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Should Physical Activity Recommendations Be Ethnicity-Specific? Evidence from a Cross-Sectional Study of South Asian and European Men

  • Carlos A. Celis-Morales ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Carlos A. Celis-Morales, Nazim Ghouri

    Affiliations Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom, Human Nutrition Research Centre, Institute for Ageing and Health, Newcastle University, Newcastle on Tyne, United Kingdom

  • Nazim Ghouri ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Carlos A. Celis-Morales, Nazim Ghouri

    Affiliation Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Mark E. S. Bailey,

    Affiliation School of Life Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Naveed Sattar ,

    These authors also contributed equally to this work.

    Affiliation Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Jason M. R. Gill

    jason.gill@glasgow.ac.uk

    These authors also contributed equally to this work.

    Affiliation Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background

Expert bodies and health organisations recommend that adults undertake at least 150 min.week−1 of moderate-intensity physical activity (MPA). However, the underpinning data largely emanate from studies of populations of European descent. It is unclear whether this level of activity is appropriate for other ethnic groups, particularly South Asians, who have increased cardio-metabolic disease risk compared to Europeans. The aim of this study was to explore the level of MPA required in South Asians to confer a similar cardio-metabolic risk profile to that observed in Europeans undertaking the currently recommended MPA level of 150 min.week−1.

Methods

Seventy-five South Asian and 83 European men, aged 40–70, without cardiovascular disease or diabetes had fasted blood taken, blood pressure measured, physical activity assessed objectively (using accelerometry), and anthropometric measures made. Factor analysis was used to summarise measured risk biomarkers into underlying latent ‘factors’ for glycaemia, insulin resistance, lipid metabolism, blood pressure, and overall cardio-metabolic risk. Age-adjusted regression models were used to determine the equivalent level of MPA (in bouts of ≥10 minutes) in South Asians needed to elicit the same value in each factor as Europeans undertaking 150 min.week−1 MPA.

Findings

For all factors, except blood pressure, equivalent MPA values in South Asians were significantly higher than 150 min.week−1; the equivalent MPA value for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor was 266 (95% CI 185-347) min.week−1.

Conclusions

South Asian men may need to undertake greater levels of MPA than Europeans to exhibit a similar cardio-metabolic risk profile, suggesting that a conceptual case can be made for ethnicity-specific physical activity guidance. Further study is needed to extend these findings to women and to replicate them prospectively in a larger cohort.

Introduction

Two of the major modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease are obesity [1], [2] and a low level of physical activity [3], [4]. Because of this, national and international bodies have made recommendations regarding appropriate levels for body mass index (BMI) [5], waist circumference [5], and physical activity [6][8], to minimise risk of vascular and metabolic disease.

Over recent years it has become apparent that the BMI and waist circumference cut-points used to define obesity in populations of white European origin are not appropriate for a number of non-white populations. In particular, for South Asians – who form 20% of the world’s population – substantially lower BMIs and waist circumferences are needed to confer equivalent cardio-metabolic risk factor profiles to those observed in populations of white European origin [9], [10]. Data from the Canadian SHARE and UK ADDITION-Leicester cohorts indicate that migrant South Asians require BMI values of ∼21–23 kg.m−2 to have equivalent glycaemia, and ∼22–26 kg.m−2 to have equivalent lipid profiles, to those observed in white Europeans at the conventional obesity threshold of 30 kg.m−2 [9], [10]. Findings such as these have led to recent consensus statements from academic groups in two countries recommending that the threshold for obesity should be lowered to BMI 25 kg.m−2 in South Asian populations [11], [12]. Similar findings have been reported for waist circumference [12][14]. Furthermore, recent guidance from the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has recommended using lower thresholds for BMI to trigger action to prevent type 2 diabetes amongst Asian populations (23 kg.m−2 (vs 25 kg.m−2 for white populations) for ‘increased risk’ and 27.5 kg.m−2 (vs 30 kg.m−2) for ‘high risk’) [15].

