| Literature DB >> 35253444 |
Borja Del Pozo Cruz1, Matthew Ahmadi2, Elif Inan-Eroglu2, Bo-Huei Huang2, Emmanuel Stamatakis2.
Abstract
Background Despite the well-established capacity of physical activity to reduce blood pressure, the associations between physical activity with cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and mortality in people living with hypertension are not well understood. We examine the dose-response associations of device-assessed physical activity with all-cause and CVD mortality and CVD incidence (total, stroke, and coronary heart disease) in adults with hypertension. Methods and Results This prospective study included data from 39 294 participants with hypertension in the UK Biobank study who had valid accelerometry data and for whom mortality and CVD followed-up data were available. We categorized moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and total physical activity volume into 4 categories based on the 10th, 50th, and 90th percentiles and used Cox regressions to estimate their associations with CVD mortality and incidence outcomes. Splines were used to assess the dose-response associations. During a median follow-up of 6.25 years (241 418 person-years), 1518 deaths (549 attributable to CVD) and 4933 CVD (fatal and nonfatal) incident events were registered. Compared with the lowest category of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, the relative risks (hazard ratios and 95% CIs) of all-cause mortality for increasing categories were 0.53 (0.46-0.61), 0.41 (0.34-0.49), and 0.36 (0.26-0.49). We found associations of similar magnitude for total CVD incidence, stroke, and coronary heart disease; and for total physical activity volume across all outcomes. For all outcomes, there were linear or nearly linear inverse dose-response relationships with no evidence of harms with high levels of physical activity. Results were robust to removing participants who died within the first 2 years. Conclusions Our findings underscore the importance of physical activity for people living with hypertension and provide novel insights to support the development of physical activity guideline recommendations for this high-risk group.Entities:
Keywords: activity; aging; exercise; high blood pressure; primary prevention; secondary prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35253444 PMCID: PMC9075331 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.121.023290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 6.106
Baseline Characteristics of the Participants in the Study by Categories Based on the 10th, 50th, and 90th Percentiles of Accelerometer‐Measured Total Volume of PA Distribution (n=39 294)
| Variable | Total | <26.28 mg | 26.28–<39.04 mg | 39.04–<56.23 mg | ≥56.23 mg |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total No. | 39 294 | 3930 | 15 716 | 15 718 | 3930 | |
| Sedentary behavior, min/wk | 4994.02 (676.76) | 5833.86 (542.95) | 5267.30 (496.98) | 4711.65 (504.31) | 4190.70 (558.23) | <0.001 |
| MVPA, min/wk | 716.56 (320.88) | 284.64 (114.26) | 532.20 (132.75) | 862.03 (172.65) | 1303.88 (273.29) | <0.001 |
| Total volume of PA, mg | 40.50 (12.52) | 22.22 (3.14) | 33.21 (3.55) | 46.04 (4.71) | 65.73 (10.66) | <0.001 |
| Sleep patterns, n (%) | <0.001 | |||||
| Poor | 916 (2.3) | 189 (4.8) | 372 (2.4) | 300 (1.9) | 55 (1.4) | |
| Intermediate | 15 437 (39.3) | 1856 (47.2) | 6569 (41.8) | 5697 (36.2) | 1315 (33.5) | |
| Healthy | 22 941 (58.4) | 1885 (48.0) | 8775 (55.8) | 9721 (61.8) | 2560 (65.1) | |
| Age, y | 58.39 (7.13) | 60.36 (6.75) | 59.16 (6.98) | 57.83 (7.07) | 55.53 (7.25) | <0.001 |
| Male sex, n (%) | 19 857 (50.5) | 2403 (61.1) | 8048 (51.2) | 7453 (47.4) | 1953 (49.7) | <0.001 |
| Obesity=yes, n (%) | 10 454 (26.6) | 1842 (46.9) | 4997 (31.8) | 3162 (20.1) | 453 (11.5) | <0.001 |
| Education=university/college, n (%) | 23 878 (60.8) | 2528 (64.3) | 9440 (60.1) | 9549 (60.8) | 2361 (60.1) | 0.001 |
| Smoking, n (%) | <0.001 | |||||
| Never | 21 230 (54.0) | 1877 (47.8) | 8451 (53.8) | 8694 (55.3) | 2208 (56.2) | |
| Previous | 15 582 (39.7) | 1611 (41.0) | 6245 (39.7) | 6194 (39.4) | 1532 (39.0) | |
| Current | 2482 (6.3) | 442 (11.2) | 1020 (6.5) | 830 (5.3) | 190 (4.8) | |
| Diet score, n (%) | <0.001 | |||||
| Poor | 9650 (25.0) | 748 (19.5) | 3716 (24.0) | 4061 (26.2) | 1125 (29.1) | |
| Reasonable | 2142 (5.5) | 329 (8.6) | 897 (5.8) | 740 (4.8) | 176 (4.6) | |
| Good | 26 850 (69.5) | 2759 (71.9) | 10 857 (70.2) | 10 672 (69.0) | 2562 (66.3) | |
| Alcohol use, n (%) | <0.001 | |||||
| Never | 1104 (2.8) | 153 (3.9) | 463 (2.9) | 402 (2.6) | 86 (2.2) | |
| Previous | 1054 (2.7) | 173 (4.4) | 449 (2.9) | 355 (2.3) | 77 (2.0) | |
| Occasional | 7457 (19.0) | 1045 (26.6) | 3124 (19.9) | 2649 (16.9) | 639 (16.3) | |
| Within guidelines | 13 264 (33.8) | 1075 (27.4) | 5349 (34.0) | 5547 (35.3) | 1293 (32.9) | |
| Double guidelines | 9530 (24.3) | 839 (21.3) | 3627 (23.1) | 4012 (25.5) | 1052 (26.8) | |
| Above double guidelines | 6885 (17.5) | 645 (16.4) | 2704 (17.2) | 2753 (17.5) | 783 (19.9) | |
| HbA1c, mmol/mol | 36.21 (6.23) | 38.20 (8.39) | 36.54 (6.77) | 35.69 (5.22) | 34.97 (4.29) | <0.001 |
| Preexisting CVD=yes, n (%) | 13 686 (34.8) | 1963 (49.9) | 5978 (38.0) | 4785 (30.4) | 960 (24.4) | <0.001 |
