TY - JOUR T1 - Maximal aerobic capacity in ageing subjects: actual measurements <em>versus</em> predicted values JF - ERJ Open Research JO - erjor DO - 10.1183/23120541.00068-2015 VL - 2 IS - 1 SP - 00068-2015 AU - Cristina Pistea AU - Evelyne Lonsdorfer AU - Stéphane Doutreleau AU - Monique Oswald AU - Irina Enache AU - Anne Charloux Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://openres.ersjournals.com/content/2/1/00068-2015.abstract N2 - We evaluated the impact of selection of reference values on the categorisation of measured maximal oxygen consumption (V′O2peak) as “normal” or “abnormal” in an ageing population.We compared measured V′O2peak with predicted values and the lower limit of normal (LLN) calculated with five equations. 99 (58 males and 41 females) disease-free subjects aged ≥70 years completed an incremental maximal exercise test on a cycle ergometer.Mean V′O2peak was 1.88 L·min−1 in men and 1.26 L·min−1 in women. V′O2peak ranged from 89% to 108% of predicted in men, and from 88% to 164% of predicted in women, depending on the reference equation used. The proportion of subjects below the LLN ranged from 5% to 14% in men and 0–22% in women, depending on the reference equation. The LLN was lacking in one study, and was unsuitable for women in another. Most LLNs ranged between 53% and 73% of predicted. Therefore, choosing an 80% cut-off leads to overestimation of the proportion of “abnormal” subjects.To conclude, the proportion of subjects aged ≥70 years with a “low” V′O2peak differs markedly according to the chosen reference equations. In clinical practice, it is still relevant to test a sample of healthy volunteers and select the reference equations that better characterise this sample.As V′O2peak % pred differs markedly with the reference value, reference equation choice is critical in the elderly http://ow.ly/YsXHD ER -