While it is now generally accepted that recommended thresholds for BMI and waist circumference should differ according to ethnicity, current recommendations for physical activity are not ethnicity-specific [6][8], and largely emanate from work done in populations of white European descent [16]. However, preliminary data suggest that the dose-response relationship between physical activity and risk factors for metabolic disease differs substantially between populations of different ethnicities [17]. South Asians are a group at increased risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease [18], who have lower levels of cardiorespiratory fitness [19][22] and a reduced ability to oxidise fat during exercise [19], compared to white Europeans with equivalent levels of physical activity. Thus, the appropriate level of physical activity for health in South Asians may differ from the current recommendation of at least 150 minutes of moderate intensity (or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity) physical activity per week, with this activity performed in bouts of at least 10 minutes duration [6][8]. This has important implications for physical activity guidance provided to the South Asian public and to healthcare professionals advising South Asian patients. Thus, main aim of the work reported here was to determine the level of physical activity required in UK South Asians to elicit an equivalent cardio-metabolic risk profile to that observed in Europeans achieving the current guideline level of physical activity.

Methods

Participants

Data collected from all South Asian (defined as having both parents of Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi or Sri Lankan origin) and European (both parents of white European origin) men recruited to the cross-sectional Carotid Ultrasound and Risk of Vascular disease in Europeans and South Asians (CURVES) study, who had valid data for objectively monitored physical activity, were included in this analysis (n = 75 South Asians and n = 83 Europeans). All participants were aged 40–70, living in the UK, and did not have coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, or diabetes. They were recruited by local advertising/word of mouth and by writing to potentially eligible participants identified from four local primary care practice databases. The study was approved by the West of Scotland Research Ethics Committee and conducted according to the principles expressed in the Declaration of Helsinki. All participants gave written informed consent. Full descriptive details of this cohort have been described previously [22].

Anthropometry

Height, body mass, and waist circumference (midpoint between the lower costal margin and iliac crest) were measured in all participants by the same person, trained in undertaking anthropometric measurements in accord with international standard protocols [23].

Measurement of physical activity

Participants wore accelerometers (Actigraph G3TX+ or ActiTrainer; ActiGraph LLC, Pensacola, FL, USA) on the left or right hip at all times, except when showering, swimming and sleeping, for seven consecutive days to objectively assess physical activity levels. Vertical axis accelerometer counts were summarized in 60-second epochs and Freedson cut-points used to define intensity domains [24]. Data from participants with at least 10 hours of daily accelerometer wear time for 4 days were included in the analysis. Non-wear was defined by intervals of at least 60 minutes of zero activity counts [25]. Wear time was calculated by subtracting non-wear time from 24 hours. Current physical activity guidelines state that physical activity should be performed in bouts of at least 10 minutes duration [6][8]. We therefore calculated amount of physical activity of at least moderate intensity undertaken in bouts of at least 10 minutes (MPAbouts), with an allowance within a bout for interruptions of up to 2 minutes below the moderate intensity threshold [25], and used this physical activity variable for our data analysis.

Blood biochemistry and blood pressure measurements

Venous blood samples were collected after an overnight fast of 10–12 hours. Glucose, HbA1c, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and triglyceride (TG) were analysed as routine samples on the day of collection in the National Health Service Biochemistry Laboratory in Glasgow, using standard automated enzymatic (for glucose and lipids) and HPLC (HbA1c) methods. This laboratory participates in the U.K. National External Quality Assessment Service (UKNEQAS) scheme and all tests had inter-assay CVs <5%. Plasma was stored at -80°C for the subsequent measurement of insulin, using commercially available enzyme-linked immunoassays (ELISA) (Mercodia AB, Uppsala, Sweden), in a single batch at the end of the study.

