Yu Ruyi, Duncombe Stephanie L, Nemoto Yuta, Araujo Raphael Ho, Chung Hsin-Fang, Mielke Gregore I
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Br J Sports Med. 2025 Aug 26;59(17):1228-1241. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2024-109122.
To understand the associations of trajectories and accumulation of physical activity (PA) over adulthood with all-cause, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and cancer mortality.
Systematic review and meta-analyses.
PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, CINAHL, MEDLINE, SPORTDiscus, and reference lists of included studies.
Population-based prospective studies with (1) non-clinical adult population, (2) PA assessed ≥2 timepoints as exposure, (3) all-cause, CVD or cancer mortality as outcomes with risk measures, and (4) publication up to 9 April 2024 and in English.
85 studies with three main types of PA exposure (ie, trajectory, time-varying, and cumulative/average) were included. Of these, 77 assessed all-cause mortality, 34 assessed CVD mortality, and 15 assessed cancer mortality. Overall, higher PA was associated with lower risks of all outcomes. Consistently and increasingly active individuals had around 20-40% lower risk of all-cause mortality and 30-40% lower risk of CVD mortality; however, the associations with decreasing PA patterns were less evident. Time-varying and cumulative/average PA illustrated similar inverse associations between higher PA levels and all-cause and CVD mortality. The associations were weaker and less robust for cancer mortality. Non-linear dose-response associations suggested risk reductions in all-cause and CVD mortality for meeting PA guidelines, but consistent/increasing PA below the guidelines also provided health benefits.
Consistently/increasingly accumulated PA over adulthood can reduce the risk of all-cause and CVD mortality, while the health benefits from decreasing PA patterns require further exploration.
了解成年期身体活动(PA)轨迹及其累积量与全因死亡率、心血管疾病(CVD)死亡率和癌症死亡率之间的关联。
系统评价和荟萃分析。
PubMed、Embase、Scopus、Cochrane图书馆、Web of Science、CINAHL、MEDLINE、SPORTDiscus以及纳入研究的参考文献列表。
基于人群的前瞻性研究,满足以下条件:(1)非临床成年人群;(2)将PA评估为暴露因素且评估时间点≥2次;(3)将全因死亡率、CVD死亡率或癌症死亡率作为结局指标并采用风险测量方法;(4)截至2024年4月9日发表且为英文文献。
纳入了85项研究,这些研究涉及三种主要的PA暴露类型(即轨迹、随时间变化以及累积/平均)。其中,77项评估了全因死亡率,34项评估了CVD死亡率,15项评估了癌症死亡率。总体而言,较高的PA与所有结局的较低风险相关。持续且活动量逐渐增加的个体全因死亡率风险降低约20%-40%,CVD死亡率风险降低30%-40%;然而,与PA模式下降的关联不太明显。随时间变化的PA以及累积/平均PA在较高PA水平与全因死亡率和CVD死亡率之间呈现出相似的反向关联。对于癌症死亡率,这些关联较弱且不太稳健。非线性剂量反应关联表明,达到PA指南可降低全因死亡率和CVD死亡率风险,但低于指南水平的持续/增加的PA也具有健康益处。
成年期持续/逐渐累积的PA可降低全因死亡率和CVD死亡率风险,而PA模式下降所带来的健康益处仍需进一步探索。