• Preventive medicine · Apr 2016

    Work, household, and leisure-time physical activity and risk of mortality in the EPIC-Spain cohort.

    • José Mª Huerta, María Dolores Chirlaque, María José Tormo, Genevieve Buckland, Eva Ardanaz, Larraitz Arriola, Diana Gavrila, Diego Salmerón, Lluís Cirera, Bienvenida Carpe, Esther Molina-Montes, Saioa Chamosa, Noemie Travier, José R Quirós, Aurelio Barricarte, Antonio Agudo, María José Sánchez, and Carmen Navarro.
    • Department of Epidemiology, Murcia Regional Health Council, IMIB-Arrixaca, Ronda de Levante, 11, 30008, Murcia, Spain; CIBER Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Melchor Fernández Almagro, 3-5, 28029, Madrid, Spain. Electronic address: jmhuerta.carm@gmail.com.
    • Prev Med. 2016 Apr 1; 85: 106-112.

    ObjectiveLarge-scale longitudinal data on the association of domain-specific physical activity (PA) and mortality is limited. Our objective was to evaluate the association of work, household (HPA), and leisure time PA (LTPA) with overall and cause-specific mortality in the EPIC-Spain study.Methods38,379 participants (62.4% women), 30-65years old, and free of chronic disease at baseline were followed-up from recruitment (1992 - 1996) to December 31st, 2008 to ascertain vital status and cause of death. PA was evaluated at baseline and at a 3-year follow-up with a validated questionnaire (EPIC-PAQ) and combined variables were used to classify the participants by sub-domains of PA. Associations with overall, cancer, and cardiovascular mortality risks were assessed using competing risk Cox regression models adjusted by potential confounders.ResultsAfter 13.6years of mean follow-up, 1371 deaths were available for analyses. HPA was strongly associated to reduced overall (hazard ratio (HR) for Q4 vs. Q1=0.47 (0.34, 0.64)) and cause-specific mortalities in women and to lower cancer mortality in men (P for trend=0.004), irrespective of age, education, and lifestyle and morbidity variables. LTPA was associated with lower mortality in women (HR for Q4 vs. Q1=0.71 (0.52, 0.98)), but not men. No relationships were found between sedentariness at work and overall mortality.ConclusionsHPA was associated to lower mortality risk in men and women from the EPIC-Spain cohort, whereas LTPA also contributed to reduce risk of death in women. Considering the large proportion of total daily PA that HPA represents in some population groups, these results are of public health importance.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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