Sedentary time and its association with risk for disease incidence, mortality, and hospitalization in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- PMID: 25599350
- DOI: 10.7326/M14-1651
Sedentary time and its association with risk for disease incidence, mortality, and hospitalization in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Erratum in
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Correction: Sedentary Time and Its Association With Risk for Disease Incidence, Mortality, and Hospitalization in Adults.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Sep 1;163(5):400. doi: 10.7326/L15-5134. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 26322710 No abstract available.
Abstract
Background: The magnitude, consistency, and manner of association between sedentary time and outcomes independent of physical activity remain unclear.
Purpose: To quantify the association between sedentary time and hospitalizations, all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer in adults independent of physical activity.
Data sources: English-language studies in MEDLINE, PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Web of Knowledge, and Google Scholar databases were searched through August 2014 with hand-searching of in-text citations and no publication date limitations.
Study selection: Studies assessing sedentary behavior in adults, adjusted for physical activity and correlated to at least 1 outcome.
Data extraction: Two independent reviewers performed data abstraction and quality assessment, and a third reviewer resolved inconsistencies.
Data synthesis: Forty-seven articles met our eligibility criteria. Meta-analyses were performed on outcomes for cardiovascular disease and diabetes (14 studies), cancer (14 studies), and all-cause mortality (13 studies). Prospective cohort designs were used in all but 3 studies; sedentary times were quantified using self-report in all but 1 study. Significant hazard ratio (HR) associations were found with all-cause mortality (HR, 1.240 [95% CI, 1.090 to 1.410]), cardiovascular disease mortality (HR, 1.179 [CI, 1.106 to 1.257]), cardiovascular disease incidence (HR, 1.143 [CI, 1.002 to 1.729]), cancer mortality (HR, 1.173 [CI, 1.108 to 1.242]), cancer incidence (HR, 1.130 [CI, 1.053 to 1.213]), and type 2 diabetes incidence (HR, 1.910 [CI, 1.642 to 2.222]). Hazard ratios associated with sedentary time and outcomes were generally more pronounced at lower levels of physical activity than at higher levels.
Limitation: There was marked heterogeneity in research designs and the assessment of sedentary time and physical activity.
Conclusion: Prolonged sedentary time was independently associated with deleterious health outcomes regardless of physical activity.
Primary funding source: None.
Comment in
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Too much sitting and chronic disease risk: steps to move the science forward.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Jan 20;162(2):146-7. doi: 10.7326/M14-2552. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 25599352 No abstract available.
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Prolonged sitting increases risk of serious illness and death regardless of exercise, study finds.BMJ. 2015 Jan 19;350:h306. doi: 10.1136/bmj.h306. BMJ. 2015. PMID: 25646739 No abstract available.
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[Sedentary lifestyle and mortality].Semergen. 2015 Nov-Dec;41(8):450-1. doi: 10.1016/j.semerg.2015.03.002. Epub 2015 Apr 16. Semergen. 2015. PMID: 25891486 Spanish. No abstract available.
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Sedentary Time and Risk for Mortality.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Jun 16;162(12):875-6. doi: 10.7326/L15-5060-2. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 26075764 No abstract available.
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Sedentary Time and Risk for Mortality.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Jun 16;162(12):875. doi: 10.7326/L15-0180. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 26075765 No abstract available.
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