Willis Benjamin L, Gao Ang, Leonard David, Defina Laura F, Berry Jarett D
Arch Intern Med. 2012 Sep 24;172(17):1333-40. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2012.3400.
BACKGROUND The association between cardiorespiratory fitness (fitness) and mortality is well described. However, the association between midlife fitness and the development of nonfatal chronic conditions in older age has not been studied. METHODS To examine the association between midlife fitness and chronic disease outcomes in later life, participant data from the Cooper Center Longitudinal Study were linked with Medicare claims. We studied 18 670 healthy participants (21.1% women; median age, 49 years) who survived to receive Medicare coverage from January 1, 1999, to December 31, 2009. Fitness estimated by Balke treadmill time was analyzed as a continuous variable (in metabolic equivalents [METs]) and according to age- and sex-specific quintiles. Eight common chronic conditions were defined using validated algorithms, and associations between midlife fitness and the number of conditions were assessed using a modified Cox proportional hazards model that stratified the at-risk population by the number of conditions while adjusting for age, body mass index, blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose levels, alcohol use, and smoking. RESULTS After 120 780 person-years of Medicare exposure with a median follow-up of 26 years, the highest quintile of fitness (quintile 5) was associated with a lower incidence of chronic conditions compared with the lowest quintile (quintile 1) in men (15.6 [95% CI, 15.0-16.2] vs 28.2 [27.4-29.0] per 100 person-years) and women (11.4 [10.5-12.3] vs 20.1 [18.7 vs 21.6] per 100 person-years). After multivariate adjustment, higher fitness (in METs) was associated with a lower risk of developing chronic conditions in men (hazard ratio, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.94-0.96] per MET) and women (0.94 [0.91-0.96] per MET). Among decedents (2406 [12.9%]), higher fitness was associated with lower risk of developing chronic conditions relative to survival (compression hazard ratio, 0.90 [95% CI, 0.88-0.92] per MET), suggesting morbidity compression. CONCLUSIONS In this cohort of healthy middle-aged adults, fitness was significantly associated with a lower risk of developing chronic disease outcomes during 26 years of follow-up. These findings suggest that higher midlife fitness may be associated with the compression of morbidity in older age.
背景 心肺适能(适能)与死亡率之间的关联已得到充分描述。然而,中年适能与老年非致命性慢性病发生之间的关联尚未得到研究。方法 为了研究中年适能与晚年慢性病结局之间的关联,将库珀中心纵向研究的参与者数据与医疗保险理赔数据相链接。我们研究了18670名健康参与者(女性占21.1%;中位年龄49岁),他们存活至1999年1月1日至2009年12月31日期间获得医疗保险覆盖。通过巴尔克跑步机运动时间估算的适能作为连续变量(以代谢当量[METs]表示)并根据年龄和性别特定五分位数进行分析。使用经过验证的算法定义了八种常见慢性病,并使用改良的Cox比例风险模型评估中年适能与疾病数量之间的关联,该模型在按疾病数量对高危人群进行分层的同时,对年龄、体重指数、血压、胆固醇和血糖水平、饮酒情况和吸烟进行了调整。结果 在120780人年的医疗保险暴露期(中位随访26年)后,与最低适能五分位数(五分位数1)相比,最高适能五分位数(五分位数5)与慢性病发病率较低相关,在男性中为每100人年15.6[95%CI,15.0 - 16.2] 比28.2[27.4 - 29.0],在女性中为每100人年11.4[10.5 - 12.3] 比20.1[18.7 - 21.6]。多变量调整后,较高的适能(以METs表示)与男性(每MET风险比,0.95[95%CI,0.94 - 0.96])和女性(每MET 0.94[0.91 - 0.96])发生慢性病的风险较低相关。在死亡者(2406人[12.9%])中,相对于存活情况,较高的适能与发生慢性病的风险较低相关(压缩风险比,每MET 0.90[95%CI,0.88 - 0.92]),提示发病压缩。结论 在这个健康中年成年人队列中,适能与26年随访期间发生慢性病结局的较低风险显著相关。这些发现表明,较高的中年适能可能与老年发病压缩相关。