Aims/hypothesis
High levels of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and physical activity (PA) are associated with a favourable metabolic risk
profile. However, there has been no thorough exploration of the independent contributions of cardiorespiratory fitness and
subcomponents of activity (total PA, time spent sedentary, and time spent in light, moderate and vigorous intensity PA) to
metabolic risk factors in children and the relative importance of these factors.
Methods
We performed a population-based, cross-sectional study in 9- to 10- and 15- to 16-year-old boys and girls from three regions
of Europe (n = 1709). We examined the independent associations of subcomponents of PA and CRF with metabolic risk factors (waist circumference,
BP, fasting glucose, insulin, triacylglycerol and HDL-cholesterol levels). Clustered metabolic risk was expressed as a continuously
distributed score calculated as the average of the standardised values of the six subcomponents.
Results
CRF (standardised β = −0.09, 95% CI −0.12, −0.06), total PA (standardised β = −0.08, 95% CI −0.10, −0.05) and all other subcomponents of PA were significantly associated with clustered metabolic risk.
After excluding waist circumference from the summary score and further adjustment for waist circumference as a confounding
factor, the magnitude of the association between CRF and clustered metabolic risk was attenuated (standardised β = −0.05, 95% CI −0.08, −0.02), whereas the association with total PA was unchanged (standardised β = −0.08 95% CI −0.10, −0.05).
Conclusions/interpretation
PA and CRF are separately and independently associated with individual and clustered metabolic risk factors in children. The
association between CRF and clustered risk is partly mediated or confounded by adiposity, whereas the association between
activity and clustered risk is independent of adiposity. Our results suggest that fitness and activity affect metabolic risk
through different pathways.
Keywords Aerobic fitness - Exercise - Metabolic syndrome