Physical activity intensity, bout-duration, and cardiometabolic risk markers in children and adolescents

Tarp, Jakob and Child, Abbey and White, Tom and Westgate, Kate and Bugge, Anna and Grøntved, Anders and Wedderkopp, Niels and Andersen, Lars B. and Cardon, Greet and Davey, Rachel and Janz, Kathleen F and Kriemler, Susi and Northstone, Kate and Page, Angie S. and Puder, Jardena J. and Reilly, John J. and Sardinha, Luis B. and van Sluijs, Esther M. F. and Ekelund, Ulf and Wijndaele, Katrien and Brage, Søren, On behalf of the International Children’s Accelerometry Database (ICAD) Collaborators (2018) Physical activity intensity, bout-duration, and cardiometabolic risk markers in children and adolescents. International Journal of Obesity. ISSN 0307-0565 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41366-018-0152-8)

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Abstract

Objectives: To determine the role of physical activity intensity and bout-duration in modulating associations between physical activity and cardiometabolic risk markers. Methods: A cross-sectional study using the International Children's Accelerometry Database (ICAD) including 38,306 observations (in 29,734 individuals aged 4–18 years). Accelerometry data was summarized as time accumulated in 16 combinations of intensity thresholds (≥500 to ≥3000 counts/min) and bout-durations (≥1 to ≥10 min). Outcomes were body mass index (BMI, kg/m2), waist circumference, biochemical markers, blood pressure, and a composite score of these metabolic markers. A second composite score excluded the adiposity component. Linear mixed models were applied to elucidate the associations and expressed per 10 min difference in daily activity above the intensity/bout-duration combination. Estimates (and variance) from each of the 16 combinations of intensity and bout-duration examined in the linear mixed models were analyzed in meta-regression to investigate trends in the association. Results: Each 10 min positive difference in physical activity was significantly and inversely associated with the risk factors irrespective of the combination of intensity and bout-duration. In meta-regression, each 1000 counts/min increase in intensity threshold was associated with a −0.027 (95% CI: −0.039 to −0.014) standard deviations lower composite risk score, and a −0.064 (95% CI: −0.09 to −0.038) kg/m2 lower BMI. Conversely, meta-regression suggested bout-duration was not significantly associated with effect-sizes (per 1 min increase in bout-duration: −0.002 (95% CI: −0.005 to 0.0005) standard deviations for the composite risk score, and −0.005 (95% CI: −0.012 to 0.002) kg/m2 for BMI). Conclusions: Time spent at higher intensity physical activity was the main determinant of variation in cardiometabolic risk factors, not bout-duration. Greater magnitude of associations was consistently observed with higher intensities. These results suggest that, in children and adolescents, physical activity, preferably at higher intensities, of any bout-duration should be promoted.