Blood pressure was measured on the left arm after at least 15 minutes of seated rest using an automated blood pressure monitor (Omron HEM705 CP, Omron Healthcare UK Limited, Milton Keynes, UK) which has been validated according to the European Society of Hypertension International Protocol [26]. The mean of four blood pressure readings was used in analysis.

These eight variables (i.e. glucose, HbA1c, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, TG, insulin and systolic and diastolic blood pressure) were selected as biomarkers for the characterisation of cardio-metabolic risk in our analyses as they have all been shown to be predictive of future cardiovascular disease and/or diabetes in large cohort studies [27], [28].

Data analysis

Statistical analysis was performed using Stata (Version 11.0, StataCorp LP, College Station). Using an approach described previously [9], [10], factor analysis was used to reduce the range of measured cardio-metabolic risk biomarkers into underlying latent factors. Biomarkers with rotated loadings >0.32 for principal components (i.e. explaining >10% of the variance in a factor (0.322 = 0.10)) in these analyses were clustered into summary factors. Four separate factors emerged summarising glycaemia (glucose, HbAlc), insulin resistance (insulin, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides), lipid metabolism (total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides), and blood pressure (systolic and diastolic blood pressure). Figure 1 provides a visual representation of the relationships between the measured biomarkers and the underlying factors. We also derived an overall cardio-metabolic risk factor which comprised a summary measure of all eight measured risk factors. Regression models, adjusted for age, BMI, daily accelerometer wear time, and number of days of accelerometer wear, were fitted with each summary factor as the dependent variable; and ethnicity, time spent in MPAbouts, and the interaction term between ethnicity and MPAbouts, as the independent variables. Predicted values for each factor in European men for an MPAbouts level of 150 min.week−1 were then calculated. We then determined the MPAbouts level which gave the same predicted values in each factor for South Asian men, to provide equivalent threshold values. 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for the equivalent South Asian thresholds were calculated from the 95% confidence bands from the regression lines. To provide external validation of our dataset/analysis by enabling comparison with previously published work on ethnicity specific obesity cut-points, we also determined (age-adjusted) equivalent South Asian cut-points for a BMI of 30 kg.m−2 and for a waist circumference of 102 cm in European men, using the same approach. All models were checked to ensure normality of the residuals and the linearity of the relationship between predictors and outcome. As there may be ethnic differences in HbA1c levels that are independent of glycaemia [29], [30], we performed a sensitivity analysis, removing HbA1c from the glycaemia and overall cardio-metabolic risk factors. Values are presented as means with 95% CI unless otherwise stated.

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Figure 1. Relationship between measured variables and underlying latent factors.

Numbers in arrows show factor loadings. Relationships between latent factors and measured variables only shown for rotated factor loadings >0.32 (i.e. where observed variable explains >10% of the variance in the latent factor (0.322 = 0.10)). See methods for further details.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082568.g001

Results

Detailed descriptive data for the South Asian and European men in this sample have been previously reported [22]. Descriptive data directly relevant to the present analyses are shown in Table 1. There were no significant differences between the groups in age, BMI or waist circumference. The South Asian group undertook less physical activity than Europeans, and had higher glucose, HbA1c and insulin concentrations, lower total and HDL cholesterol concentrations, and higher diastolic blood pressure.

Equivalent physical activity levels

Table 2 shows the percentage variance in each factor explained by ethnicity and by MPAbouts, and MPAbouts values for physical activity in South Asians which are equivalent to 150 min.week−1 of MPAbouts in Europeans. Figure 2 displays how these threshold values were calculated, using the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor as an illustration. Ethnicity explained a substantial proportion of the variance (up to 10%) in all of the latent factors (except blood pressure factor, where it explained only 1.1% of the variance). The contribution of MPAbouts to the variance in all of the latent factors was of similar magnitude to the ethnicity effect, with 9.5% of the variance in the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor explained by MPAbouts. Equivalent threshold values for MPAbouts were significantly higher than 150 min.week−1 in South Asians, for the glycaemia factor (299 (221 to 394) min.week−1), insulin resistance factor (283 (239 to 342) min.week−1), lipid factor (364 (276 to 576) min.week−1), and overall cardio-metabolic risk factor (266 (228 to 313) min.week−1), but did not differ significantly from 150 min.week−1 for the blood pressure factor (118 (95 to 156) min.week−1). Removing HbA1c reduced the equivalent MPAbouts value in South Asians for the glycaemia factor to 211 (163 to 335) min.week−1 and reduced the equivalent MPAbouts value for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor to 197 (160 to 224) min.week−1.

