Litcius/Paper detail

Twenty-four-hour movement guidelines during adolescence and its association with obesity at adulthood: results from a nationally representative study

Antônio García‐Hermoso, Yasmín Ezzatvar, Alicia M. Alonso‐Martínez, Robinson Ramírez‐Vélez, Míkel Izquierdo, José Francisco López‐Gil

2022European Journal of Pediatrics23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To determine the association between adherence to the 24-h movement guidelines during adolescence with obesity at adulthood 14 years later in a nationally representative cohort. We analyzed data from 6984 individuals who participated in Waves I (1994-1995) and IV (2008-2009) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) in the USA. Obesity was defined by the International Obesity Task Force cut-off points at Wave I and adult cut-points at Wave IV (body mass index [BMI]≥30 kg/m2 and waist circumference [WC]≥102 cm in male and 88 cm in female). Physical activity, screen time and sleep duration were self-reported. Adolescents who met screen time recommendation alone (β = -1.62 cm, 95%CI -2.68 cm to -0.56), jointly with physical activity (β = -2.25 cm, 95%CI -3.75 cm to -0.75 cm), and those who met all three recommendations (β = -1.92 cm, 95%CI -3.81 cm to -0.02 cm) obtained lower WC at Wave IV than those who did not meet any of these recommendations. Our results also show that meeting with screen time recommendations (IRR [incidence rate ratio] = 0.84, 95%CI 0.76 to 0.92) separately and jointly with physical activity recommendations (IRR = 0.86, 95%CI 0.67 to 0.97) during adolescence is associated with lower risk of abdominal obesity at adulthood. In addition, adolescents who met all 24-h movement recommendations had lower risk of abdominal obesity later in life (IRR = 0.76, 95%CI 0.60 to 0.97). CONCLUSION: Promoting the adherence to the 24-h movement guidelines from adolescence, especially physical activity and screen time, seems to be related with lower risk of abdominal obesity later in life, but not for BMI. WHAT IS KNOWN: • Some studies have shown a relationship between adherence to 24-h movement guidelines and adiposity or obesity markers in youth. However, most of these studies have a cross-sectional design or a short follow-up. WHAT IS NEW: • This is the first study which determined the association between adherence to the 24-h movement guidelines during adolescence with obesity at adulthood 14 years later in a nationally representative US cohort. • Meeting the 24-h movement guidelines from adolescence seems to be related with lower risk of abdominal obesity later in life, but not for body mass index.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineObesityWaistAbdominal obesityBody mass indexLongitudinal studyDemographyIncidence (geometry)CohortCohort studyRate ratioYoung adultConfidence intervalGerontologyInternal medicineSociologyOpticsPhysicsPathologyObesity, Physical Activity, DietPhysical Activity and HealthDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins