Health benefits of leisure-time physical activity by socioeconomic status, lifestyle risk, and mental health: a multicohort study

IF 25.2 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Lancet Public Health Pub Date : 2025-02-03 DOI:10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00300-1
Solja T Nyberg, Philipp Frank, Jaana Pentti, Lars Alfredsson, Jenni Ervasti, Marcel Goldberg, Anders Knutsson, Aki Koskinen, Tea Lallukka, Maria Nordin, Ossi Rahkonen, Timo Strandberg, Sakari Suominen, Ari Väänänen, Jussi Vahtera, Marianna Virtanen, Hugo Westerlund, Marie Zins, Sari Stenholm, Séverine Sabia, Mika Kivimäki
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The aim of this study was to examine these benefits in terms of years lived free from major non-communicable diseases in subgroups with varying levels of risk factors.<h3>Methods</h3>Our analysis was based on a multicohort study of initially healthy European adults from the IPD-Work Consortium and initially healthy participants from the UK Biobank study. Self-reported leisure-time physical activity levels at baseline (1986–2010) were categorised as low (no or very little), intermediate (between low and recommended levels), and WHO-recommended (≥2·5 h of moderate or ≥1·25 h of vigorous physical activity per week). We divided the study population into 36 overlapping subgroups based on socioeconomic factors, lifestyle, and mental health at baseline, and assessed disease-free years between ages 40 years and 75 years for both the overall population and subgroups, accounting for coronary heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, cancer, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.<h3>Findings</h3>14 IPD-Work studies were assessed and six studies were excluded due to missing outcome data and unavailable data for pooling, resulting in the inclusion of eight studies with 124 909 participants. After the exclusion of 7685 participants due to prevalent diseases and 9265 due to missing data, the sample consisted of 107 959 initially healthy European adults (63 567 [58·9%] females and 44 392 [41·1%] males) from the IPD-Work consortium. For the UK Biobank sample, 9 238 453 million individuals were invited, 8 736 094 (94·6%) were non-respondents, and 502 359 participated in the baseline examination. After the exclusion of 73 460 participants, 428 899 participants had data on at least one measure of physical activity. 236 258 (55·1%) were female and 192 641 (44·9%) were male. During 1·6 million person-years at risk, 21 231 IPD-Work participants developed a non-communicable disease, while 101 319 UK Biobank participants developed a non-communicable disease over 4·8 million person-years at risk. Compared with individuals with low physical activity, those meeting the recommended physical activity levels during leisure-time gained an additional 1·1 (95% CI 1·0–1·2) to 2·0 (1·7–2·3) disease-free years, depending on sex and study. In males from the IPD-Work and UK Biobank cohorts, greater gains in disease-free years were observed in current smokers (2·4 [95% CI 2·1–2·8]) versus never smokers (0·7 [0·5–0·9]); those with low education (1·4 [1·1–1·7]) versus high education (0·8 [0·7–1·0]); low socioeconomic status (1·7 [1·5–2·0]) versus high socioeconomic status (0·9 [0·7–1·1]); and those with (1·6 [1·3–1·9]) versus without depressive symptoms (1·0 [0·9–1·1]; p value range &lt;0·0001–0·0008). Similar differences were seen in women for smoking (2·3 [95% CI 1·9–2·7] <em>vs</em> 0·9 [0·7–1·1]), socioeconomic status (1·7 [1·4–2·0] <em>vs</em> 0·8 [0·5–1·0]), depressive symptoms (1·4 [1·1–1·7] <em>vs</em> 1·0 [0·9–1·1]), and for heavy drinkers compared with moderate drinkers (1·4 [1·1–1·6] <em>vs</em> 0·9 [0·7–1·1]; p value range &lt;0·0001–0·010). No differences in physical activity-related health gains were observed between risk groups and non-risk groups by BMI, history of depression, and, in men, alcohol use (p value range 0·11–0·86).<h3>Interpretation</h3>In addition to confirming the association between leisure-time physical activity and increased disease-free years across population subgroups, our findings show that these health benefits are often more pronounced among individuals with pre-existing health risks or disadvantaged backgrounds than in those with more favourable risk factor profiles. This suggests that enhancing population-wide physical activity initiatives could help reduce health disparities, while incorporating physical activity into targeted strategies addressing social disadvantage, unhealthy lifestyles, and depression might enhance their effectiveness.<h3>Funding</h3>Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, US National Institute on Aging, and Research Council of Finland.","PeriodicalId":56027,"journal":{"name":"Lancet Public Health","volume":"19 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":25.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Lancet Public Health","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00300-1","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Background

Regular physical activity is recommended for all aged 5 years and older, but the health benefits gained might differ across population subgroups. The aim of this study was to examine these benefits in terms of years lived free from major non-communicable diseases in subgroups with varying levels of risk factors.

