Scientific Opinion on the substantiation of health claims related to creatine  
and increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity,  
repeated exercise bouts (ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531,  
1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924), increase in endurance capacity  
(ID 1527, 1535), and increase in endurance performance (ID 1521, 1963)  
pursuant to Article 13(1) of Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006[sup]1[/sup]  
EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies (NDA)2, 3  
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), Parma, Italy  
Słowa kluczowe:
Creatine
 
endurance capacity
 
endurance performance
 
exercise
 
health claims
 
physical performance
 
	
	1. Charakterystyka żywności / składnika
	
        
		The food constituent that is the subject of the health claims is creatine.
Creatine is a non-essential nitrogenous organic acid that occurs in vertebrates, and it is also  synthesised in the human body from L-arginine, glycine and L-methionine. Approximately 95 % of  the creatine pool in the body is located in skeletal muscle. The content of creatine in foods can be  measured by established methods.
The Panel considers that the food constituent, creatine, which is the subject of the health claims, is  sufficiently characterised.
		
	
	
    
	
	
		
 
	
	2. Znaczenie oświadczenia dla zdrowia człowieka
	
        
		
		
	
	
    
	
	
		
			
2.1. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej podczas krótkotrwałych, powtarzających się ćwiczeń o dużej intensywności (ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924)
	
	
			The claimed effects are “energy metabolism”, “muscular effort”, “bodily constitution”, “increasing  strength”, “increasing mass”, “increasing power”, “increasing performance”, “muscular  effort/recovery”, “increasing time to exhaustion”, and “increasing lifting volume and performance”.  The Panel assumes that the target population is adults performing high-intensity exercise.
In the context of the proposed wordings and the references provided, the Panel assumes that the  claimed effects refer to an increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity,  repeated exercise bouts. Physical performance relates to the ability to complete certain tasks with  higher intensity, faster, or with a higher power output. Muscle mass and strength are major  determinants of physical performance. In repeated exercise bouts, physical performance is also related  to the ability of muscle to recover faster from high-intensity exercise.
The Panel considers that an increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity,  repeated exercise bouts is a beneficial physiological effect.
	
    
			
	
		
			
2.2. Wzrost wytrzymałości (ID 1527, 1535)
	
	
			The claimed effect is “increasing workout capacity”. The Panel assumes that the target population is  adults performing endurance exercise.
In the context of the proposed wordings, the Panel assumes that the claimed effect refers to an  increase in endurance capacity. Endurance capacity refers to the exercise time to self-reported fatigue  when exercising at a constant workload or speed.
The Panel considers that an increase in endurance capacity is a beneficial physiological effect.
	
    
			
	
		
			
2.3. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej (ID 1521, 1963)
	
	
			The claimed effects are “muscular effort” and “creatine: energy reserve of muscle tissue”. The Panel  assumes that the target population is adults performing endurance exercise.
In the context of the proposed wordings, the Panel assumes that the claimed effects refer to an  increase in endurance performance (i.e. during longer-term exercise generally at intensity <80 % of  maximum O2 consumption). Endurance performance relates to the ability to complete certain tasks  with higher intensity, faster, or with a higher power output when performing long-term exercise.
The Panel considers that an increase in endurance performance is a beneficial physiological effect.
	
    
			
	
		
 
	
