TY - JOUR AB - This is a corrigendum to the published paper entitled “Should workers be physically active after work? Associations of leisure-time physical activity with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality across occupational physical activity levels–An individual participant data meta-analysis”.1 In Table 1 (Page 5) and Supplementary Material 1, the citation for the HUNT Study data was incorrectly attributed to “Moe et al.”. After further review, we have corrected this error by replacing “Moe et al.” with the correct citation “Krokstad et al.” in the revised Table 1 (revisions shown in red). We can further confirm that this error in citation does not affect the statistical analyses or the data interpretation presented in the paper. The correction pertains solely to the proper citation of the HUNT Study data. AU - Cillekens, B.* AU - Coenen, P.* AU - Huysmans, M.A.* AU - Holtermann, A.* AU - Troiano, R.P.* AU - Mork, P.J.* AU - Krokstad, S.* AU - Clays, E.* AU - de Bacquer, D.* AU - Aadahl, M.* AU - Kårhus, L.L.* AU - Sjøl, A.* AU - Bo Andersen, L.* AU - Kauhanen, J.* AU - Voutilainen, A.* AU - Pulsford, R.* AU - Stamatakis, E.* AU - Goldbourt, U.* AU - Peters, A. AU - Thorand, B. AU - Rosengren, A.* AU - Björck, L.* AU - Sprow, K.* AU - Franzon, K.* AU - Rodríguez-Barranco, M.* AU - Luján-Barroso, L.* AU - Alfredsson, L.* AU - Bahls, M.* AU - Ittermann, T.* AU - Wanner, M.* AU - Bopp, M.* AU - Marott, J.L.* AU - Schnohr, P.* AU - Nordestgaard, B.G.* AU - Dalene, K.E.* AU - Ekelund, U.* AU - Clausen, J.* AU - Jensen, M.T.* AU - Petersen, C.B.* AU - Krause, N.* AU - Twisk, J.* AU - van Mechelen, W.* AU - van der Beek, A.J.* C1 - 74468 C2 - 57487 CY - Editorial Board, 650 Qingyuanhuan Rd, Shanghai, 200438, Peoples R China TI - Corrigendum to "Should workers be physically active after work? Associations of leisure-time physical activity with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality across occupational physical activity levels-An individual participant data meta-analysis" (J Sport Health Sci 14 [2025] 100987). JO - J. Sport Health Sci. VL - 14 PB - Shanghai Univ Sport PY - 2025 SN - 2095-2546 ER - TY - JOUR AB - BACKGROUND: Although light-intensity physical activity (LPA) has been suggested to be associated with a lower risk of mortality, the minimal and optimal volumes of LPA remain unclear. We aimed to examine the minimal and optimal volumes of LPA associated with the risks of mortality and disease incidence (i.e., cardiovascular diseases and cancer). METHODS: Data were derived from the population-based UK Biobank cohort study, including 69,492 adults aged 43-78 years. Accelerometer-measured LPA was defined using a validated, published machine learning-based Random Forest activity method, which was categorized into four quartile groups. All-cause and cause-specific mortality (cardiovascular disease- and cancer-specific) were determined according to the International Classification of Diseases, 10th version codes. Disease incidence was defined based on primary care, hospitalization, or death records. RESULTS: During a median follow-up period of 8.04 years, 2024 adults died from all causes, 539 from cardiovascular disease, and 1175 from cancer. For all-cause mortality, compared with participants in the lowest quartile of LPA (<3.9 h/day), the hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) were 0.82 (95% CI: 0.73‒0.93) for those with 3.9‒<5.0 h/day, 0.75 (95% CI: 0.66‒0.85) for those with 5.0‒<6.1 h/day, and 0.77 (95% CI: 0.68‒0.88) for those with ≥6.1 h/day, respectively. There was an inverse non-linear dose-response association between LPA and all-cause mortality, with an optimal dose of 5.7 h/day (95% CI: 5.5‒6.4; HR = 0.63, 95% CI: 0.56‒0.71) and a minimal dose of 3.6 h/day (95% CI: 3.5‒8.6; HR = 0.81, 95% CI: 0.78‒0.86), with the 5th percentile as the reference. Similar patterns were observed for cause-specific mortality and disease incidence (cardiovascular disease and cancer). CONCLUSION: Engaging in LPA for ∼3.5 h/day was conservatively associated with lower risk of mortality and disease incidence, with further risk reductions observed up to an optimal dose of ∼6.0 h/day. These findings suggest that sufficient LPA offers important health benefits, which can inform the development of future PA guidelines. AU - Sun, J.