The Lancet Regional Health. Americas (May 2023)

Leisure time physical activity and bone mineral density preservation during the menopause transition and postmenopause: a longitudinal cohort analysis from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN)Research in context

  • Gail A. Greendale,
  • Nicholas J. Jackson,
  • Albert Shieh,
  • Jane A. Cauley,
  • Carrie Karvonen-Gutierrez,
  • Kelly R. Ylitalo,
  • Kelley Pettee Gabriel,
  • Barbara Sternfeld,
  • Arun S. Karlamangla

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
p. 100481

Abstract

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Summary: Background: Whether greater leisure time physical activity (LTPA) is associated with less bone mineral density (BMD) loss during the menopause transition (MT) remains an open question. We hypothesized that: 1) larger increases in LTPA from pre-/early perimenopause (period 1) to late perimenopause/postmenopause (period 2) would be associated with a slower period 2 BMD loss rate; and 2) greater entire-study LTPA levels would be associated with better final absolute BMD (g/cm2). Methods: Data were from of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (1996–2017). Exclusions were: bone beneficial medications, inability to identify start of the MT, and extreme BMD change rates. LTPA measures were a validated ordinal scale and number of metabolic equivalents per hour per week (MET hr wk−1) from sport/exercise. Multiply adjusted, linear regression models estimated: 1) BMD decline rate (annualized %) as a function of LTPA change; and 2) final BMD as a function of entire-study LTPA. Findings: Median [p25, p75] MET hr wk−1 were 4.2 [0.9, 10.1] and 4.9 [1.4, 11.2] in periods 1 and 2, respectively; walking was the commonest activity. In adjusted models (N = 875), greater increases in LTPA ordinal score and MET hr wk−1 were statistically significantly associated with a slower decline in femoral neck (FN) BMD. Larger entire-study averages of each LTPA measure were statistically significantly related to better final FN and lumbar spine BMD levels. Interpretation: Findings suggest that LTPA, at modest levels, mitigate MT-related BMD decline and even small increases in intensity, duration or frequency of common activities may lessen bone loss at the population level. Funding: US-NIH.

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