Benefits of physical activity on COPD hospitalisation depend on intensity
Journal article
Donaire-Gonzalez, David, Gimeno-Santos, Elena, Balcells, Eva, De Batlle, Jordi, Ramon, Maria A., Rodriguez, Esther, Farrero, Eva, Benet, Marta, Guerra, Stefano, Sauleda, Jaume, Ferrer, Antoni, Barberà, Joan A., Rodriguez-Roisin, Robert, Gea, Joaquim, Agusti, Alvar, Antó, Josep M., Garcia-Aymerich, Judith, PAC-COPD Study Group, , Ferrer, Jaume and PAC-COPD Study Group. (2015). Benefits of physical activity on COPD hospitalisation depend on intensity. European Respiratory Journal. 46(5), pp. 1281 - 1289. https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01699-2014
Authors | Donaire-Gonzalez, David, Gimeno-Santos, Elena, Balcells, Eva, De Batlle, Jordi, Ramon, Maria A., Rodriguez, Esther, Farrero, Eva, Benet, Marta, Guerra, Stefano, Sauleda, Jaume, Ferrer, Antoni, Barberà, Joan A., Rodriguez-Roisin, Robert, Gea, Joaquim, Agusti, Alvar, Antó, Josep M., Garcia-Aymerich, Judith, PAC-COPD Study Group, , Ferrer, Jaume and PAC-COPD Study Group |
---|---|
Abstract | The present study aims to disentangle the independent effects of the quantity and the intensity of physical activity on the risk reduction of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) hospitalisations. 177 patients from the Phenotype Characterization and Course of COPD (PAC-COPD) cohort (mean±sd age 71±8 years, forced expiratory volume in 1 s 52±16% predicted) wore the SenseWear Pro 2 Armband accelerometer (BodyMedia, Pittsburgh, PA, USA) for eight consecutive days, providing data on quantity (steps per day, physically active days and daily active time) and intensity (average metabolic equivalent tasks) of physical activity. Information on COPD hospitalisations during follow-up (2.5±0.8 years) was obtained from validated centralised datasets. During follow-up 67 (38%) patients were hospitalised. There was an interaction between quantity and intensity of physical activity in their effects on COPD hospitalisation risk. After adjusting for potential confounders in the Cox regression model, the risk of COPD hospitalisation was reduced by 20% (hazard ratio (HR) 0.79, 95% CI 0.67–0.93; p=0.005) for every additional 1000 daily steps at low average intensity. A greater quantity of daily steps at high average intensity did not influence the risk of COPD hospitalisations (HR 1.01, p=0.919). Similar results were found for the other measures of quantity of physical activity. Greater quantity of low-intensity physical activity reduces the risk of COPD hospitalisation, but high-intensity physical activity does not produce any risk reduction. |
Keywords | chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
Year | 2015 |
Journal | European Respiratory Journal |
Journal citation | 46 (5), pp. 1281 - 1289 |
Publisher | European Respiratory Society |
ISSN | 0903-1936 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.01699-2014 |
Scopus EID | 2-s2.0-84946546552 |
Page range | 1281 - 1289 |
Research Group | Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research |
Publisher's version | File Access Level Controlled |
Place of publication | United Kingdom |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8650w/benefits-of-physical-activity-on-copd-hospitalisation-depend-on-intensity
Restricted files
Publisher's version
94
total views0
total downloads2
views this month0
downloads this month