» Articles » PMID: 39821867

The Associations of Long-term Physical Activity in Adulthood with Later Biological Ageing and All-cause Mortality - a Prospective Twin Study

Overview
Journal Eur J Epidemiol
Date 2025 Jan 17
PMID 39821867
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objectives: The association between leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and a lower risk of mortality is susceptible to bias from multiple sources. We investigated the potential of biological ageing to mediate the association between long-term LTPA and mortality and whether the methods used to account for reverse causality affect the interpretation of this association.

Methods: Study participants were twins from the older Finnish Twin Cohort (n = 22,750; 18-50 years at baseline). LTPA was assessed using questionnaires in 1975, 1981 and 1990. The mortality follow-up lasted until 2020 and biological ageing was assessed using epigenetic clocks in a subsample (n = 1,153) with blood samples taken during the follow-up. Using latent profile analysis, we identified classes with distinct longitudinal LTPA patterns and studied differences in biological ageing between these classes. We employed survival models to examine differences in total, short-term and long-term all-cause mortality, and multilevel models for twin data to control for familial factors.

Results: We identified four classes of long-term LTPA: sedentary, moderately active, active and highly active. Although biological ageing was accelerated in sedentary and highly active classes, after adjusting for other lifestyle-related factors, the associations mainly attenuated. Physically active classes had a maximum 7% lower risk of total mortality over the sedentary class, but this association was consistent only in the short term. After accounting for familial factors and excluding participants reporting prevalent cardiovascular diseases, LTPA exhibited less favourable associations with mortality.

Conclusion: The association between LTPA and lower all-cause mortality may be largely due to genetic confounding and reverse causality.

Citing Articles

The association between exercise, activities, and frailty in older Chinese adults: a cross-sectional study based on the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS) data.

Dai L, Tang Y, Guo Y, Lai X, Wang X, Li B BMC Geriatr. 2025; 25(1):131.

PMID: 40012051 PMC: 11863621. DOI: 10.1186/s12877-025-05802-2.


Exercise intensity and training alter the innate immune cell type and chromosomal origins of circulating cell-free DNA in humans.

Rodrigues K, Weng Z, Graham Z, Lavin K, McAdam J, Tuggle S Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025; 122(3):e2406954122.

PMID: 39805013 PMC: 11761974. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2406954122.

References
1.
Schnohr P, Lange P, Scharling H, Skov Jensen J . Long-term physical activity in leisure time and mortality from coronary heart disease, stroke, respiratory diseases, and cancer. The Copenhagen City Heart Study. Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil. 2006; 13(2):173-9. DOI: 10.1097/01.hjr.0000198923.80555.b7. View

2.
Leskinen T, Kujala U . Health-Related Findings Among Twin Pairs Discordant for Leisure-Time Physical Activity for 32 Years: The TWINACTIVE Study Synopsis. Twin Res Hum Genet. 2015; 18(3):266-72. DOI: 10.1017/thg.2015.23. View

3.
Shiroma E, Lee I . Can we proceed with physical activity recommendations if (almost) no clinical trial data exist on mortality?. Br J Sports Med. 2018; 52(14):888-889. PMC: 6100792. DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2018-099185. View

4.
Lopez-Otin C, Blasco M, Partridge L, Serrano M, Kroemer G . Hallmarks of aging: An expanding universe. Cell. 2023; 186(2):243-278. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2022.11.001. View

5.
Chilunga F, Henneman P, Elliott H, Cronje H, Walia G, Meeks K . Epigenetic age acceleration in the emerging burden of cardiometabolic diseases among migrant and non-migrant African populations: the population based cross-sectional RODAM study. Lancet Healthy Longev. 2022; 2(6):E327-E339. PMC: 7612337. DOI: 10.1016/S2666-7568(21)00087-8. View