Villegas Raquel, Shu Xiao-Ou, Li Honglan, Yang Gong, Matthews Charles E, Leitzmann Michael, Li Qi, Cai Hui, Gao Yu-Tang, Zheng Wei
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt Epidemiology Center Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
Int J Epidemiol. 2006 Dec;35(6):1553-62. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyl209. Epub 2006 Sep 19.
Leisure-time physical activity (LPA) has been associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. However, the potential effect of other types of physical activity on type 2 diabetes is still uncertain. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of occupational, commuting, daily living, and LPA on the incidence of type 2 diabetes in a cohort of middle-aged women.
We prospectively followed 70,658 women who had no prior history of diabetes at study recruitment for 4.6 years. Participants completed in-person interviews at baseline that collected information on diabetes risk factors including physical activity habits. Anthropometric measurements were taken by trained interviewers. Multivariate-adjusted hazard ratios were estimated by levels of occupational, commuting, daily living, and LPA.
We documented 1973 incident cases of diabetes during 326,625 person-years of follow-up. LPA and daily living physical activity (DPA) were associated with a moderately reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. The relative risk for type 2 diabetes associated with LPA and DPA categories were 1.00, 0.89, 1.05, and 0.83, (P trend = 0.12) and 1.00, 0.98, 0.95, and 0.88, (P trend = 0.06) respectively. LPA was associated with lower risk of type 2 diabetes in employed participants (P trend = 0.09) while DPA was mainly associated with a reduction in risk in non-employed participants (P trend <0.01). While occupational physical activity was not associated with type 2 diabetes risk in this population, commuting to work was associated with a reduction in risk. A combination of DPA and LPA was associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes.
This study suggests that physical activity, either from leisure-time exercise or daily activity reduces the risk of type 2 diabetes in women, supporting the current health promotion efforts encouraging both exercise and non-exercise activity levels.
休闲时间体力活动(LPA)与2型糖尿病风险降低相关。然而,其他类型的体力活动对2型糖尿病的潜在影响仍不确定。本研究的目的是在一组中年女性队列中,研究职业、通勤、日常生活和休闲时间体力活动对2型糖尿病发病率的影响。
我们对70658名在研究招募时无糖尿病病史的女性进行了4.6年的前瞻性随访。参与者在基线时完成了面对面访谈,收集了包括体力活动习惯在内的糖尿病风险因素信息。由经过培训的访谈者进行人体测量。通过职业、通勤、日常生活和休闲时间体力活动水平估计多变量调整后的风险比。
在326625人年的随访期间,我们记录了1973例糖尿病发病病例。休闲时间体力活动和日常生活体力活动(DPA)与2型糖尿病风险适度降低相关。与休闲时间体力活动和日常生活体力活动类别相关的2型糖尿病相对风险分别为1.00、0.89、1.05和0.83,(P趋势=0.12)以及1.00、0.98、0.95和0.88,(P趋势=0.06)。休闲时间体力活动与在职参与者患2型糖尿病的风险较低相关(P趋势=0.09),而日常生活体力活动主要与非在职参与者的风险降低相关(P趋势<0.01)。虽然职业体力活动与该人群的2型糖尿病风险无关,但通勤与风险降低相关。日常生活体力活动和休闲时间体力活动相结合与2型糖尿病风险降低相关。
本研究表明,无论是休闲时间锻炼还是日常活动,体力活动都能降低女性患2型糖尿病的风险,支持当前鼓励锻炼和非锻炼活动水平的健康促进努力。