Alcántara Alcántara, Juan ManuelJurado Fasoli, LucasDote-Montero, ManuelMerchán Ramírez, ElisaAmaro Gahete, Francisco J.Labayen Goñi, IdoiaRuiz, Jonatan R.Sánchez Delgado, Guillermo2023-11-082023-11-082023Alcantara, J. M. A., Jurado-Fasoli, L., Dote-Montero, M., Merchan-Ramirez, E., Amaro-Gahete, F. J., Labayen, I., Ruiz, J. R., & Sanchez-Delgado, G. (2023). Impact of methods for data selection on the day-to-day reproducibility of resting metabolic rate assessed with four different metabolic carts. Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases, 33(11), 2179-2188. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.numecd.2023.07.0170939-475310.1016/j.numecd.2023.07.017https://academica-e.unavarra.es/handle/2454/46731Background and aims: Accomplishing a high day-to-day reproducibility is important to detect changes in resting metabolic rate (RMR) and respiratory exchange ratio (RER) that may be produced after an intervention or for monitoring patients’ metabolism over time. We aimed to analyze: (i) the influence of different methods for selecting indirect calorimetry data on RMR and RER assessments; and, (ii) whether these methods influence RMR and RER day-to-day reproducibility. Methods and results: Twenty-eight young adults accomplished 4 consecutive RMR assessments (30-min each), using the Q-NRG (Cosmed, Rome, Italy), the Vyntus CPX (Jaeger-CareFusion, Höchberg, Germany), the Omnical (Maastricht Instruments, Maastricht, The Netherlands), and the Ultima CardiO2 (Medgraphics Corporation, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA) carts, on 2 consecutive mornings. Three types of methods were used: (i) short (periods of 5 consecutive minutes; 6e10, 11e15, 16e20, 21e25, and 26e30 min) and long time intervals (TI) methods (6e25 and 6 e30 min); (ii) steady state (SSt methods); and, (iii) methods filtering the data by thresholding from the mean RMR (filtering methods). RMR and RER were similar when using different methods (except RMR for the Vyntus and RER for the Q-NRG). Conversely, using different methods impacted RMR (all P 0.037) and/or RER (P 0.009) day-to-day reproducibility in all carts. The 6e25 min and the 6e30 min long TI methods yielded more reproducible measurements for all metabolic carts. Conclusion: The 6e25 min and 6e30 min should be the preferred methods for selecting data, as they result in the highest day-to-day reproducibility of RMR and RER assessments.application/pdfapplication/mswordeng© 2023 The Author(s). This is an open access article under the CC BY license.Between-days reproducibilityCoefficient of variationIndirect calorimetryREEReliabilityResting energy expenditureImpact of methods for data selection on the day-to-day reproducibility of resting metabolic rate assessed with four different metabolic cartsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article2023-11-08info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess