, and radiomic texture features of muscle heterogeneity; D3CR muscle mass) are associated with changes in hip and spine bone strength over 4 years of aging.
2) Determine if muscle performance (leg extensor specific power; 4-M gait speed; time to complete 5 chair stands) is associated with change in hip and spine bone strength over 4 years of aging. We will also explore how biomarkers of muscle-bone crosstalk (myokines: aminobutyric acids; osteokines: CTX-1, P1NP) relate to bone strength both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, and test if these biomarkers mediate the muscle-bone associations in aims 1-2.
The scientific premise is that thigh and trunk muscle degeneration will be associated with declining hip and spine bone strength, and that circulating biomarkers will offer mechanistic insights on muscle-bone crosstalk contributors to bone strength. This investigation in an aging cohort will increase our knowledge of the dynamic interrelationships and crosstalk between muscle and bone. New discoveries in this area could impact over 158 million older adults worldwide who are at high risk of osteoporotic fracture. This work has strong potential to shift clinical practice paradigms by improving predictive power in fracture risk screening and identifying new phenotypes in muscle and/or bone which could be targeted to prevent fracture.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Winston Salem,
North Carolina
27157
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 280% from $795,677 to $3,023,004.
Wake Forest University Health Sciences was awarded
Muscle-Bone Interactions in Aging: Enhancing Fracture Prevention with SOMMA-CT
Project Grant R01AG079975
worth $3,023,004
from National Institute on Aging in September 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Winston Salem North Carolina United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years 8 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.866 Aging Research.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NIH Research Project Grant (Parent R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 6/22/26
Period of Performance
9/5/23
Start Date
5/31/28
End Date
Funding Split
$3.0M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.0M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01AG079975
Transaction History
Modifications to R01AG079975
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01AG079975
SAI Number
R01AG079975-1319657100
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Funding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Awardee UEI
SN7KD2UK7GC5
Awardee CAGE
1WEZ6
Performance District
NC-10
Senators
Thom Tillis
Ted Budd
Ted Budd
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0843) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $795,677 | 100% |
Modified: 6/22/26