BMJ Open (Jan 2025)

Nation-wide cohort of device-measured sedentary time and physical activity in the USA—the Cancer Prevention Study-3 (CPS-3) Accelerometry Substudy: cohort profile

  • Erika Rees-Punia,
  • Alpa Patel,
  • Jillian Nelson,
  • Peter J Briggs,
  • Nance Joiner,
  • James M Hodge,
  • Jeuneviette E Bontemps-Jones,
  • Den E Bloodworth,
  • Ashley Yeager,
  • Jeshondria McCrary

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085896
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1

Abstract

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Purpose This paper describes the data collection and management methods for the Cancer Prevention Study-3 (CPS-3) Accelerometry Substudy, a nested cohort of device-based physical activity and sedentary time data.Participants US-based CPS-3 participants (initially enrolled 2006–2013) who completed the 2018 follow-up survey and had a valid email address were invited to the Accelerometry Substudy (n=109 780). Among the 23 111 participants who registered and were shipped an ActiGraph GT3X+ accelerometer, 21 219 participants returned the device with a complete wear log (91.8%) and 20 950 (90.6%) provided at least three adherent days of data (eg, days with at least 10 hours of wear).Findings to date Participants with ≥3 adherent days were predominantly female (n=16 187, 77.3%), non-Latino white (n=17 977, 85.8%) and had an average age of 58 years (SD=9.8). The median daily wear time was 15.3 hours, which did not vary considerably by wear day. The median time spent in moderate-intensity aerobic physical activity was 29 min/day (IQR=36), and the median time in vigorous physical activity was 3 min/day (IQR=13). Participants were sedentary for 9.4 hours (564 min, IQR=171 min) and accumulated a median of 6474 steps per day (IQR=5348).Future plans The full CPS-3 cohort will be linked with the National Death Index and state cancer registries biennially. Participants will be sent triennial surveys for the next two decades. Future analyses within the CPS-3 Accelerometry Substudy more specifically aim to identify relationships between physical activity, sedentary time and health outcomes, primarily cancer incidence, survival and survivorship.