Post-test decorin levels added to Riegel-predicted 10 km race time and BMI improved prediction accuracy reducing MAE by 0.39 min (22%) and yielded cross-validated R2 of 0.933 in recreational runners.
Cross-Sectional Observational (n=33)
No
Does integrating non-conventional blood biomarkers (decorin, hypoxanthine, NT-proBNP, BDNF) improve running performance prediction in recreational runners?
Post-test decorin levels marginally improve the prediction of 10 km race performance beyond conventional field-based predictors in recreational runners.
Estimación del efecto: R2 0.933 (LOOCV) for model with Riegel-predicted time + BMI + post-test decorin (95% CI 95% BCa bootstrap CI on coefficients indicated stable standardized coefficients; unstandardized decorin coefficient less certain)
Conventional measures such as maximal oxygen uptake (V˙O2max), although widely regarded as the gold standard, do not fully capture endurance performance. Therefore, this study investigated whether a 2.4 km Cooper test elicits measurable changes in blood-based biomarkers (decorin, hypoxanthine, N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)) and whether integrating these markers may improve performance prediction in a heterogeneous sample of runners. In this cross-sectional observational proof-of-concept study, thirty-three participants completed the 2.4 km Cooper test, with venous blood samples collected at baseline and post-test. Non-parametric statistical tests were used to assess biomarker changes (α = 0.05), with exploratory correlations evaluated using Spearman’s ρ. To examine whether blood-based biomarkers provide information beyond conventional field-based predictors, Ridge regression with leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) was applied to predict 10 km race time in a subsample of 24 participants who completed a 10 km race two weeks later. The Cooper test elicited significant post-test changes in decorin, hypoxanthine, and BDNF (all p < 0.001). Higher post-test decorin (ρ = −0.44, p = 0.010) and hypoxanthine (ρ = −0.37, p = 0.034) were associated with faster Cooper test performance. In Ridge regression analysis, adding post-test decorin to conventional predictors resulted in a minor reduction of 10 km race time prediction error. This study suggests that decorin may provide complementary information to a conventional field-based test in heterogeneous recreational runners. Post-test decorin marginally contributed to 10 km race performance prediction beyond established predictors, though external validation and comparison with directly measured V˙O2max are needed before practical application can be recommended.
Dvorski et al. (Thu,) conducted a cross-sectional observational in Heterogeneous recreational runners aged 18-35 years with weekly training ≥2 times and prior race experience of ≥2.4 km, no chronic disease or medication, from Zagreb, Croatia (n=33). 2.4 km Cooper test was evaluated on 10 km race time prediction (R2 0.933 (LOOCV) for model with Riegel-predicted time + BMI + post-test decorin, 95% CI 95% BCa bootstrap CI on coefficients indicated stable standardized coefficients; unstandardized decorin coefficient less certain). Post-test decorin levels added to Riegel-predicted 10 km race time and BMI improved prediction accuracy reducing MAE by 0.39 min (22%) and yielded cross-validated R2 of 0.933 in recreational runners.
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