Study on Moderate Exercise
Questioned
Mon
Jun 16, 3:43 PM ET By IRA DREYFUSS,
Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - New research labels as
an "illusion" a major study's conclusion that couch potatoes who take
up at least moderate regular exercise can reduce their risk of dying early. The apparent benefit "can be
entirely attributed to measurement error," said researcher Paul T.
Williams, a biostatistician in the Life Sciences Division of Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif. However, the lead scientist in the
original study says additional data from the research project can prove him
right. And other experts say that even if Williams' analysis is correct, other
studies have shown so many health benefits from exercise that it must extend
lifespan. Williams examined a landmark study
published in 1995 in the Journal of the American Medical Association by
scientists at the Cooper Institute, a Dallas-based organization that studies
exercise and lifestyle. However, his conclusions could be applied to other
studies that used the research format employed by the Cooper Institute project,
Williams said. The Cooper Institute team looked at
data on 9,777 men who had taken two treadmill exercise tests almost five years
apart. The scientists then followed the men for more than five years. The
researchers adjusted statistically for age and other risk factors, so they could
focus on seeing if exercise affected the risk of death. Men in the least-fit 20 percent on
both treadmill tests were most likely to die, the study found. However, men
whose times had improved enough on the second test to pull themselves out of the
least-fit group had a lower risk of death, the study found. Men who were unfit on the first test
and fit on the second had a 44 percent reduction in their risk of death,
compared with men who were unfit on both tests, the study found. The researchers concluded that
getting out of the least-fit group could pull people out of the group at highest
risk of early death. The finding is commonly cited to support current federal
guidelines on physical activity, which call for doing at least 30 minutes of
moderate activity on most, if not all, days of the week. But Williams contends the researchers
did not account sufficiently for the fact that the treadmill test is not a
perfect measurement of physical ability. The test has a good day-bad day
problem: A person might go longer in one test and shorter in another while
having the same underlying fitness, he said In his experiment, Williams ran
numbers on a computer model. He created two hypothetical treadmill tests, and
varied the scores according to his assumptions of measurement error. His results were the same as the
Cooper scientists described in the JAMA article, Williams said. And if the article's results can be
explained by measurement error, scientists must reject the conclusion that there
were improvements due to physical activity, Williams said. "It hasn't been
proved that changing to moderate exercise would affect your life
expectancy," he said. Williams believes physical activity
can improve health, but that moderate activity such as brisk walks are not
enough to reap a big benefit. "Real health benefits are achieved with more
vigorous exercise," he said. "If you are unfit and you become
substantially fit, I believe that will change your life expectancy." Williams' challenge is itself
challenged by Steven N. Blair, president and CEO of the Cooper Institute, who
led the JAMA article study team as a scientist, before his promotion. Men whose fitness improved on the
treadmill tests also reported a corresponding change in their physical activity,
Blair said. Those self-reports are a sign that the improved lifespans were the
result of improved living, not a glitch in the methodology, he said. A colleague of Blair, digging deeper
into the Cooper Institute data, said he was seeing physical changes which also
argue that the lifespan improvements are real. "The idea that people don't
change on repeated measures is absolute nonsense. They do, and we've got the
data to prove it," said Tony Jackson, a professor of health and human
performance at the University of Houston. "People who actually changed
their treadmill times altered their body composition in desirable ways,"
Jackson said. At Stanford University, medical
professor and physical activity researcher William Haskell felt Williams made a
point in criticizing the design of the Cooper study. "It does raise an
issue about how much weight we should be putting on those studies," he
said. Haskell, who also is a member of the
Cooper Institute's board of scientific advisers, does not consider the case
closed. He's waiting for Blair's response. Another institute board member, I-Min
Lee of the Harvard School of Public Health, noted that some measurement error is
a normal part of science. But, she said, other studies give lots of reasons to
think that moderate exercise should improve health enough to reduce the risk of
an early death. "If (Blair's) study were the
only one, I probably wouldn't put as much weight on it, but it is a piece of the
puzzle that fits into the larger picture," Lee said. Other studies have shown that
exercise reduces such health risks as body fat, cholesterol levels and insulin
sensitivity, and those improvements are markers of long-term good health, Lee
said. |