| Hypertension medication=yes, n (%) | 12 938 (32.9) | 1877 (47.8) | 5838 (37.1) | 4435 (28.2) | 788 (20.1) | <0.001 |
| Arterial pressure, mm Hg | 109.06 (10.19) | 108.69 (11.16) | 109.04 (10.36) | 109.11 (9.92) | 109.27 (9.50) | 0.071 |
| Diastolic blood pressure, mm Hg | 87.61 (9.79) | 87.33 (10.46) | 87.65 (9.91) | 87.59 (9.61) | 87.76 (9.27) | 0.238 |
| Systolic blood pressure, mm Hg | 151.96 (16.24) | 151.42 (17.65) | 151.82 (16.50) | 152.16 (15.85) | 152.30 (15.24) | 0.028 |
Values represent mean (SD) unless specified otherwise. CVD indicates cardiovascular disease; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; mg, milligravities; MVPA, moderate‐to‐vigorous PA; and PA, physical activity.
One‐way ANOVA for continuous variables and χ2 test for categorical variables.
Participants were categorized by how many healthy sleep characteristics (morning chronotype, adequate sleep duration [7–8 h/d], never or rare insomnia, never or rare snoring, and infrequent daytime sleepiness) they displayed into 3 groups (healthy, ≥4; intermediate, 2–3; poor, ≤1). ,
Obesity was ascertained on the basis of body mass index (ie, participants with a body mass index ≥30 kg/m2 were considered obese).
Dietary intake was collected using a touchscreen questionnaire that collected information on food frequency consumption. Dietary pattern was classified on the basis of the UK’s latest‐available National Health Service Eatwell Guide and a previously applied scoring procedure that considered consumption of fruits, vegetables, fish, red meats (unprocessed), and processed meats. One point was awarded for each of the following conditions that were met in each participant’s diet, with possible scores ranging from 0 to 4 points: total fruit and vegetable intake ≥4.5 pieces or servings/d (one serving of vegetables was considered to be 3 tablespoons of vegetables); total fish intake ≥2 times/wk; red meat (unprocessed) intake ≤5 times/wk; and processed meat intake ≤2 times/wk. Diets were categorized as poor (0), reasonable (1), and good (2–4).
Guidelines for alcohol use in the United Kingdom recommend no more than 14 units of alcohol per week for both men and women.
Figure 1Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for mortality outcomes by categories of average accelerometer‐measured total volume and moderate‐to‐vigorous intensity physical activity in adults with hypertension (n=39 294).
Models adjusted for age, sex, education, sedentary behavior (only models for moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity), sleep pattern, obesity, smoking, and alcohol use. Lines represent 95% CI and circle is the estimate (hazard ratio). HRs are in logarithmic scale. CHD indicates coronary heart disease; CVD, cardiovascular disease; mg, milligravities; and Ref., reference.
Figure 2Dose‐response association (adjusted hazard ratios [HRs] and associated 95% CI band) between accelerometer‐measured moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and total volume of physical activity with all‐cause (n=39 294; events=1518) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality (n=39 294; events=549).
Models adjusted for age, sex, education, sedentary behavior (only models for MVPA), sleep pattern, obesity, smoking, and alcohol use. Dose‐response associations were assessed with restricted cubic splines with knots at 10th, 50th, and 90th centiles of the distribution of the exposure of interest (reference category=675.36 min/wk of MVPA; and 39.04 milligravities [mg] for total volume of physical activity). HRs are in logarithmic scale. Dashed line (the line that goes along y=1) represents the reference value. Solid line is the estimate (hazard ratio) and dotted lines is the 95% CI.
Figure 3Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes (total, coronary heart disease [CHD], and stroke) by categories of average accelerometer‐measured total volume and moderate‐to‐vigorous intensity physical activity in adults with hypertension (total CVD, n=31 968; stroke, n=38 978; and CHD, n=36 669).
Models adjusted for age, sex, education, sedentary behavior (only models for moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity), sleep pattern, obesity, smoking, and alcohol use. Lines represent 95% CI and circle is the estimate (hazard ratio). HRs are in logarithmic scale. Mg indicates milligravities; and Ref., reference.
Figure 4Dose‐response association (adjusted hazard ratios [HRs] and associated 95% CI band) between accelerometer‐measured moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and total volume of physical activity with incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) (n=31 968; events=4933).
.Models adjusted for age, sex, education, sedentary behavior (only models for MVPA), sleep pattern, obesity, smoking, and alcohol use. Dose‐response associations were assessed with restricted cubic splines with knots at 10th, 50th, and 90th centiles of the distribution of the exposure of interest (reference category=695.52 min/wk of MVPA; and 39.65 milligravities [mg] for total volume of physical activity). HRs are in logarithmic scale. Dashed line (the line that goes along y=1) represents the reference value. Solid line is the estimate (hazard ratio) and dotted lines is the 95% CI.