Author:
Ahmadi Matthew N.,Blodgett Joanna M.,Atkin Andrew J.,Chan Hsiu-Wen,del Pozo Cruz Borja,Suorsa Kristin,Bakker Esmee A.,Pulsford Richard M.,Mielke Gregore I.,Johansson Peter J.,Hettiarachchi Pasan,Thijssen Dick H. J.,Stenholm Sari,Mishra Gita D.,Teixeira-Pinot Armando,Rangul Vegar,Sherar Lauren B.,Ekelund Ulf,Hughes Alun D.,Lee I.-Min, ,Holtermann Andreas,Koster Annemarie,Hamer Mark,Stamatakis Emmanuel
Abstract
Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
The aim of this study was to examine the dose–response associations of device-measured physical activity types and postures (sitting and standing time) with cardiometabolic health.
Methods
We conducted an individual participant harmonised meta-analysis of 12,095 adults (mean ± SD age 54.5±9.6 years; female participants 54.8%) from six cohorts with thigh-worn accelerometry data from the Prospective Physical Activity, Sitting and Sleep (ProPASS) Consortium. Associations of daily walking, stair climbing, running, standing and sitting time with a composite cardiometabolic health score (based on standardised z scores) and individual cardiometabolic markers (BMI, waist circumference, triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol, HbA1c and total cholesterol) were examined cross-sectionally using generalised linear modelling and cubic splines.
Results
We observed more favourable composite cardiometabolic health (i.e. z score <0) with approximately 64 min/day walking (z score [95% CI] −0.14 [−0.25, −0.02]) and 5 min/day stair climbing (−0.14 [−0.24, −0.03]). We observed an equivalent magnitude of association at 2.6 h/day standing. Any amount of running was associated with better composite cardiometabolic health. We did not observe an upper limit to the magnitude of the dose–response associations for any activity type or standing. There was an inverse dose–response association between sitting time and composite cardiometabolic health that became markedly less favourable when daily durations exceeded 12.1 h/day. Associations for sitting time were no longer significant after excluding participants with prevalent CVD or medication use. The dose–response pattern was generally consistent between activity and posture types and individual cardiometabolic health markers.
Conclusions/interpretation
In this first activity type-specific analysis of device-based physical activity, ~64 min/day of walking and ~5.0 min/day of stair climbing were associated with a favourable cardiometabolic risk profile. The deleterious associations of sitting time were fully attenuated after exclusion of participants with prevalent CVD and medication use. Our findings on cardiometabolic health and durations of different activities of daily living and posture may guide future interventions involving lifestyle modification.
Graphical Abstract
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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