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Effects of sedentary behaviour interventions on biomarkers of cardiometabolic risk in adults: Systematic review with meta-analyses

Hadgraft, NT, Winkler, E, Climie, RE, Grace, MS, Romero, L, Owen, N, Dunstan, David, Healy, G and Dempsey, PC 2021, Effects of sedentary behaviour interventions on biomarkers of cardiometabolic risk in adults: Systematic review with meta-analyses, British Journal of Sports Medicine, vol. 55, no. 3, pp. 144-154, doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2019-101154.

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Title Effects of sedentary behaviour interventions on biomarkers of cardiometabolic risk in adults: Systematic review with meta-analyses
Author(s) Hadgraft, NT
Winkler, E
Climie, RE
Grace, MS
Romero, L
Owen, N
Dunstan, DavidORCID iD for Dunstan, David orcid.org/0000-0003-2629-9568
Healy, G
Dempsey, PC
Journal name British Journal of Sports Medicine
Volume number 55
Issue number 3
Start page 144
End page 154
Total pages 11
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Place of publication London, Eng.
Publication date 2021-02
ISSN 0306-3674
1473-0480
Keyword(s) cardiovascular
intervention
LIFE-STYLE
meta-analysis
physical activity
REDUCING SITTING TIME
RESTING BLOOD-PRESSURE
sedentary
SIT-STAND WORKSTATIONS
WEIGHT-LOSS
WORKPLACE INTERVENTION
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Sport Sciences
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY INTERVENTION
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
SHORT-TERM EFFICACY
PILOT INTERVENTION
Summary Context/purposeObservational and acute laboratory intervention research has shown that excessive sedentary time is associated adversely with cardiometabolic biomarkers. This systematic review with meta-analyses synthesises results from free living interventions targeting reductions in sedentary behaviour alone or combined with increases in physical activity.MethodsSix electronic databases were searched up to August 2019 for sedentary behaviour interventions in adults lasting for ≥7 days publishing cardiometabolic biomarker outcomes covering body anthropometry, blood pressure, glucose and lipid metabolism, and inflammation (54 studies). The pooled effectiveness of intervention net of control on 15 biomarker outcomes was evaluated using random effects meta-analyses in the studies with control groups not providing other relevant interventions (33 studies; 6–25 interventions analysed).ResultsInterventions between 2 weeks and <6 months in non-clinical populations from North America, Europe and Australia comprised much of the evidence base. Pooled effects revealed small, significant (p<0.05) beneficial effects on weight (≈ −0.6 kg), waist circumference (≈ −0.7 cm), percentage body fat (≈ −0.3 %), systolic blood pressure (≈ −1.1 mm Hg), insulin (≈ −1.4 pM) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (≈ 0.04 mM). Pooled effects on the other biomarkers (p>0.05) were also small, and beneficial in direction except for fat-free mass (≈ 0.0 kg). Heterogeneity ranged widely (I2=0.0–72.9).ConclusionsOur review of interventions targeting sedentary behaviour reductions alone, or combined with increases in physical activity, found evidence of effectiveness for improving some cardiometabolic risk biomarkers to a small degree. There was insufficient evidence to evaluate inflammation or vascular function. Key limitations to the underlying evidence base include a paucity of high-quality studies, interventions lasting for ≥12 months, sensitive biomarkers and clinical study populations (eg, type 2 diabetes).PROSPERO trial registration numberCRD42016041742
Language eng
DOI 10.1136/bjsports-2019-101154
Field of Research 09 Engineering
11 Medical and Health Sciences
13 Education
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Free to Read? Yes
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30162651

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Health
School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences
Open Access Collection
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Created: Thu, 17 Feb 2022, 11:43:42 EST

Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in DRO. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au.