University of Exeter
Browse

Device-measured sleep characteristics, daily step count, and cardiometabolic health markers: Findings from the Prospective Physical Activity, Sitting, and Sleep (ProPASS) Consortium

Download (2.18 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-31, 13:51 authored by Wenxin Bian, Matthew N Ahmadi, Raaj Kishore Biswas, Joanna M Blodgett, Andrew J Atkin, Hsiu-Wen Chan, Borja del Pozo Cruz, Kristin Suorsa, Esmée A Bakker, Richard PulsfordRichard Pulsford, Gregore I Mielke, Peter J Johansson, Pasan Hettiarachchi, Nicholas A Koemel, Dick HJ Thijssen, Sari Stenholm, Gita D Mishra, Armando Teixeira-Pinto, Vegar Rangul, Lauren B Sherar, Ulf Ekelund, Alun D Hughes, I-Min Lee, Peter A Cistulli, Andreas Holtermann, Annemarie Koster, Mark Hamer, Emmanuel Stamatakis, on behalf of the ProPASS Collaboration, H Savelberg, B de Galan, C van de Kallen, TMH Eijsvogels
<p dir="ltr">BACKGROUND:</p><p dir="ltr">Sleep and physical activity (PA) are important lifestyle-related behaviors that impact cardiometabolic health. This study investigated the joint associations of daily step count and sleep patterns (regularity and duration) with cardiometabolic biomarkers in adults.</p><p dir="ltr">METHODS:</p><p dir="ltr">We conducted a cross-sectional study using pooled data from the Prospective PA, Sitting, and Sleep Consortium, comprising 6 cohorts across Europe and Australia with thigh-worn accelerometry data collected between 2011 and 2021. The sleep regularity index, a metric that quantifies day-to-day sleep consistency, sleep duration (h/d), and steps (per day), was derived from the accelerometer data and categorized based on tertiles and sleep duration guidelines. We used multivariate generalized linear models to examine joint associations of sleep patterns and total daily step count with individual cardiometabolic biomarkers, including body mass index, waist circumference, total cholesterol, HDL (high-density lipoprotein) cholesterol, triglycerides, HbA1c (glycated hemoglobin), and a composite cardiometabolic health score (mean of the 6 standardized biomarker Z scores).</p><p dir="ltr">RESULTS:</p><p dir="ltr">The sample included 11 903 adults with a mean±SD age of 54.7±9.5 years, 54.9% female, a sleep regularity index of 78.7±10.4, and 10 206.4±3442.2 daily steps. Lower PA (<8475 steps/d) combined with either lower sleep regularity (sleep regularity index <75.9) or short sleep duration (<7 h/d) was associated with the least favorable composite cardiometabolic health. The corresponding Z scores (95% CI) were 0.34 (0.30–0.38) and 0.26 (0.22–0.31) compared with those with optimal sleep (sleep regularity index >84.5 or 7–8 h/d) and high step count (>11 553 steps/d). The combination of low sleep regularity and low daily steps was associated with higher body mass index (2.92 [2.61–3.24] kg/m2), waist circumference (8.58 [7.78–9.38] cm), total cholesterol (0.15 [0.07–0.23] mmol/L), and lower HDL levels (0.17 [0.14–0.2] mmol/L), regardless of sleep duration. The combination of short sleep and low step count had the strongest unfavorable associations for body mass index (2.31 [1.98–2.65] kg/m2) and waist circumference (7.01 [6.15–7.87] cm).</p><p dir="ltr">CONCLUSIONS:</p><p dir="ltr">Our findings suggest that the potential deleterious associations of irregular or insufficient sleep with cardiometabolic health outcomes may be exaggerated by lower daily PA. Investigation of the prospective joint association of sleep patterns and PA with cardiometabolic health may be warranted.</p>

Funding

The next generation of evidence on cardiovascular disease prevention using device-based assessments of physical behaviour in harmonised pooled cohorts: The Prospective Physical Activity, Sitting and Sleep consortium (ProPASS)

British Heart Foundation

Find out more...

National Health and Medical Research Council: grant number APP1194510

University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre

National Institute for Health Research

Find out more...

Government of Andalusia, Research Talent Recruitment Programme: grant number 2020/00158

National Health and Medical Research Council: grant number APP2008702

National Health and Medical Research Council: grant number APP1121844

Aerobic and Resistance Exercise Training for Improving Brain-related Outcomes

European Commission

Find out more...

Healthy aging at work and after retirement: focus on behavioral and clinical changes during retirement transition

Academy of Finland

Find out more...

Healthy aging at work and after retirement: focus on behavioral and clinical changes during retirement transition

Academy of Finland

Find out more...

Healthy aging at work and after retirement: focus on behavioral and clinical changes during retirement transition

Academy of Finland

Find out more...

24-hour movement behavior phenotypes: temporal patterns, determinants and health consequences (MOVE)

Academy of Finland

Find out more...

Balanced and Sustainable working life of the future- Models and methods for developing and supporting sustainable health throughout life

Swedish Research Council for Health Working Life and Welfare

Find out more...

National Health and Medical Research Council: grant number APP1129592

National Heart Foundation: grant number APP107158

History

Related Materials

Rights

© 2025 The Authors. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes is published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.

Submission date

2024-12-12

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Wolters Kluwer Health via the DOI in this record. The data on which this research is based were drawn from 6 observational studies. The research included data from the ALSWH (Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health) from the University of Newcastle, Australia, and The University of Queensland, Australia.

Journal

Circulation Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes

Volume

18

Issue

8

Pagination

670-681

Article Number

e011873

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer Health / American Heart Association

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

Department

  • Public Health and Sport Sciences