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Figure 2. Relationship between the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor and level of physical activity of at least moderate intensity, performed in bouts of at least 10 minutes (MPAbouts) in South Asians (solid red line) and Europeans (solid blue line).

266 min.week−1 of MPAbouts in South Asians gave an equivalent cardio-metabolic risk factor level to that observed in Europeans undertaking 150 min.week−1 of MPAbouts. Dotted red lines represent the 95% confidence bands around the regression line for South Asians. These bands were used to calculate the 95% CI around the equivalent level of MPAbouts in South Asians. Regression lines are adjusted for age, BMI, daily accelerometer wear time, and number of days of accelerometer wear.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082568.g002

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Table 2. Variance explained by physical activity of at least moderate intensity, performed in bouts of at least 10 minutes (MPAbouts), and derived value for MPAbouts in South Asian men equivalent to 150 min.week−1 of MPAbouts in European men, for glucose, insulin resistance, lipid, blood pressure and overall cardio-metabolic risk factors.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082568.t002

BMI and waist circumference cut-points

Cut-point values equivalent to a BMI of 30 kg.m−2 in Europeans, were 24.3 (22.1 to 26.9) kg.m−2 for the glycaemia factor, 23.3 (20.5 to 26.4) kg.m−2 for the insulin resistance factor, 23.3 (20.0 to 27.1) kg.m−2 for the lipid factor, 28.3 (24.1 to 30.5) kg.m−2 for the blood pressure factor, and 23.1 (20.9 to 27.6) kg.m−2 for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor, when all participants were included in the analysis. Removing HbA1c from the glycaemia and overall cardio-metabolic risk factors, in sensitivity analysis, reduced the cut-point values for South Asians for the glycaemia factor to 22.1 (19.7 to 26.8) kg.m−2 and for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor to 23.0 (20.3 to 27.2) kg.m−2.

For a waist circumference of 102 cm in European men, equivalent cut-point values in South Asians were 90.4 (85.1 to 97.3) cm for the glycaemia factor, 87.0 (81.6 to 91.4) cm for the insulin resistance factor, 85.3 (79.5 to 92.1) cm for the lipid factor, 100.7 (93.0 to 105.6) cm for the blood pressure factor, and 88.2 (81.1 to 92.7) cm for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor. Removing HbA1c increased the glycaemia cut-point value to 94.9 (86.9 to 100.5) cm, and the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor cut-point to 88.6 (80.8 to 94.9) cm.

Discussion

This study demonstrates, for the first time, that, for a given age and BMI, South Asian men may need to undertake greater levels of physical activity to exhibit a similar cardio-metabolic risk profile to that observed in European men undertaking the level of physical activity (150 min.week−1 of MPAbouts) currently recommended in physical activity for health guidance [6][8]. This suggests that there is a clear conceptual case for physical activity guidelines to be ethnicity-specific, in an analogous manner to that widely accepted for obesity cut-points [12][14]. Lending external validity to our work, our analyses also confirm previously reported findings that lower BMI and waist circumference cut-points are required in South Asian men to confer similar cardio-metabolic risk profiles to European men at conventional obesity thresholds (i.e. BMI 30 kg.m−1 and waist circumference 102 cm) [9], [10].