Methods

Our analysis was based on a multicohort study of initially healthy European adults from the IPD-Work Consortium and initially healthy participants from the UK Biobank study. Self-reported leisure-time physical activity levels at baseline (1986–2010) were categorised as low (no or very little), intermediate (between low and recommended levels), and WHO-recommended (≥2·5 h of moderate or ≥1·25 h of vigorous physical activity per week). We divided the study population into 36 overlapping subgroups based on socioeconomic factors, lifestyle, and mental health at baseline, and assessed disease-free years between ages 40 years and 75 years for both the overall population and subgroups, accounting for coronary heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, cancer, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Findings

14 IPD-Work studies were assessed and six studies were excluded due to missing outcome data and unavailable data for pooling, resulting in the inclusion of eight studies with 124 909 participants. After the exclusion of 7685 participants due to prevalent diseases and 9265 due to missing data, the sample consisted of 107 959 initially healthy European adults (63 567 [58·9%] females and 44 392 [41·1%] males) from the IPD-Work consortium. For the UK Biobank sample, 9 238 453 million individuals were invited, 8 736 094 (94·6%) were non-respondents, and 502 359 participated in the baseline examination. After the exclusion of 73 460 participants, 428 899 participants had data on at least one measure of physical activity. 236 258 (55·1%) were female and 192 641 (44·9%) were male. During 1·6 million person-years at risk, 21 231 IPD-Work participants developed a non-communicable disease, while 101 319 UK Biobank participants developed a non-communicable disease over 4·8 million person-years at risk. Compared with individuals with low physical activity, those meeting the recommended physical activity levels during leisure-time gained an additional 1·1 (95% CI 1·0–1·2) to 2·0 (1·7–2·3) disease-free years, depending on sex and study. In males from the IPD-Work and UK Biobank cohorts, greater gains in disease-free years were observed in current smokers (2·4 [95% CI 2·1–2·8]) versus never smokers (0·7 [0·5–0·9]); those with low education (1·4 [1·1–1·7]) versus high education (0·8 [0·7–1·0]); low socioeconomic status (1·7 [1·5–2·0]) versus high socioeconomic status (0·9 [0·7–1·1]); and those with (1·6 [1·3–1·9]) versus without depressive symptoms (1·0 [0·9–1·1]; p value range <0·0001–0·0008). Similar differences were seen in women for smoking (2·3 [95% CI 1·9–2·7] vs 0·9 [0·7–1·1]), socioeconomic status (1·7 [1·4–2·0] vs 0·8 [0·5–1·0]), depressive symptoms (1·4 [1·1–1·7] vs 1·0 [0·9–1·1]), and for heavy drinkers compared with moderate drinkers (1·4 [1·1–1·6] vs 0·9 [0·7–1·1]; p value range <0·0001–0·010). No differences in physical activity-related health gains were observed between risk groups and non-risk groups by BMI, history of depression, and, in men, alcohol use (p value range 0·11–0·86).

Interpretation

In addition to confirming the association between leisure-time physical activity and increased disease-free years across population subgroups, our findings show that these health benefits are often more pronounced among individuals with pre-existing health risks or disadvantaged backgrounds than in those with more favourable risk factor profiles. This suggests that enhancing population-wide physical activity initiatives could help reduce health disparities, while incorporating physical activity into targeted strategies addressing social disadvantage, unhealthy lifestyles, and depression might enhance their effectiveness.

