Causal effects of physical activity and sedentary behaviour on health deficits accumulation in older adults.
Causality
health deficits
older adults
physical activity
sedentary behaviour
Journal
International journal of epidemiology
ISSN: 1464-3685
Titre abrégé: Int J Epidemiol
Pays: England
ID NLM: 7802871
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
09 07 2021
09 07 2021
Historique:
accepted:
16
10
2020
pubmed:
6
11
2020
medline:
31
7
2021
entrez:
5
11
2020
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Increasing physical activity (PA) and reducing sedentary behaviour (SB) have been associated with healthy ageing, but their effects when adjusted for reverse causation and selection bias remain unclear. A deficits accumulation (DA) index based on the number and severity of 51 health deficits (0-100%) was calculated at baseline and three biannual follow-up visits, in a representative cohort of 3 228 community-dwelling older adults in Spain. Average differences in DA index by previous recreational PA, household PA, mentally-active SB and passive SB were estimated using marginal structural models with inverse probability of exposure and censoring weights. Compared with participants with previous recreational PA of 10-19.9 metabolic equivalent hours/week (MET-hours/week), average differences in DA index (95% confidence intervals) were 0.19 (-1.09, 1.48), 0.69 (-0.23, 1.61), -0.66 (-1.34, 0.02), -0.87 (-1.59, -0.13) and -0.55 (-1.37, 0.28) for 0, 0.1-9.9, 20-29.9, 30-39.9 and ≥40 MET-hours/week, respectively (P for trend = 0.006). Household PA showed no effect on subsequent DA after adjusting for reverse causation. Women, but not men, who spent 7-14.9, 15-20.9 and ≥21 h/week on mentally active SB had DA decreases of 0.09 (-1.00, 1.19), 1.08 (-0.28, 2.45) and 2.17 (0.58, 3.75), respectively, compared with 1-6.9 h/week (P for trend = 0.005); whereas women who spent 3-3.9, 4-4.9 and ≥5 h/day on passive SB showed DA increases of 0.41 (-0.52, 1.35), 1.35 (0.13, 2.57) and 2.13 (0.78, 3.47), respectively, compared with 2-2.9 h/day (P for trend = 0.001). The proposed methodology allows estimation of the causal effects of PA and SB on ageing, by simulating a random assignment in which all subjects have the same probability of exposure.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
Increasing physical activity (PA) and reducing sedentary behaviour (SB) have been associated with healthy ageing, but their effects when adjusted for reverse causation and selection bias remain unclear.
METHODS
A deficits accumulation (DA) index based on the number and severity of 51 health deficits (0-100%) was calculated at baseline and three biannual follow-up visits, in a representative cohort of 3 228 community-dwelling older adults in Spain. Average differences in DA index by previous recreational PA, household PA, mentally-active SB and passive SB were estimated using marginal structural models with inverse probability of exposure and censoring weights.
RESULTS
Compared with participants with previous recreational PA of 10-19.9 metabolic equivalent hours/week (MET-hours/week), average differences in DA index (95% confidence intervals) were 0.19 (-1.09, 1.48), 0.69 (-0.23, 1.61), -0.66 (-1.34, 0.02), -0.87 (-1.59, -0.13) and -0.55 (-1.37, 0.28) for 0, 0.1-9.9, 20-29.9, 30-39.9 and ≥40 MET-hours/week, respectively (P for trend = 0.006). Household PA showed no effect on subsequent DA after adjusting for reverse causation. Women, but not men, who spent 7-14.9, 15-20.9 and ≥21 h/week on mentally active SB had DA decreases of 0.09 (-1.00, 1.19), 1.08 (-0.28, 2.45) and 2.17 (0.58, 3.75), respectively, compared with 1-6.9 h/week (P for trend = 0.005); whereas women who spent 3-3.9, 4-4.9 and ≥5 h/day on passive SB showed DA increases of 0.41 (-0.52, 1.35), 1.35 (0.13, 2.57) and 2.13 (0.78, 3.47), respectively, compared with 2-2.9 h/day (P for trend = 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
The proposed methodology allows estimation of the causal effects of PA and SB on ageing, by simulating a random assignment in which all subjects have the same probability of exposure.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33150410
pii: 5956331
doi: 10.1093/ije/dyaa228
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
852-865Informations de copyright
© The Author(s) 2020; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.