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Association of sedentary time with risk of cardiovascular diseases and cardiovascular mortality: A systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies

Sunday O. Onagbiye, A. Guddemi, Ololade Julius Baruwa, Fabrizio Alberti, Anna Odone, Hannah Ricci, Maddalena Gaeta, Daniela Schmid, Cristian Ricci

2023Preventive Medicine43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Given the high prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD), we meta-analysed CVD relative risk (RR) in relation to high vs. low categories of self-reported and objectively assessed sedentary behaviours from cohort studies; in a sub-sample (n = 4 studies), the theoretical substitution of one hour spent sedentary with the same amount of time spent in light-intense physical activity was evaluated. Based on 19 studies (60,526 fatal and non-fatal CVD, 1,473,354 individuals and 13,559,139 persons-year) we estimated a 30% increased CVD risk for high vs. low categories of sedentary behaviour (RR = 1.29, confidence interval (CI) = 1.22;1.37). Every hour spent sedentary corresponds to a 5% increased fatal and non-fatal CVD risk (RR = 1.05, CI = 1.02;1.07). Dose-response meta-analysis revealed that sedentary behaviour is statistically significantly associated to fatal and non-fatal CVD risk following a J-shaped relation. Substituting one hour spent sedentary with physical activity of light intensity reduced the risk of fatal and non-fatal CVD events by one-fifth (RR =0.84, CI = 0.73;0.97). In meta-regression analysis, potential influential factors such as age, sex, and medical condition did not essentially alter the results.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRelative riskMeta-analysisConfidence intervalCohort studyCohortProspective cohort studyDemographySedentary lifestyleDiseaseInternal medicineLower riskObesitySociologyPhysical Activity and HealthObesity, Physical Activity, DietBehavioral Health and Interventions
Association of sedentary time with risk of cardiovascular diseases and cardiovascular mortality: A systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies | Litcius