	3. Naukowe uzasadnienia wpływu na zdrowie człowieka - 
	
        
		The references provided in the consolidated list in relation to the claims evaluated in this opinion  included narrative reviews and book chapters which contained no original data for the scientific  substantiation of the claims, and abstracts and conference proceedings reporting on human  intervention studies in which the information provided regarding the study design, methodology and  statistical analyses was insufficient for a full scientific evaluation. Some of the references reported on  human intervention studies in which creatine was administered in combination with other food  constituents (e.g. carbohydrates, protein, micronutrients and fatty acids) so that the study design did  not allow conclusions to be drawn on the effect of creatine alone. The Panel considers that no  conclusions can be drawn from these references for the scientific substantiation of the claims.
The references provided also included statements/consensus opinions from authoritative bodies such  as the Agence Française de Sécurité Sanitaire des Aliments (AFSSA, 2000), the Scientific Committee  on Food (SCF, 2001), and the American College of Sports Medicine (Terjung et al., 2000). Other  consensus opinions were published by the International Society of Sports Nutrition (Buford et al.,  2007; Kreider et al., 2010) and the American Dietetic Association (Rodriguez et al., 2009). Two meta- analyses of human intervention studies (Branch, 2003; Nissen and Sharp, 2003) and one “systematic  review” (Rawson and Volek, 2003) which addressed the effects of creatine consumption on outcome  measures relevant to the claimed effects evaluated in this opinion, considered the vast majority of  individual human intervention studies submitted for the scientific substantiation of the claims. In  addition, three of the references provided which reported on human intervention studies and which  addressed the effects of creatine on outcome measures related to the claimed effects evaluated in this  opinion were not included in the meta-analyses described below, and will be considered separately as  appropriate (Izquierdo et al., 2002; Ostojic, 2004; Syrotuik et al., 2001).
The purpose of the “systematic review” by Rawson and Volek (2003) was to address the effects of  creatine supplementation and concurrent resistance training on muscle strength and weight lifting  performance. A total of 22 studies, 14 of which were already included in the meta-analysis by Nissen  and Sharp (2003), met the inclusion criteria of Rawson and Volek (2003) and the remaining, except  three (Stevenson and Dudley, 2001; Syrotuik et al., 2000; Syrotuik et al., 2001), were considered in
the meta-analysis by Branch (2003). Two of the three references were provided in the consolidated  list as individual studies (Stevenson and Dudley, 2001; Syrotuik et al., 2001). The Panel notes that the  methodology (e.g. literature search or other strategies used to identify pertinent references, and  methodology used to calculate average percent estimates for increases in muscle strength and weight  lifting performance) used in this review is poorly described and that all the studies included were  already considered in the meta-analyses provided or were submitted separately. The Panel considers  that no conclusions can be drawn from this review for the scientific substantiation of the claims  evaluated in this opinion.
The meta-analysis by Branch (2003) included 96 publications (published up to December 2000) from  100 randomised, placebo-controlled trials, in which at least subjects were blinded to the intervention.
These studies comprised 1,847 subjects. Results were given as means SEM and 95 % CI. Mean
sample size was 19 1 (range 4 to 80). Most of the studies (93 %) were published after 1994, and most  (71 % of the studies) were randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled interventions which
addressed the effect of an acute ( 14 days) creatine loading regimen (19.7 0.5 g creatine for an
average of 9 1 days) on physical performance in mostly young trained (77 % of the studies) men  (68 % of the studies). Only 22 studies investigated the effects of low dose maintenance creatine  supplementation (>14 days) following acute creatine loading. Twenty-four studies included men and  women as subjects. The effect of creatine supplementation on women was the focus in only 9 studies.  The primary objective of the meta-analysis was to quantify the effect of creatine supplementation on  body composition (including lean body mass) and exercise performance. Performance tasks were  classified as single-bout or repetitive-bout exercises. The first bout of repetitive-bout exercises was
classified as a single-bout exercise task. Performance tasks of 30 sec, 30 to 150 sec, and >150 sec  were also analysed separately. The effect size (ES) of creatine supplementation variable was  calculated for each dependent.
The meta-analysis by Nissen and Sharp (2003) assessed the effects of longer-term creatine  supplementation on lean body mass and muscle strength during resistance training. Only randomised,  placebo-controlled human intervention studies, published in peer reviewed journals between 1967 and  2001, of at least 3 weeks duration and which involved a full-body resistance-training regimen two or  more times per week and were conducted in healthy adults who were not under dietary restriction  were included. A total of 18 studies using creatine alone as intervention met the inclusion criteria.  These studies included a total of 368 subjects (n=180 in the intervention group and n=188 in the  control group) with a mean age of 24 years. All studies had a parallel design, and the sample size in  individual studies was generally small (mean n=10 per group). All studies included were published  between 1997 and 2001. Three studies included men and women, three studies included women only,  and the remaining studies were conducted in men only. Five studies were conducted in untrained  subjects, and 13 studies in trained individuals. The studies averaged 7.5 weeks (range 3-13 weeks) in  duration. The average loading dose of creatine was 19.4 g/day (range 10-21 g/day) for 5.3 days (range  4-7 days), and the average maintenance dose was 6.7 g/day (range 2-10.5 g/day). Changes in lean  mass and strength were normalised for inclusion in the meta-analysis by conversion to percentage  change per week for both treatment and placebo groups. Effect sizes (ES) of lean mass and strength  changes were calculated for each dependent variable. Duration of tasks and task repetition were not  considered in the analysis. All the studies included in this meta-analysis except four (Arciero et al.,  2001; Bemben et al., 2001; Chrusch et al., 2001; Jowko et al., 2001) were already considered in the  meta-analysis by Branch (2003).
These references will be referred to in different sections of the present evaluation as appropriate.
		
	
	
    
	
	
		
			
3.1. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej podczas krótkotrwałych, powtarzających się ćwiczeń o dużej intensywności (ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924)
	
	
			The evidence provided by consensus opinions/reports from authoritative bodies and reviews shows  that there is good consensus on the role of creatine in increasing physical performance during short- term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al., 2007; Kreider et al., 2010;  Rodriguez et al., 2009; SCF, 2001; Terjung et al., 2000).
Creatine phosphate (CrP) serves as a readily available source of energy in skeletal muscle and other  tissues. For most exercise situations, the demand for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is predominantly  provided through oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria. However, when aerobic energy  production cannot meet the demand for ATP, anaerobic energy production from CrP hydrolysis and  glycogenolysis/glycolysis is required to assist in the provision of ATP. Such cases include the  transition from rest to exercise, the transition from one power output to a higher power output, and  power outputs above 90-100 % maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max). The rapid  re-phosphorylation of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) from CrP via the creatine kinase reaction may  buffer changes in ATP during transitions between rest and exercise, and may contribute a substantial  fraction of ATP synthesis during short duration, high intensity exercise (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al.,  2007; SCF, 2001; Terjung et al., 2000).
During a bout of high intensity exercise, the relative importance of CrP hydrolysis to ATP synthesis  falls off as the exercise duration is increased beyond a few seconds. The greatest improvements in  performance following short-term creatine supplementation (5-7 days of ~20 g/day) are found during  a series of repetitive, high power output exercise bouts. Exercise performance during the latter bouts  of a series (e.g. third, fourth and fifth) can be increased by 5-20 % in very high power output exercise  bouts that can be maintained for only a short (seconds) period (e.g. maximal cycling and/or power  jumping), and are separated by fairly brief periods of rest (e.g. 20-60 seconds). Therefore, it is likely  that creatine supplementation improves exercise performance in sport events which require explosive,  high-energy output activities, especially of a repeated nature (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al., 2007; SCF,  2001; Terjung et al., 2000).
Creatine ingestion increases the total creatine content in human muscle by approximately 15-20 %  (mean value), albeit a high inter-individual variability exists. Such increases can be achieved by  ingestion of 20 g per day for 4-5 days, but also by ingestion of 3 g per day over a period of one month.  The increased creatine content in human muscle is maintained when the ingestion is reduced to 2 g  per day after the original loading period. There is a substantial reduction in urine production on the  first three days of the loading period and this reduction is coincident with the retention of creatine.  The retention of water is thought to be related to an osmotic load caused by creatine retention and to  account for the rapid-onset weight gain experienced by many individuals ingesting creatine. Many  studies have reported increases in body mass of 1-3 kg following short-term (5-7 days) creatine  supplementation (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al., 2007; SCF, 2001; Terjung et al., 2000).
Longer-term creatine supplementation (e.g. 4 to 12 weeks) in combination with training appears to  increase muscle mass and strength as a result of an improved ability to perform high-intensity exercise  via increased CrP availability (Buford et al., 2007; SCF, 2001).
The meta-analyses and individual intervention studies provided in the consolidated list are consistent  with the above-mentioned consensus. In the meta-analysis by Branch (2003), anaerobic exercise
performance capacity during high-intensity, short-duration exercise ( 30 sec) was significantly
increased by creatine supplementation (617 performance variables; ES=0.24 0.002, 95 % CI=0.20,  0.28; p<0.05), and the majority of the studies considered (45 out of 61) reported an ergonomic effect  of creatine. Significantly more repetitions at specific submaximal intensity/workload (21 estimates;
ES=0.64 0.18, 95 % CI=0.27, 1.00, p<0.05) and greater work capacity (83 estimates; ES=0.21 0.05,
95 % CI=0.11, 0.30, n=83, p<0.05) were performed during consumption of creatine compared to  placebo. ES for repetitive-bout exercise was significantly higher than for single-bout exercise, and  mean ES for percentage decrement in performance over multiple high-intensity bouts was not  significantly different from zero (ES= –0.04±0.06; 95 %CI= –0.16, 0.09), suggesting a resistance to  fatigue between exercise bouts associated with creatine supplementation. The effect of creatine on  overall exercise performance was still significant, but less evident, for tasks lasting 30 to 150 sec
(135 performance estimates; ES=0.19 0.05, 95 % CI=0.10, 0.28; p<0.05), and it was non-significant  for tasks lasting more than 150 sec (ES=0.09±0.07; 95 % CI= –0.04, 0.22). On the other hand, the  meta-analysis by Nissen and Sharp (2003) supports a positive effect of longer-term (3-13 weeks)  creatine supplementation on lean body mass (ES=0.26; 95 % CI=0.17, 0.34, p<0.001) and strength  (ES=0.36; CI=0.28, 0.43, p<0.001) during repetitive resistance training, possibly owing to an  improved ability to perform high-intensity exercise.
In weighing the evidence, the Panel took into account that there is good consensus on the role of  creatine in increasing physical performance during short-term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts,  and that the meta-analyses and individual intervention studies provided in the consolidated list are  consistent with this consensus.
The Panel concludes that a cause and effect relationship has been established between the  consumption of creatine and an increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity,  repeated exercise bouts.
	