* AU - Qiao, Y.* AU - Li, F.* AU - Lin, R.* AU - Yu, Y.* AU - Wang, M. AU - Zhao, M.* AU - Xi, B.* C1 - 75972 C2 - 58304 TI - Associations of accelerometer-measured light-intensity physical activity with mortality and incidence of cardiovascular diseases and cancers: A prospective cohort study. JO - J. Sport Health Sci. PY - 2025 SN - 2095-2546 ER - TY - JOUR AB - BACKGROUND: There is insufficient evidence to provide recommendations for leisure-time physical activity among workers across various occupational physical activity levels. This study aimed to assess the association of leisure-time physical activity with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality across occupational physical activity levels. METHODS: This study utilized individual participant data from 21 cohort studies, comprising both published and unpublished data. Eligibility criteria included individual-level data on leisure-time and occupational physical activity (categorized as sedentary, low, moderate, and high) along with data on all-cause and/or cardiovascular mortality. A 2-stage individual participant data meta-analysis was conducted, with separate analysis of each study using Cox proportional hazards models (Stage 1). These results were combined using random-effects models (Stage 2). RESULTS: Higher leisure-time physical activity levels were associated with lower all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk across most occupational physical activity levels, for both males and females. Among males with sedentary work, high compared to sedentary leisure-time physical activity was associated with lower all-cause (hazard ratios (HR) = 0.77, 95% Confidence interval(95%CI): 0.70-0.85) and cardiovascular mortality (HR = 0.76, 95%CI: 0.66-0.87) risk. Among males with high levels of occupational physical activity, high compared to sedentary leisure-time physical activity was associated with lower all-cause (HR = 0.84, 95%CI: 0.74-0.97) and cardiovascular mortality (HR = 0.79, 95%CI: 0.60-1.04) risk, while HRs for low and moderate levels of leisure-time physical activity ranged between 0.87 and 0.97 and were not statistically significant. Among females, most effects were similar but more imprecise, especially in the higher occupational physical activity levels. CONCLUSION: Higher levels of leisure-time physical activity were generally associated with lower mortality risks. However, results for workers with moderate and high occupational physical activity levels, especially women, were more imprecise. Our findings suggests that workers may benefit from engaging in high levels of leisure-time physical activity, irrespective of their level of occupational physical activity. AU - Cillekens, B.* AU - Coenen, P.* AU - Huysmans, M.A.* AU - Holtermann, A.* AU - Troiano, R.P.* AU - Mork, P.J.* AU - Krokstad, S.* AU - Clays, E.* AU - de Bacquer, D.* AU - Aadahl, M.* AU - Kårhus, L.L.* AU - Sjøl, A.* AU - Bo Andersen, L.* AU - Kauhanen, J.* AU - Voutilainen, A.* AU - Pulsford, R.* AU - Stamatakis, E.* AU - Goldbourt, U.* AU - Peters, A. AU - Thorand, B. AU - Rosengren, A.* AU - Björck, L.* AU - Sprow, K.* AU - Franzon, K.* AU - Rodríguez-Barranco, M.* AU - Luján-Barroso, L.* AU - Alfredsson, L.* AU - Bahls, M.* AU - Ittermann, T.* AU - Wanner, M.* AU - Bopp, M.* AU - Marott, J.L.* AU - Schnohr, P.* AU - Nordestgaard, B.G.* AU - Dalene, K.E.* AU - Ekelund, U.* AU - Clausen, J.* AU - Jensen, M.T.* AU - Petersen, C.B.* AU - Krause, N.* AU - Twisk, J.* AU - van Mechelen, W.* AU - van der Beek, A.J.* C1 - 71722 C2 - 56337 CY - Editorial Board, 650 Qingyuanhuan Rd, Shanghai, 200438, Peoples R China TI - Should workers be physically active after work? Associations of leisure-time physical activity with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality across occupational physical activity levels-An individual participant data meta-analysis. JO - J. Sport Health Sci. VL - 14 PB - Shanghai Univ Sport PY - 2024 SN - 2095-2546 ER -