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The Physical Behaviour Intensity Spectrum and Body Mass Index in School-Aged Youth: A Compositional Analysis of Pooled Individual Participant Data

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posted on 2023-10-04, 13:32 authored by Stuart J Fairclough, Liezel Hurter, Dorothea Dumuid, Ales Gába, Alex V Rowlands, Borja del Pozo Cruz, Ashley Cox, Matteo Crotti, Lawrence Foweather, Lee EF Graves, Owen Jones, Deborah A McCann, Robert J Noonan, Michael B Owen, James R Rudd, Sarah L Taylor, Richard Tyler, Lynne M Boddy
We examined the compositional associations between the intensity spectrum derived from incremental acceleration intensity bands and the body mass index (BMI) z-score in youth, and investigated the estimated differences in BMI z-score following time reallocations between intensity bands. School-aged youth from 63 schools wore wrist accelerometers, and data of 1453 participants (57.5% girls) were analysed. Nine acceleration intensity bands (range: 0–50 mg to ≥700 mg) were used to generate time-use compositions. Multivariate regression assessed the associations between intensity band compositions and BMI z-scores. Compositional isotemporal substitution estimated the differences in BMI z-score following time reallocations between intensity bands. The ≥700 mg intensity bandwas strongly and inversely associated with BMI z-score (p < 0.001). The estimated differences in BMI z-score when 5 min were reallocated to and from the ≥700 mg band and reallocated equally among the remaining bands were −0.28 and 0.44, respectively (boys), and −0.39 and 1.06, respectively (girls). The time in the ≥700 mg intensity band was significantly associated with BMI z-score, irrespective of sex. When even modest durations of time in this band were reallocated, the asymmetrical estimated differences in BMI z-score were clinically meaningful. The findings highlight the utility of the full physical activity intensity spectrum over a priori-determined absolute intensity cut-point approaches.

Funding

Funding for the selected contributing studies was provided by the Waterloo Foundation (#1669/3509), West Lancashire Sport Partnership, West Lancashire Leisure Trust, Edge Hill University, and Wigan Council. Alex Rowlands is supported by the Lifestyle Theme of the Leicester NHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre and NIHR Applied Research Collaborations East Midlands (ARC-EM). Dorothea Dumuid is supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Early Career Fellowship APP1162166 and by the Centre of Research Excellence in Driving Global Investment in Adolescent Health funded by NHMRC APP1171981.

History

Citation

Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 8778

Author affiliation

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

Volume

19

Issue

14

Publisher

MDPI AG

eissn

1660-4601

Acceptance date

2022-07-15

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-10-04

Language

en

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