Association of accelerometer-derived physical activity with all-cause and cause-specific mortality among individuals with cardiovascular diseases: a prospective cohort study

Author:

Cao Zhi12,Min Jiahao1,Hou Yabing3,Si Keyi4,Wang Mingwei56,Xu Chenjie1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health, Hangzhou Normal University , 2318 Yuhangtang Road, Yuhang District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province 311121 , China

2. School of Public Health, Zhejiang University School of Medicine , Hangzhou , China

3. Yanjing Medical College, Capital Medical University , Beijing , China

4. School of Public Health, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine , Shanghai , China

5. Department of Cardiology, Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Medical Epigenetics, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Affiliated Hospital of Hangzhou Normal University , Hangzhou , China

6. Hangzhou Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, Zhejiang Key Laboratory for Research in Assessment of Cognitive Impairments, Hangzhou Normal University , Hangzhou , China

Abstract

Abstract Aims To investigate the association of accelerometer-measured intensity-specific physical activity (PA) with all-cause and cause-specific mortality among individuals with cardiovascular disease (CVD). Methods and results In this prospective cohort study, 8024 individuals with pre-existing CVD (mean age: 66.6 years, female: 34.1%) from the UK Biobank had their PA measured using wrist-worn accelerometers over a 7-day period in 2013–2015. All-cause, cancer, and CVD mortality was ascertained from death registries. Cox regression modelling and restricted cubic splines were used to assess the associations. Population-attributable fractions (PAFs) were used to estimate the proportion of preventable deaths if more PA was undertaken. During a median follow-up of 6.8 years, 691 deaths (273 from cancer and 219 from CVD) were recorded. An inverse non-linear association was found between PA duration and all-cause mortality risk, irrespective of PA intensity. The hazard ratio (HR) of all-cause mortality plateaued at 1800 min/week for light-intensity PA (LPA), 320 min/week for moderate-intensity PA (MPA), and 15 min/week for vigorous-intensity PA (VPA). The highest quartile of PA was associated with lower risks for all-cause mortality, with HRs of 0.63 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.51–0.79), 0.42 (0.33–0.54), and 0.47 (0.37–0.60) for LPA, MPA, and VPA, respectively. Similar associations were observed for cancer and CVD mortality. Additionally, the highest PAFs were noted for VPA, followed by MPA. Conclusion We found an inverse non-linear association between all intensities of PA (LPA, MPA, VPA, and MVPA) and mortality risk in CVD patients using accelerometer-derived data, but with a larger magnitude of the associations than that in previous studies based on self-reported PA.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China

Scientific Research Foundation for Scholars of HZNU

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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