| Literature DB >> 35476038 |
Michael M Hammond1, Yuankai Zhang2, Chathurangi H Pathiravasan2, Honghuang Lin3, Mayank Sardana4, Ludovic Trinquart2, Emelia J Benjamin1,5,6, Belinda Borrelli7, Emily S Manders1, Kelsey Fusco1, Jelena Kornej1, Nicole L Spartano8, Vik Kheterpal9, Christopher Nowak9, David D McManus10,11, Chunyu Liu2, Joanne M Murabito1,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of obesity is rising. Most previous studies that examined the relations between BMI and physical activity (PA) measured BMI at a single timepoint. The association between BMI trajectories and habitual PA remains unclear.Entities:
Keywords: BMI; cardiology; cardiovascular diseases; digital health; mHealth; mobile health; mobile health apps; physical activity; smartwatch
Year: 2022 PMID: 35476038 PMCID: PMC9096636 DOI: 10.2196/32348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Cardio ISSN: 2561-1011
Baseline characteristics of 837 eFHSa participants, by BMI trajectory groups, at examination 3.
| Variable | BMI trajectory groupsb | |||||
| Group 1 (n=292) | Group 2 (n=468) | Group 3 (n=77) |
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| Age (years), mean (SD) | 54 (9) | 53 (8) | 50 (10) | <.001 |
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| Female, n (%) | 166 (56.8) | 264 (56.4) | 54 (70.1) | .07 |
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| .44 |
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| European ancestry | 257 (88.0) | 425 (90.8) | 70 (90.9) |
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| Other ancestries | 35 (12.0) | 43 (9.2) | 7 (9.1) |
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| Hypertension, n (%) | 67 (22.9) | 116 (24.8) | 37 (48.1) | <.001 |
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| Diabetes, n (%) | 16 (5.5) | 22 (4.7) | 6 (7.8) | .52 |
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| Current smoking, n (%) | 11 (3.8) | 20 (4.3) | 5 (6.5) | .58 |
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| Cardiovascular disease, n (%) | 14 (4.8) | 16 (3.4) | 2 (2.6) | .59 |
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| .01 |
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| Yes | 29 (9.9) | 55 (11.8) | 18 (23.4) |
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| No | 261 (89.4) | 402 (85.9) | 59 (76.6) |
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| .34 |
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| Bachelor’s degree or higher | 197 (67.5) | 327 (69.9) | 47 (61.0) |
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| No college degree | 94 (32.2) | 140 (29.9) | 29 (37.7) |
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| .53 |
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| Married | 223 (76.4) | 356 (76.1) | 54 (70.1) |
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| Currently not married | 66 (22.6) | 110 (23.5) | 22 (28.6) |
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| Physical Activity Index, mean (SD) | 33.6 (4.4) | 33.3 (4.9) | 33.0 (5.4) | .51 |
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| <.001 |
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| Normal weight | 128 (43.8) | 115 (24.6) | 1 (1.3) |
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| Overweight | 103 (35.3) | 218 (46.6) | 15 (19.5) |
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| Obese | 61 (20.9) | 135 (28.8) | 61 (79.2) |
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aeFHS: electronic cohort of the Framingham Heart Study.
bGroup 1: Participants whose BMI remained stable over the study period; group 2: slight increase in BMI over the study period; group 3: large increase in BMI over the study period.
cP-value of chi-square test for categorical variables, and detecting if any of the groups are statistically different for continuous variables.
Figure 1The three trajectory groups based on BMI measures at three health exams for 837 participants in eFHS. eFHS: electronic cohort of the Framingham Heart Study.
Association between BMI trajectory groups and average daily step counta.
| Models and groups | Estimate | 95% CI |
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| Group 1c (n=285) | Referent | — | — |
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| Group 2 (n=455) | –422 | –823 to –21 | .04 |
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| Group 3 (n=75) | –1437 | –2084 to –790 | <.001 |
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| Group 1 | Referent | — | — |
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| Group 2 | –406 | –800 to –12 | .04 |
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| Group 3 | –1258 | –1908 to –609 | <.001 |
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| Group 1 | Referent | — | — |
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| Group 2 | –382 | –773 to 10 | .06 |
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| Group 3 | –1120 | –1766 to –475 | .001 |
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aComplete case analysis: n=815.
bModel 1 covariates: age, sex, wear time, and cohort.
cGroup 1: participants whose BMI remained stable over the study period; group 2: slight increase in BMI over the study period; group 3: large increase in BMI over the study period.
dModel 2 covariates: model 1 + hypertension, type 2 diabetes, current smoking, and cardiovascular disease.
eModel 3 covariates: model 2 + sleep apnea, education, and marital status
Figure 2Median daily step distributions of BMI trajectory groups at 90-day window.