Sedentary time and cardio-metabolic biomarkers in US adults: NHANES 2003-06

Genevieve N Healy, Charles E Matthews, David W Dunstan, Elisabeth A H Winkler, Neville Owen, Genevieve N Healy, Charles E Matthews, David W Dunstan, Elisabeth A H Winkler, Neville Owen

Abstract

Aims: Prolonged sedentary time is ubiquitous in developed economies and is associated with an adverse cardio-metabolic risk profile and premature mortality. This study examined the associations of objectively assessed sedentary time and breaks (interruptions) in sedentary time with continuous cardio-metabolic and inflammatory risk biomarkers, and whether these associations varied by sex, age, and/or race/ethnicity.

Methods and results: Cross-sectional analyses with 4757 participants (≥ 20 years) from the 2003/04 and 2005/06 US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). An Actigraph accelerometer was used to derive sedentary time [< 100 counts per minute (cpm)] and breaks in sedentary time. Independent of potential confounders, including moderate-to-vigorous exercise, detrimental linear associations (P for trends < 0.05) of sedentary time with waist circumference, HDL-cholesterol, C-reactive protein, triglycerides, insulin, HOMA-%B, and HOMA-%S were observed. Independent of potential confounders and sedentary time, breaks were beneficially associated with waist circumference and C-reactive protein (P for trends <0.05). There was limited evidence of meaningful differences in associations with biomarkers by age, sex, or race/ethnicity. Notable exceptions were sex-differences in the associations of sedentary time and breaks with HDL-cholesterol, and race/ethnicity differences in the association of sedentary time with waist circumference with associations detrimental in non-Hispanic whites, null in Mexican Americans, and beneficial in non-Hispanic blacks.

Conclusion: These are the first population-representative findings on the deleterious associations of prolonged sedentary time with cardio-metabolic and inflammatory biomarkers. The findings suggest that clinical communications and preventive health messages on reducing and breaking up sedentary time may be beneficial for cardiovascular disease risk.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Associations of total sedentary time (AE) and breaks in sedentary time (F) with cardio-metabolic biomarkers by race/ethnicity (Model 2) in US adults ≥20 years (NHANES 2003–06). Only associations where a significant interaction (P < 0.1) was observed are shown. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001 from Quartile 1 (reference). Quartile cutpoints for total sedentary time (hours/day) are: 7.39, 8.59, 9.72 for non-Hispanic whites (clear triangle), 6.20, 7.48, 8.85 for Mexican Americans (filled orange triangle), and 7.19, 8.49, 9.51 for non-Hispanic blacks (clear blue square). Quartile cutpoints for breaks are: 472, 558, 645 for non-Hispanic whites, 478, 575, 649 for Mexican Americans, and 449, 545, 638 for non-Hispanic blacks. Sedentary variables standardized for wear time prior to categorization.

Source: PubMed

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