Low levels of physical activity are a major public health concern. It is estimated that 9% of deaths worldwide – more than can be attributed to smoking – are due to physical inactivity [31]. The 150 min.week−1 MPAbouts guideline level [6][8] is based on a compelling body of epidemiological and experimental evidence (summarised here [16]). However the data underpinning these recommendations is largely based on populations of white European origin, and it is acknowledged that further investigation is required to evaluate the relationship between physical activity and health status in non-Caucasian populations [16].

Our findings indicate that the threshold level of MPAbouts in South Asians, equivalent to an MPAbouts level of 150 min.week−1 in Europeans, is significantly higher for the glycaemia (299 min.week−1), insulin resistance (283 min.week−1) and lipid (364 min.week−1) factors. This suggests that – analogous to ethnicity-specific obesity cut-points – ethnicity-specific physical activity recommendations are potentially warranted. As guidelines require a single threshold value to be adopted, we also included a summary overall cardio-metabolic risk factor in our analyses which combined all the measured risk biomarkers. Physical activity explained more of the variance in this overall cardio-metabolic factor than the individual glycaemia, insulin resistance, lipid or blood pressure factors, which is consistent with the large body of evidence indicating that activity influences vascular and metabolic disease risk by multiple mechanisms [32]. Thus, we would argue that it is the threshold value based on this overall cardio-metabolic risk factor that should be used guide to any changes to physical activity recommendations to include an ethnicity-specific component. The equivalent MPAbouts threshold in South Asians for the overall cardio-metabolic risk factor was 266 (228 to 313) min.week−1. This dropped to 197 (160 to 224) min.week−1 in sensitivity analyses where HbA1c was excluded from the model because of potential ethnic differences in HbA1c that are independent of glycaemia [29], [30]. Thus, in practical terms, a recommendation that South Asians undertake 200 to 250 min.week−1 – which equates to 40–50 minutes on five days of the week – of moderate-equivalent physical activity would seem to provide a clear, and easy to remember public health message.

A major strength of this study is the objective measurement of physical activity. This is essential to provide accurate quantification of the dose-response relationship between physical activity and cardio-metabolic risk. Previous reports have shown that questionnaire-based assessment of physical activity can overestimate activity levels by several fold compared to objective measures [25], [33] and the use of questionnaires to assess physical activity can substantially underestimate the true relationship between activity and cardio-metabolic disease risk [33], [34]. However, while use of a hip-mounted accelerometer is the most widely used method for the objective measure of physical activity, this approach does underestimate the level of activity associated with load-carrying, walking/running up a gradient or stairs, cycling or arm-based activities [25], and accelerometers cannot be worn during water-based activities, such as swimming. Thus, we may not have captured all relevant physical activity with our approach. However, we feel that this limitation is unlikely to have substantially influenced the overall findings, as all participants in this cohort completed a physical activity diary in parallel with the accelerometer measurements (data not shown) and only a small number of participants reported undertaking any swimming (n = 9) or cycling (n = 3) activity during the week of activity measurement. A further consideration is that we used the same cut-point to define moderate intensity physical activity, which was equivalent to an absolute intensity of ≥3 METS [24], in all participants. The South Asians in our cohort had ∼20% lower maximal oxygen uptake values than the Europeans (data reported in Ghouri et al [22]), and thus the physiological threshold for moderate intensity physical activity (in terms of relative exercise intensity) would have been lower in the South Asians than Europeans. Reducing the moderate intensity cut-point for the South Asians to take this into account would have increased the apparent amount of physical activity that the South Asians in this cohort undertook. However, doing this would also flatten the dose-response relationship between physical activity and cardio-metabolic risk biomarkers, leading to the threshold level of MPAbouts in South Asians, equivalent to an MPAbouts level of 150 min.week−1 in Europeans being higher than the 200-250 min.week−1 reported here.