    
			
	
		
			
3.2. Wzrost wytrzymałości (ID 1527, 1535)
	
	
			Among the references provided in the consolidated list, three reported on individual human  intervention studies which investigated the effect of creatine supplementation on continuous (Zoeller  et al., 2007) or intermittent (Izquierdo et al., 2002; Ostojic, 2004) endurance cycling or running  capacity. Two of the studies tested the effects of an acute creatine load (Izquierdo et al., 2002;  Ostojic, 2004), whereas one study used an acute creatine load followed by a creatine maintenance  phase (Zoeller et al., 2007).
Izquierdo et al. (2002) investigated the effects of acute creatine supplementation (20 g/day for five  days) on endurance capacity in trained male handball players randomly assigned to either creatine  (n=9) or placebo (maltodextrin; n=10). Before and after supplementation, subjects performed a  maximal multistage discontinuous incremental running test to exhaustion. No significant differences  in endurance capacity were observed between the creatine and placebo groups. Ostojic et al. (2004)  examined the effects of a seven-day creatine supplementation (30 g/day) vs. placebo (cellulose) on  endurance capacity assessed by a maximal multistage 20 m shuttle run test in 20 young soccer players  in a randomised parallel study. No significant differences between the creatine and placebo groups
were observed. In the study by Zoeller et al. (2007), 55 men (24.5 5.3 years) were randomly assigned  to one of the following supplementation groups for four weeks: placebo (34 g glucose/day, n=13),  creatine (5.25 g/day creatine monohydrate plus 34 g glucose, n=12), beta-alanine (n=14), or beta- alanine plus creatine (n=16). Prior to and following supplementation, participants performed a graded  exercise test on a cycle ergometer to determine time to exhaustion. The initial power output was set at  30 watts and increased 30 watts every two minutes until the subject could not maintain the required  power output at a pedaling rate of 70 rpm, or until volitional termination owing to fatigue. No  significant differences in time to exhaustion were observed between groups.
The Panel notes that the three human intervention studies provided did not show an effect of creatine  supplementation on measures of endurance capacity. The Panel also notes that there is no consensus  on the role of creatine in increasing endurance (aerobic) capacity (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al., 2007;  Kreider et al., 2010; SCF, 2001; Terjung et al., 2000).
In weighing the evidence, the Panel took into account that the three human intervention studies  provided from which conclusions could be drawn for the scientific substantiation of the claim did not  show an effect of creatine supplementation on measures of endurance capacity.
The Panel concludes that a cause and effect relationship has not been established between the  consumption of creatine and an increase in endurance capacity.
	
