Aims/hypothesis
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationships among adiposity, physical activity, physical fitness and the
development of diabetes in a diverse sample of Canadians.
Methods
The sample included 1,543 adults (709 men and 834 women) from the Canadian Physical Activity Longitudinal Study who were free
of diabetes at baseline (1988). Several indicators of adiposity (BMI, waist circumference, WHR, sum of skinfold thicknesses),
musculoskeletal fitness (sit-ups, push-ups, grip strength, trunk flexibility), cardiorespiratory fitness (maximal metabolic
equivalents [METs]) and leisure-time physical activity levels were measured at baseline. Participants were followed until
2002–2004 for the ascertainment of new cases of diabetes.
Results
The 15.5-year cumulative incidence of diabetes was 5.0% (5.2% in men, 4.9% in women). Adiposity and physical fitness, but
not physical activity, were significant predictors of diabetes after adjustment for age, sex and several covariates. For each
standard deviation of the indicators of adiposity, the risk of diabetes was 99–194% higher. Conversely, the risk was 70 and
61% lower for each standard deviation of maximal METs and composite musculoskeletal fitness score, respectively. Receiver
operating characteristic curve analyses confirmed that neither adiposity nor physical fitness provided a superior prediction
of incident diabetes.
Conclusions/interpretation
Adiposity and physical fitness were both important predictors of the development of diabetes in this cohort of Canadians.
Keywords Cohort study - Diabetes - Fitness - Lifestyle - Obesity - Physical activity