Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and...

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Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in pregnancy Cath McParlin Louise Hayes

Transcript of Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and...

Page 1: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by

questionnaire in pregnancy

Cath McParlinLouise Hayes

Page 2: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Benefits of PA in pregnancy

Potential to:• Maintain energy balance• Reduce excessive gestational weight gain• Improve pregnancy outcomes

Obese women• Poor glycaemic control, insulin resistance, metabolic

syndrome

Observational data• Predominantly self-report, contradictory/conflicting• Potential association PA and GDM

Page 3: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Guidelines in pregnancy

• Importance of healthy eating and appropriate exercise for all women, esp. if BMI>30

• Dispel myths• Recommend 30 mins

moderate activity per day

• Importance of not being sedentary

Page 4: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Intervention studies

• Various approaches• Goal setting, motivational interviewing, behaviour

change techniques

Predominantly ineffective in achieving outcomes

Often PA/behaviour change not measured

? can PA be increased

? would an increase result in improved outcomes

Page 5: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Measuring PA in pregnancyvalidity/reliability/acceptability

Accelerometry• Position• Cut points• Compliance• Not waterproof• Upper body• EE in pregnancy

Questionnaire• PPAQ correlations

(light -0.08 – 0.22

mod. 0.20 – 0.49)• Over estimate, multi tasking• Focus on LTPA

Advantage:

Recreational activities

EE in different domains

Page 6: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Measuring Activity in Pregnancy Study (MAPS)

• Pilot feasibility study• Pregnant women, (n=68, BMI>25)• PA measured at 12-14 weeks gestation for 7

days

1. Actigraph accelerometer

2. Recent Physical Activity Questionnaire

Page 7: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Activity (min/day) Median (IQR) Spearman’s ρ

Accelerometer

Sedentary (<100 cpm) 631 (574, 673)

Light (100-1951 cpm) 125 (97, 153)

MVPA (>1952 cpm) 35 (28, 51)

All activity 165 (127, 192)

RPAQ

Sedentary (<1.5 MET) 1197 (1058, 1318) 0.30*

Light (1.5-2.9 MET) 94 (60, 231) 0.41**

MVPA (>3.0 MET) 81 (35, 169) 0.06

All activity 243 (122, 382) 0.53**

Correlation between RPAQ and accelerometer

MAPS (n=55)

**p<0.01; *p<0.05

Bell R et al 2013 EGOG:170;90

Page 8: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Activity (min/day) Median (IQR) Spearman’s ρ

Accelerometer

Sedentary (<100 cpm) 1167 (1111, 1218)

Light (100-1951 cpm) 175 (140, 222) 

MVPA (>1952 cpm) 39 (25, 52)

All activity 216 (168, 265) 

RPAQ

Sedentary (<1.5 MET) 1007 (878,1140) 0.42**

Light (1.5-2.9 MET) 372 (233, 473)  0.05

MVPA (>3.0 MET) 26 (12, 56) 0.25**

All activity 424 (283, 532) 0.15

Correlation between RPAQ and accelerometer

UPBEAT pilot study (n=102)

**p<0.01

Page 9: Louise Hayes, Cath McParlin - Relationship between physical activity measured by accelerometer and by questionnaire in preganancy

Time in different PA intensities by RPAQ tertile

UPBEAT pilot study (n=102)

Tertile 1 Tertile 2 Tertile 3

Sedentary (<100 cpm): min/d

1165 (110) 1168 (109) 1180 (99)

% weartime 72 (11) 73 (10) 75 (12)

Light (100-1951 cpm): min/d 184 (88) 171 (80) 172 (89)

% weartime 23 (8) 21 (9) 20 (11)

MVPA (>1952 cpm): min/d 40 (27) 41 (26) 38 (29)

% weartime 4.5 (3) 4.8 (3) 4.7 (4)

All activity: min/d 220 (101) 215 (95) 210 (96)

Counts per minute 275 (129) 288 (172) 269 (149)Figures are median (IQR)

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Proportion meeting PA guidelines

UPBEAT pilot study (n=102)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Actigraph - 30 min MVPA Actigraph - 30 min MVPA ( bouts)

RPAQ - 30 min MVPA RPAQ - 500 MET/min/d

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Conclusions

• Poor agreement between accelerometer and RPAQ assessed PA in pregnant women

• Choice of method affects estimates of pregnant women achieving guidelines

• Implications for understanding of relationship between PA during pregnancy and outcomes

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Why does it matter?

• Need to (try to) quantify the dose-response relationship between PA and pregnancy outcomes

• Want to determine proportion of women meeting guidelines to guide public health activity and to assess effectiveness of interventions

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Acknowledgements

Participants in MAPS and UPBEATLucilla Poston, Ruth Bell, Steve Robson and UPBEAT teamFunders – NIHR Programme Grant: RP-0407-10452