Funding

Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, US National Institute on Aging, and Research Council of Finland.
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社会经济地位、生活方式风险和心理健康对休闲时间体育活动的健康益处:一项多队列研究
背景:建议所有5岁及以上的儿童定期进行体育锻炼,但所获得的健康益处可能因人群亚群而异。本研究的目的是在具有不同风险因素水平的亚组中,根据无主要非传染性疾病的生活年数来检查这些益处。我们的分析基于一项多队列研究,研究对象包括来自IPD-Work联盟的最初健康的欧洲成年人和来自英国生物银行研究的最初健康的参与者。基线时(1986-2010年)自我报告的休闲时间身体活动水平分为低(没有或很少)、中等(介于低水平和推荐水平之间)和世卫组织推荐(每周≥2.5小时的中度或≥1.25小时的剧烈身体活动)。我们根据基线时的社会经济因素、生活方式和精神健康状况将研究人群分为36个重叠的亚组,并评估了40岁至75岁之间的总体人群和亚组的无病年数,包括冠心病、中风、2型糖尿病、癌症、哮喘和慢性阻塞性肺疾病。结果:14项IPD-Work研究被评估,6项研究因缺少结局数据和无法获得合并数据而被排除,最终纳入8项研究,共1224909名受试者。在因流行疾病和数据缺失而排除7685名参与者和9265名参与者后,样本包括来自IPD-Work联盟的107 959名最初健康的欧洲成年人(63 567名[58.9%]女性和44 392名[41.1%]男性)。在英国生物银行样本中,邀请了9 238 4.53亿人,8 736 094人(94.6%)为非受访者,502 359人参加了基线检查。在排除73 460名参与者后,428 899名参与者至少有一项身体活动的数据。其中女性236 258例(55.1%),男性192 641例(44.9%)。在160万人年的风险中,有21 231名IPD-Work参与者患上了非传染性疾病,而英国生物银行的101 319名参与者在480万人年的风险中患上了非传染性疾病。与体力活动较少的个体相比,那些在闲暇时间达到推荐体力活动水平的人,根据性别和研究,增加了1.1 (95% CI 1.0 - 1.2)至2.0(1.7 - 2.3)年的无病时间。在来自IPD-Work和UK Biobank队列的男性中,当前吸烟者(2.4 [95% CI 2.1 - 1.8])比从不吸烟者(0.7[0.5 - 0.9])的无病年数增加更大;受教育程度低(1.4[1·1 - 1·7])vs受教育程度高(0.8[0·7 - 1·0]);低社会经济地位(1·7[1·5-2·0])vs高社会经济地位(0·9[0·7 - 1·1]);有(1·6[1·3-1·9])和无(1·0[0·9 - 1·1])抑郁症状组;P值范围<; 0.0001 - 0.0008)。在女性吸烟(2.3 [95% CI 1.9 - 2.7] vs 0.9[0.7 - 1.1])、社会经济地位(1.7 [1.4 - 1.0]vs 0.8[0.5 - 1.0])、抑郁症状(1.4 [1.1 - 1.7]vs 1.0[0.9 - 1.1])以及重度饮酒者与中度饮酒者(1.4 [1.1 - 1.6]vs 0.9[0.7 - 1.1])方面也存在类似差异;P值范围<; 0.0001 - 0.010)。在体力活动相关的健康收益方面,危险组和非危险组在BMI、抑郁史和男性酒精使用方面没有差异(p值范围为0.11 - 0.86)。除了在人群亚组中证实休闲时间体育活动与无病年数增加之间的关联外,我们的研究结果还表明,与具有更有利风险因素的个体相比,这些健康益处在先前存在健康风险或背景不利的个体中往往更为明显。这表明,加强全民体育活动倡议可以帮助减少健康差距,同时将体育活动纳入针对社会劣势、不健康生活方式和抑郁的有针对性战略可能会提高其有效性。资助:威康信托基金、英国医学研究委员会、美国国家老龄化研究所和芬兰研究委员会。
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来源期刊
Lancet Public Health
Lancet Public Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
55.60
自引率
0.80%
发文量
305
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Public Health is committed to tackling the most pressing issues across all aspects of public health. We have a strong commitment to using science to improve health equity and social justice. In line with the values and vision of The Lancet, we take a broad and inclusive approach to public health and are interested in interdisciplinary research. We publish a range of content types that can advance public health policies and outcomes. These include Articles, Review, Comment, and Correspondence. Learn more about the types of papers we publish.
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