| Literature DB >> 20980470 |
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20980470 PMCID: PMC2963526 DOI: 10.2337/db10-0822
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
FIG. 1.Average steps per day among Old Order Amish men and women (12) compared with contemporary U.S. adults in the 2005–2006 U.S. NHANES (13) and the 2003 America on the Move Study (14).
FIG. 2.RRs of all-cause mortality across levels of physical activity in the Harvard Alumni Study (17) (A) and cardiorespiratory fitness in the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study (18) (B).
Summary of prospective epidemiological studies of sedentary behavior and mortality in humans
| Study (ref.) | Sample size | Follow-up | Sedentary behaviors | Outcomes | HR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Japan Public Health Center (JPHC) Study ( | 83,034 men and women | 8.7 years | Daily sitting | All-cause mortality | ||
| Men | ||||||
| <3 h/day | 1.00 | |||||
| 3–8 h/day | 1.02 (0.95–1.11) | |||||
| ≥8 h/day | 1.18 (1.04–1.35) | |||||
| Women | ||||||
| <3 h/day | 1.00 | |||||
| 3–8 h/day | 0.95 (0.85–1.06) | |||||
| ≥8 h/day | 1.10 (0.82–1.25) | |||||
| Canada Fitness Survey ( | 17,013 men and women | 12.0 years | Daily sitting | All-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality | ||
| All-cause mortality | ||||||
| None | 1.00 | |||||
| ¼ of time | 1.00 (0.86–1.18) | |||||
| ½ of time | 1.11 (0.94–1.30) | |||||
| ¾ of time | 1.36 (1.14–1.63) | |||||
| All of time | 1.54 (1.25–1.91) | |||||
| <0.0001 | ||||||
| CVD mortality | ||||||
| None | 1.00 | |||||
| ¼ of time | 1.01 (0.77–1.31) | |||||
| ½ of time | 1.22 (0.94–1.60) | |||||
| ¾ of time | 1.47 (1.09–1.96) | |||||
| All of time | 1.54 (1.09–2.17) | |||||
| <0.0001 | ||||||
| Cancer mortality | ||||||
| None | 1.00 | |||||
| ¼ of time | 0.92 (0.71–1.20) | |||||
| ½ of time | 0.91 (0.69–1.20) | |||||
| ¾ of time | 0.96 (0.69–1.33) | |||||
| All of time | 1.07 (0.72–1.61) | |||||
| NS | ||||||
| Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle (AusDiab) Study ( | 8,800 men and women | 6.6 years | TV viewing | All-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality | ||
| All-cause mortality | ||||||
| <2 h/day | 1.00 | |||||
| 2–4 h/day | 1.13 (0.87–1.36) | |||||
| ≥4 h/day | 1.46 (1.04–2.05) | |||||
| CVD mortality | ||||||
| None | 1.00 | |||||
| 2–4 h/day | 1.19 (0.72–2.00) | |||||
| ≥4 h/day | 1.80 (1.00–3.25) | |||||
| Cancer mortality | ||||||
| None | 1.00 | |||||
| 2–4 h/day | 1.12 (0.75–1.66) | |||||
| ≥4 h/day | 1.48 (0.88–2.49) | |||||
| Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study (ACLS) ( | 7,744 men | 21.0 years | TV viewing, riding in car | CVD mortality | ||
| TV viewing | ||||||
| <4 h/week | 1.00 | |||||
| 4–8 h/week | 1.02 (0.74–1.42) | |||||
| 8–12 h/week | 1.27 (0.90–1.78) | |||||
| >12 h/week | 0.96 (0.68–1.36) | |||||
| 0.94 | ||||||
| Riding in car | ||||||
| <4 h/week | 1.00 | |||||
| 4–7 h/week | 1.09 (0.77–1.54) | |||||
| 7–10 h/week | 1.33 (0.96–1.83) | |||||
| >10 h/week | 1.37 (1.01–1.87) | |||||
| 0.01 | ||||||
| EPIC-Norfolk Study ( | 13,197 men and women | 9.5 years | TV viewing | All-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality | ||
| All-cause mortality | ||||||
| per h/day | 1.05 (1.01–1.09) | |||||
| CVD mortality | ||||||
| per h/day | 1.08 (1.01–1.16) | |||||
| Cancer mortality | ||||||
| per h/day | 1.04 (0.98–1.10) |
*Adjusted for age, geographic area, occupation, history of diabetes, smoking, alcohol intake, BMI, total energy intake, heavy physical work or strenuous exercise, walking or standing, and leisure-time sports or exercise;
‡adjusted for age, sex, smoking, alcohol consumption, leisure-time physical activity, and physical activity readiness;
†adjusted for age, sex, smoking, education, total energy intake, alcohol intake, diet quality index, waist circumference, hypertension, cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, lipid-lowering medication use, glucose tolerance status, and exercise time;
§adjusted for age, physical inactivity, current smoker, alcohol intake, BMI, family history of CVD, hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia; and
‖adjusted for age, gender, education level, smoking status, alcohol consumption, history of diabetes, family history of CVD, family history of cancer, total physical activity energy expenditure, and medication use for hypertension or dyslipidemia (not in models for cancer mortality). NS, not significant.
FIG. 3.HRs for all-cause mortality across categories of leisure-time physical activity (active defined as expending ≥7.5 MET · h · wk−1) and daily sitting time in 17,013 men and women from the Canada Fitness Survey Follow-Up Study.
FIG. 4.Relationship between TV viewing and the development of obesity and type 2 diabetes over 6 years of follow-up in women 30–55 years of age from the Nurses' Health Study (36). Models are adjusted for age, smoking, alcohol use, hormone use, physical activity, total fat, cereal fiber, glycemic load, and total calories.