    
			
	
		
			
3.3. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej (ID 1521, 1963)
	
	
			In the meta-analysis by Branch (2003), half of the studies (nine studies out of 18) which investigated  the effect of creatine supplementation on measures of performance during continuous, long-term  aerobic exercise (>150 sec) in endurance sports (running and swimming) did not show an effect of  creatine supplementation compared to placebo, and the overall effect was not significant  (ES=0.09±0.07; 95 % CI= –0.04, 0.22) after exclusion of an outlier with a large ES.
Among the references provided in the consolidated list, one reported on an individual human  intervention study which investigated the effect of creatine supplementation on measures of  endurance performance (Syrotuik et al., 2001), and was not included in the meta-analysis by Branch  (2003).
Syrotuik et al. (2001) randomised 22 rowers to consume either creatine (0.3 g/kg/day for five days  followed by a five-week maintenance dose of 0.03 g/kg/day) or placebo together with training  (continuous and interval rowing and resistance training 4 and 2 days per week, respectively) for six  weeks. No significant differences in repeated power interval performance or 2,000 m rowing times  were observed compared to placebo during the five-day creatine loading or the five-week maintenance  phases. The Panel notes that this study does not show an effect of creatine supplementation on  endurance performance.
The Panel notes that one meta-analysis of 18 human intervention studies, and one additional study,  did not show an effect of creatine supplementation on measures of endurance performance. The Panel  also notes that there is no consensus on the role of creatine in increasing endurance (aerobic)  performance (AFSSA, 2000; Buford et al., 2007; Kreider et al., 2010; SCF, 2001; Terjung et al.,  2000).
In weighing the evidence, the Panel took into account that one meta-analysis of 18 human intervention  studies, and one additional study, did not show an effect of creatine supplementation on measures of  endurance performance.
The Panel concludes that a cause and effect relationship has not been established between the  consumption of creatine and an increase in endurance performance.
	
    
			
	
		
 
	
	4. Uwagi do zaproponowanego brzmienia oświadczenia
	
        
		
		
	
	
    
	
	
		
			
4.1. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej podczas krótkotrwałych, powtarzających się ćwiczeń o dużej intensywności (ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924)
	
	
			The Panel considers that the following wording reflects the scientific evidence: “Consumption of  creatine increases physical performance during short-term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts”.
	
    
			
	
		
 
	
	5. Warunki i możliwe ograniczenia stosowania oświadczenia
	
        
		
		
	
	
    
	
	
		
			
5.1. Zwiększenie wydolności fizycznej podczas krótkotrwałych, powtarzających się ćwiczeń o dużej intensywności (ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924)
	
	
			The Panel considers that in order to obtain the claimed effect, 3 g of creatine should be consumed  daily. The target population is adults performing high-intensity exercise.
	
    
			
	
		
 
Wnioski
	
		On the basis of the data presented, the Panel concludes that:  
The food constituent, creatine, which is the subject of the health claims, is sufficiently  characterised.  
Increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts  
(ID 739, 1520, 1521, 1522, 1523, 1525, 1526, 1531, 1532, 1533, 1534, 1922, 1923, 1924)  
The claimed effects are “energy metabolism”, “muscular effort”, “bodily constitution”,  “increasing strength”, “increasing mass”, “increasing power”, “increasing performance”,  “muscular effort/recovery”, “increasing time to exhaustion” and “increasing lifting volume  and performance”. The target population is assumed to be adults performing high-intensity  exercise. In the context of the proposed wordings and the references provided, it is assumed  that the claimed effects refer to an increase in physical performance during short-term, high  intensity, repeated exercise bouts. An increase in physical performance during short-term,  high intensity, repeated exercise bouts is a beneficial physiological effect.  
A cause and effect relationship has been established between the consumption of creatine and  an increase in physical performance during short-term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts.  
The following wording reflects the scientific evidence: “Consumption of creatine increases  physical performance during short-term, high intensity, repeated exercise bouts”.  
In order to obtain the claimed effect, 3 g of creatine should be consumed daily. The target  population is adults performing high-intensity exercise.  
Increase in endurance capacity (ID 1527, 1535)  
The claimed effect is “increasing workout capacity”. The target population is assumed to be  adults performing endurance exercise. In the context of the proposed wordings, it is assumed  that the claimed effect refers to an increase in endurance capacity. An increase in endurance  capacity is a beneficial physiological effect.  
A cause and effect relationship has not been established between the consumption of creatine  and an increase in endurance capacity.  
Increase in endurance performance (ID 1521, 1963)  
The claimed effects are “muscular effort” and “creatine: energy reserve of muscle tissue”.  The target population is assumed to be adults performing endurance exercise. In the context  of the proposed wordings, it is assumed that the claimed effects refer to increase in endurance  performance. An increase in endurance performance is a beneficial physiological effect.  
A cause and effect relationship has not been established between the consumption of creatine  and an increase in endurance performance.