The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Associations between exercise training, physical activity, sedentary behavior and mortality: An umbrella review of meta-analyses: physical activity and mortality

Associations between exercise training, physical activity, sedentary behavior and mortality: An umbrella review of meta-analyses: physical activity and mortality
Associations between exercise training, physical activity, sedentary behavior and mortality: An umbrella review of meta-analyses: physical activity and mortality
Background: numerous studies support the association of exercise training, physical activity (PA), and sedentary behavior (SB) with both mortality and morbidity outcomes. The results across studies have been inconsistent, and no umbrella reviews have yet been conducted on this topic.

Methods: we conducted an umbrella review of meta-analyses of observational studies by screening articles in PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science databases from inception to 30 April 2024. Quality appraisal of each included meta-analysis was done using the AMSTAR 2 tool, with evidence certainty evaluated based on statistical significance, study size, heterogeneity, small-study effects, prediction intervals (PI), and potential biases.

Results: frothy-eight meta-analyses were included (AMSTAR 2 ratings: high 25, moderate 10, low 2, critically low 11). No evidence was highly suggestive or convincing. Suggestive evidence linked any PA and SB to lower and higher risks of all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality, respectively. Suggestive evidence indicated a significant association between self-reported and device-measured total PA (equivalent odds ratio [eOR] 0.78 [0.70 to 0.86] and eHR = 0.50 [0.38 to 0.65], respectively), self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.73 [0.66 to 0.80]), device-measured daily steps (eHR = 0.44 [0.35 to 0.56]), and aerobic plus resistance training (eHR = 0.60 [0.56 to 0.64]) with lower all-cause mortality. Weak evidence supported links between self-reported and device-measured SB and higher mortality (eHR = 1.3 [1.22 to 1.38] and eHR = 2.16 [1.09 to 4.28], respectively). Suggestive evidence was noted for the association between self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.74 [0.69 to 0.80]), resistance training (eHR = 0.82 [0.81 to 0.84]) with cardiovascular mortality. Suggestive evidence was also found for the association between self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.87 [0.83 to 0.91]) with cancer mortality. Associations between self-reported running time and mortality from all causes, cardiovascular diseases (CVD), and cancer did not reach statistical significance, nor did the association between low skeletal muscle mass and all-cause mortality. Meta-regression analyses showed that physical activity reduces mortality risk, with age reducing the protective effects against all-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality. We also found that combined exercise training (aerobic plus resistance) most effectively reduces all-cause and CVD mortality.

Conclusions: converging evidence supports that physical activity and sedentary behaviour are associated with lower and higher rates of all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality, respectively. More high-quality prospective studies are needed for a better understanding of the associations between running time and also TV-viewing time and health-related outcomes.
2190-5991
Rahmati, Masoud
ac8e8113-51b9-4d63-b046-2bdbafb3217d
Lee, Hyeri
c1921b95-8b2f-466c-a1ff-1bd65a9aae20
Lee, Hayeon
80e66bad-825e-43d4-bd0d-e6103c5ed5cb
Park, Jaeyu
5e0b8d72-20d7-4a46-ae61-1b5d611e3ec9
Tadum, Djandan
402e07c7-ab8f-4b6f-810e-bb018a755d18
Vithran, Arthur
94f20104-33e0-4688-9784-27a43b5b10f0
Li, Yusheng
7f45e2ed-7380-44eb-9bae-34ce3d93eb6b
Kazemi, Abdolreza
68dbf73b-f021-47e1-a1bc-9b72c23144a3
Boyer, Laurent
72a17e4a-21bc-4b59-a806-d49b43d7c8a7
Fond, Guillaume
0b173363-39e0-41cc-93fc-fd954f2e432a
Smith, Lee
1784249d-fa7a-4b03-b87a-aed5bafef543
Veronese, Nicola
a9a97f63-a828-45a3-bae0-68182c5a44fd
Soysal, Pinar
d5ec9bec-7a62-4aac-a7d0-f70939874acb
Dragioti, Elena
53e535be-b473-4ab8-b7f1-2522b7b70cda
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Kang, Jiseung
533716e6-346f-4018-8234-ba405dc93a7c
Yon, Dong Keon
1c7386e1-7a78-441c-942e-c9b35a1203cc
Solmi, Marco
8dc5ef1e-4b0d-4047-a55b-6c4c7a93cf00
Rahmati, Masoud
ac8e8113-51b9-4d63-b046-2bdbafb3217d
Lee, Hyeri
c1921b95-8b2f-466c-a1ff-1bd65a9aae20
Lee, Hayeon
80e66bad-825e-43d4-bd0d-e6103c5ed5cb
Park, Jaeyu
5e0b8d72-20d7-4a46-ae61-1b5d611e3ec9
Tadum, Djandan
402e07c7-ab8f-4b6f-810e-bb018a755d18
Vithran, Arthur
94f20104-33e0-4688-9784-27a43b5b10f0
Li, Yusheng
7f45e2ed-7380-44eb-9bae-34ce3d93eb6b
Kazemi, Abdolreza
68dbf73b-f021-47e1-a1bc-9b72c23144a3
Boyer, Laurent
72a17e4a-21bc-4b59-a806-d49b43d7c8a7
Fond, Guillaume
0b173363-39e0-41cc-93fc-fd954f2e432a
Smith, Lee
1784249d-fa7a-4b03-b87a-aed5bafef543
Veronese, Nicola
a9a97f63-a828-45a3-bae0-68182c5a44fd
Soysal, Pinar
d5ec9bec-7a62-4aac-a7d0-f70939874acb
Dragioti, Elena
53e535be-b473-4ab8-b7f1-2522b7b70cda
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Kang, Jiseung
533716e6-346f-4018-8234-ba405dc93a7c
Yon, Dong Keon
1c7386e1-7a78-441c-942e-c9b35a1203cc
Solmi, Marco
8dc5ef1e-4b0d-4047-a55b-6c4c7a93cf00

