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Non-occupational physical activity and risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer and mortality outcomes: a dose-response meta-analysis of large prospective studies

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 57, Issue 15, Pages 979-+

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2022-105669

Keywords

epidemiology; meta-analysis; noncommunicable diseases; physical activity; health

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This study aims to estimate the dose-response associations between non-occupational physical activity and chronic disease outcomes and mortality. The results show that even small increases in non-occupational physical activity can significantly reduce the risk of various diseases and mortality compared to being inactive.
ObjectiveTo estimate the dose-response associations between non-occupational physical activity and several chronic disease and mortality outcomes in the general adult population. DesignSystematic review and cohort-level dose-response meta-analysis. Data sourcesPubMed, Scopus, Web of Science and reference lists of published studies. Eligibility criteriaProspective cohort studies with (1) general population samples >10 000 adults, (2) >= 3 physical activity categories, and (3) risk measures and CIs for all-cause mortality or incident total cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, stroke, heart failure, total cancer and site-specific cancers (head and neck, myeloid leukaemia, myeloma, gastric cardia, lung, liver, endometrium, colon, breast, bladder, rectum, oesophagus, prostate, kidney). Results196 articles were included, covering 94 cohorts with >30 million participants. The evidence base was largest for all-cause mortality (50 separate results; 163 415 543 person-years, 811 616 events), and incidence of cardiovascular disease (37 results; 28 884 209 person-years, 74 757 events) and cancer (31 results; 35 500 867 person-years, 185 870 events). In general, higher activity levels were associated with lower risk of all outcomes. Differences in risk were greater between 0 and 8.75 marginal metabolic equivalent of task-hours per week (mMET-hours/week) (equivalent to the recommended 150 min/week of moderate-to-vigorous aerobic physical activity), with smaller marginal differences in risk above this level to 17.5 mMET-hours/week, beyond which additional differences were small and uncertain. Associations were stronger for all-cause (relative risk (RR) at 8.75 mMET-hours/week: 0.69, 95% CI 0.65 to 0.73) and cardiovascular disease (RR at 8.75 mMET-hours/week: 0.71, 95% CI 0.66 to 0.77) mortality than for cancer mortality (RR at 8.75 mMET-hours/week: 0.85, 95% CI 0.81 to 0.89). If all insufficiently active individuals had achieved 8.75 mMET-hours/week, 15.7% (95% CI 13.1 to 18.2) of all premature deaths would have been averted. ConclusionsInverse non-linear dose-response associations suggest substantial protection against a range of chronic disease outcomes from small increases in non-occupational physical activity in inactive adults.PROSPERO registration number CRD42018095481.

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