In addition, the values for the South Asian obesity cut-points in the present study agreed well with those obtained in previous reports. The biomarkers included in the factor analysis models differed slightly between the studies of Razak [10], Gray [9] and the present report. For example, insulin was included in both the present and the Razak’s analysis, but not in the analysis of Gray and colleagues [9], and only Razak and colleagues [10] included free fatty acids in their model. Because of this, the biomarkers included within each summary factor differed slightly between the three studies: in our analyses the risk biomarkers clustered into four distinct factors – glycaemia, insulin resistance, lipids and blood pressure, in contrast to the earlier studies, where the risk biomarkers clustered into three separate factors representing glycaemia, lipids and blood pressure. However, the BMI and waist circumference cut-point values for the glycaemia and insulin resistance factors were very similar, so this difference in clustering does not substantially influence the overall message. Our cut-point estimates of 24.3 kg.m−2 for the glycaemia factor BMI cut-point and 23.3 kg.m−2 for the insulin resistance factor were similar to, and well within 95% confidence limits of, the glycaemia factor cut-points of 22.6 kg.m−2 reported by Gray et al [9] and the glucose factor cut-point of 21.0 kg.m−2 reported by Razak et al [10]. Similarly, our estimated cut-points for the lipid factor (23.3 kg.m−2) and blood pressure factor (28.3 kg.m−2) were similar to the equivalent cut points in the Gray (26.0 kg.m−2 and 28.4 kg.m−2, respectively) [9] and Razak (22.5 kg.m−2 and 28.8 kg.m−2, respectively) [10] analyses. Our estimated waist circumference cut-points for glycaemia/insulin resistance, lipid and blood pressure factors (90.4/87.0 cm, 85.3 cm and 100.7 cm, respectively) also agreed well (within 95% CI limits) with values reported by Gray and colleagues (83.8 cm, 91.4 cm and 99.3 cm, respectively) [9]. Thus, studies from three different populations of South Asians have all converged on similar obesity cut-points for this ethnic group, suggesting that these threshold estimates are likely to be robust, at least on the basis of cross-sectional data.

This is a relatively small proof-of-principle study aimed at demonstrating the potential need for ethnicity-specific physical activity guidelines. Our findings are limited to a relatively small cohort of non-diabetic middle-aged men, and the analyses were cross-sectional. Our relatively small sample size, together with the fact that the calculated equivalent MPAbouts levels for South Asians were towards the upper end of the distribution of physical activity levels for our cohort (the maximum value for MPAbouts was 383 min.week−1 in South Asians and 459 min.week−1 in Europeans), resulted in 95%CIs around our estimates that were relatively large. Thus, further work is needed to replicate our findings in larger cohorts, including both men and women, and ideally with prospective data using hard disease end-points as outcomes, before a definitive recommendation regarding ethnicity-specific physical activity guidelines can be made. Nevertheless, the present report describes a novel approach for determining equivalent physical activity levels in different ethnic groups and we hope that this work will help facilitate the larger definitive studies needed to influence guidelines and policy in practice.

In conclusion, the present findings provide evidence indicating that ethnicity-specific physical activity guidelines are conceptually warranted. While larger studies are need to confirm and replicate our findings, the present data suggest that for an equivalent cardio-metabolic risk profile to that observed in Europeans undertaking the currently recommended physical activity level of 150 min.week−1 of MPAbouts, South Asians need to undertake 200-250 min.week−1. This equates to South Asians undertaking an extra 10-20 minutes of physical activity per day beyond present physical activity guideline levels. Dissemination of this message in a positive manner could be used to promote increases in physical activity levels in South Asians worldwide, a group who, despite clearly having higher cardio-metabolic disease risks, appear to be (at least in the UK) currently less active than their white European counterparts [22], [35].

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: CACM NG MESB NS JMRG. Performed the experiments: NG. Analyzed the data: CACM JMRG. Wrote the paper: JMRG. Critically revised manuscript: CACM NG MESB NS JMRG.

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