Rahmati, Masoud, Lee, Hyeri, Lee, Hayeon, Park, Jaeyu, Tadum, Djandan, Vithran, Arthur, Li, Yusheng, Kazemi, Abdolreza, Boyer, Laurent, Fond, Guillaume, Smith, Lee, Veronese, Nicola, Soysal, Pinar, Dragioti, Elena, Cortese, Samuele, Kang, Jiseung, Yon, Dong Keon and Solmi, Marco (2025) Associations between exercise training, physical activity, sedentary behavior and mortality: An umbrella review of meta-analyses: physical activity and mortality. Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: numerous studies support the association of exercise training, physical activity (PA), and sedentary behavior (SB) with both mortality and morbidity outcomes. The results across studies have been inconsistent, and no umbrella reviews have yet been conducted on this topic.

Methods: we conducted an umbrella review of meta-analyses of observational studies by screening articles in PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science databases from inception to 30 April 2024. Quality appraisal of each included meta-analysis was done using the AMSTAR 2 tool, with evidence certainty evaluated based on statistical significance, study size, heterogeneity, small-study effects, prediction intervals (PI), and potential biases.

Results: frothy-eight meta-analyses were included (AMSTAR 2 ratings: high 25, moderate 10, low 2, critically low 11). No evidence was highly suggestive or convincing. Suggestive evidence linked any PA and SB to lower and higher risks of all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality, respectively. Suggestive evidence indicated a significant association between self-reported and device-measured total PA (equivalent odds ratio [eOR] 0.78 [0.70 to 0.86] and eHR = 0.50 [0.38 to 0.65], respectively), self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.73 [0.66 to 0.80]), device-measured daily steps (eHR = 0.44 [0.35 to 0.56]), and aerobic plus resistance training (eHR = 0.60 [0.56 to 0.64]) with lower all-cause mortality. Weak evidence supported links between self-reported and device-measured SB and higher mortality (eHR = 1.3 [1.22 to 1.38] and eHR = 2.16 [1.09 to 4.28], respectively). Suggestive evidence was noted for the association between self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.74 [0.69 to 0.80]), resistance training (eHR = 0.82 [0.81 to 0.84]) with cardiovascular mortality. Suggestive evidence was also found for the association between self-reported leisure time PA (eHR = 0.87 [0.83 to 0.91]) with cancer mortality. Associations between self-reported running time and mortality from all causes, cardiovascular diseases (CVD), and cancer did not reach statistical significance, nor did the association between low skeletal muscle mass and all-cause mortality. Meta-regression analyses showed that physical activity reduces mortality risk, with age reducing the protective effects against all-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality. We also found that combined exercise training (aerobic plus resistance) most effectively reduces all-cause and CVD mortality.

Conclusions: converging evidence supports that physical activity and sedentary behaviour are associated with lower and higher rates of all-cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality, respectively. More high-quality prospective studies are needed for a better understanding of the associations between running time and also TV-viewing time and health-related outcomes.

Text
Associations between exercise training, physical activity, sedentary behavior and mortality An umbrella review of meta-analyses - Accepted Manuscript
Download (147kB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 February 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498970
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498970
ISSN: 2190-5991
PURE UUID: 62fe6526-da8b-44bd-b477-f60a0fee6320
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Mar 2025 18:00
Last modified: 05 Apr 2025 04:01

Export record

Contributors

Author: Masoud Rahmati
Author: Hyeri Lee
Author: Hayeon Lee
Author: Jaeyu Park
Author: Djandan Tadum
Author: Arthur Vithran
Author: Yusheng Li
Author: Abdolreza Kazemi
Author: Laurent Boyer
Author: Guillaume Fond
Author: Lee Smith
Author: Nicola Veronese
Author: Pinar Soysal
Author: Elena Dragioti
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Author: Jiseung Kang
Author: Dong Keon Yon
Author: Marco Solmi

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×