Metadata
Title
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS-NYCU and TVGH Announce New Asian Guidelines Lowering Sarcopenia Screening Age to 50-National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Category
general
UUID
36518fb9e2a34081ba3a49db43b6422f
Source URL
https://www.nycu.edu.tw/nycu/en/app/news/view?module=headnews&id=623&serno=b7a3e...
Parent URL
https://www.nycu.edu.tw/nycu/en/app/news/list?module=headnews&id=623
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T06:16:58+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS-NYCU and TVGH Announce New Asian Guidelines Lowering Sarcopenia Screening Age to 50-National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University

Source: https://www.nycu.edu.tw/nycu/en/app/news/view?module=headnews&id=623&serno=b7a3e479-4342-4402-a4aa-56c22fb6637a Parent: https://www.nycu.edu.tw/nycu/en/app/news/list?module=headnews&id=623

12

NYCU

National-Level\ Research Center

date from 2022

20

NYCU

University-Level\ Research Centers

date from 2022

28

NYCU

College-Level\ Research Centers

date from 2022

167

NYCU

Total Awarded Students\ Participating in Competitions

date from 2022

379

NYCU

Number of Academic Papers\ Published by Students or Exhibition\ Activities Organized by Students

date from 2022

50+

NYCU

Number of International\ Collaborations on Academic\ Research Projects

date from 2022

243

NYCU

Number of Students Attending\ International Conference

date from 2022

中文

NYCU and TVGH Announce New Asian Guidelines Lowering Sarcopenia Screening Age to 50

NYCU and Taipei Veterans General Hospital co-hosted a press conference to announce updated Asian diagnostic guidelines—from “sarcopenia” to “muscle health”—that lower the recommended screening age to 50.

\ By Taipei Veterans General Hospital\ Edited by Chance Lai\ ______

Nearly 40% of older adults in Asia face compromised quality of life due to sarcopenia, a progressive loss of muscle strength and mass. Now, a landmark multi-nation study has revealed that muscle deterioration in Asian populations begins far earlier than previously believed—prompting experts to recommend moving routine screening from age 65 to 50. The new consensus, led by Professor Liang-Kung Chen, Superintendent of Taipei City Guandu Hospital and Director of the Center for Healthy Longevity and Aging Sciences at National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University (NYCU), was published this year in the prestigious journal Nature Aging.\

A clinician conducts a handgrip strength test, one of the key indicators used to assess muscle function in the updated Asian sarcopenia guidelines.\ \ At a press briefing, Director Chen explained that the findings are based on eight large-scale cohort studies across Japan, Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong, and other regions, tracking nearly 35,000 individuals over many years. The Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia integrated these datasets to build a region-specific evidence base that reflects the unique body composition and aging patterns of Asian populations.\ \ Earlier, Faster, and Different: What the Data Shows\ \ Skeletal muscle loss has long been known as a hallmark of aging. Past global studies estimated that adults lose up to 40% of muscle mass between ages 20 and 70, with an annual decline of 1.4–2.5% after age 60. But the new Asia-focused analysis reveals significant differences:

These patterns confirm that Western diagnostic thresholds are poorly suited for Asian populations and that early detection is essential.

\ \ \ A New Consensus for Asia—and a Call to Act Earlier\ \ Director Chen emphasized that waiting for both muscle strength and mass to “fall off a cliff” before intervening leads to limited gains, greater frustration, and poorer patient outcomes. The updated Asian diagnostic consensus introduces several significant changes:

\ From Muscle Health to Whole-Body Health\ \ Recent scientific advances have shown that skeletal muscle functions as the body’s largest endocrine organ, influencing cardiovascular metabolism, brain function, bone health, adipose regulation, and immune responses. With these broader systemic links in mind, the new consensus emphasizes “muscle health enhancement” beginning in midlife—not only to prevent disability and frailty in later years but also to promote long-term healthy longevity.\ \ Director Liang-Kung Chen emphasized that “this is not just about preventing falls in old age,” noting that muscle health in one’s 40s and 50s shapes metabolic well-being, cognitive function, and overall resilience for decades to come.\ \ As Asia rapidly transitions into a super-aged society, the updated guidelines offer a unified scientific roadmap to help governments, hospitals, and communities strengthen early intervention, develop preventive programs, and support healthy aging from midlife onward.

Related Image(s):

Back