Summary
Background and objectives The association between mortality and physical activity based on self-report questionnaire in hemodialysis patients has been reported previously. However, because self-report is a subjective assessment, evaluating true physical activity is difficult. This study investigated the prognostic significance of habitual physical activity on 7-year survival in a cohort of clinically stable and adequately dialyzed patients.
Design, setting, participants, & measurements A total of 202 Japanese outpatients who were undergoing maintenance hemodialysis three times per week at the hemodialysis center of Sagami Junkanki Clinic (Japan) from October 2002 to February 2012 were followed for up to 7 years. Physical activity was evaluated using an accelerometer at study entry and is expressed as the amount of time a patient engaged in physical activity on nondialysis days. Cox proportional hazard regression was used to assess the contribution of habitual physical activity to all-cause mortality.
Results The median patient age was 64 (25th, 75th percentiles, 57, 72) years, 52.0% of the patients were women, and the median time on hemodialysis was 40.0 (25th, 75th percentiles, 16.8, 119.3) months at baseline. During a median follow-up of 45 months, 34 patients died. On multivariable analysis, the hazard ratio for all-cause mortality per 10 min/d increase in physical activity was 0.78 (95% confidence interval, 0.66–0.92; P=0.002).
Conclusions Engaging in habitual physical activity among outpatients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis was associated with decreased mortality risk.
Introduction
The mortality rate among hemodialysis (HD) patients is very high despite continual improvements in dialysis technology. To date, specified determinants of mortality in maintenance HD patients include older age, body mass, comorbid conditions, and markers of nutrition and inflammation (1–4). Previous studies have established the strong benefits of increased habitual physical activity on mortality in the general population, older patients with cardiovascular disease, and patients with CKD (5–8). Although an association of physical activity with mortality in HD patients has been previously reported (9–12), these studies based their definitions of physical activity on self-report questionnaires. Because self-reports are subjective assessments, it is difficult to provide a firm basis for elucidating the association between the true status of habitual physical activity and survival in HD patients.
Measuring habitual physical activity with an accelerometer during patients’ routine daily activities is recommended by Tudor-Locke et al. and Johansen et al. (13,14). This simple method, which is validated and widely used in sports and preventive medicine (13,15), accurately assesses habitual physical activity. Recent studies that measured the habitual physical activity of HD patients with accelerometers or pedometers (14,16–18) have shown that physical activity is significantly lower in HD patients than in age-matched healthy controls (16,17) and that physical activity in HD patients declines gradually (19). Kutsuna et al. reported that maintaining a high level of physical activity in daily living for HD patients is important for preventing the deterioration of walking ability (20). Additionally, increasing physical activity improves exercise tolerance and quality of life (21,22). However, the association between the true status of habitual physical activity and mortality remains unclear in HD patients.
In this study, we investigated the prognostic significance of habitual physical activity, which was evaluated using an accelerometer, on survival in a cohort of clinically stable and adequately dialyzed patients.
Materials and Methods
Study Population
Clinically stable outpatients seen at the Department of HD Center at Sagami Junkanki Clinic from October 2002 to February 2012 were assessed for their eligibility to be included in this prospective study. Patients were undergoing maintenance HD therapy three times a week, which is most common in Japan according to data from the Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy. Patients were excluded from our study if they had been hospitalized within 3 months before the study; had recently sustained a myocardial infarction or angina pectoris; had uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmias, hemodynamic instabilities, uncontrolled hypertension, or renal osteodystrophy with severe arthralgia; or needed assistance in walking from another person. This study was approved by the Kitasato University Allied Health Sciences Research Ethics Committee. The physicians obtained oral consent from all patients.
Demographic and Clinical Factors
Information on demographic factors (age, sex, time on HD), physical constitution (body mass index [BMI]), primary kidney disease, and comorbid conditions (cardiac disease, diabetes mellitus) was collected at study entry. Serum albumin levels and serum C-reactive protein levels were obtained from patient hospital charts. To quantify comorbid illnesses in this study, we used a comorbidity index developed for dialysis patients (composed of primary causes of ESRD; atherosclerotic heart disease, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular accident/transient ischemic attack, peripheral vascular disease, dysrhythmia, and other cardiac diseases; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; gastrointestinal bleeding; liver disease; cancer; and diabetes). This score was calculated using the method previously described and performed in analysis of survival in HD patients (23).
Habitual Physical Activity
A uniaxial accelerometer (Lifecorder; Suzuken Co., Ltd., Nagoya, Japan) was used to measure patients’ habitual physical activity. The device obtains objective information on physical activity patterns because it can continuously measure the intensity, duration, and frequency of activities. The accuracy and reliability of the instrument have been reported in previous studies (24,25). The vector magnitude in the vertical direction that was recorded for every 2-minute period was digitally divided into 11 grades of 0, 0.5, or 1–9, with each grade reflecting the intensity of the physical activity, as described elsewhere (26). Briefly, grades 0 and 0.5 represent such activities as reading, eating, or standing, and grades 1–9 represent activities range from gentle walking to running in succession. The monitor does not capture such activities as use of a stationary cycle. Such activities were confirmed via interview at each patient visit.
In this study, habitual physical activity was evaluated at study entry using an accelerometer; it was calculated as the sum of time patients were engaged in physical activity of grade 1 or higher intensity. The accelerometer also recorded the number of steps. The instrument was worn around the waist, and it measured motion as the acceleration of the body. Patients were instructed to wear the accelerometer continuously during their waking hours for 7 days and to avoid getting it wet, such as during bathing. Patients were asked to maintain their typical weekly schedules. To ensure that the measurement periods were typical of their weekly activity patterns, we excluded data obtained when patients traveled or had acute illness.
Before the analysis, the accelerometer data were inspected to ensure that there were no obvious errors, such as a failure to acquire data or if the patient forgot to wear the accelerometer. The measurements from 4 nondialysis days during the week were analyzed.
Statistical Analyses
Data were presented as median (25th, 75th percentiles) or number (percentage) and were tested by Mann-Whitney U test or chi-squared test. We used the physical activity time as the index of physical activity because it was easily generalizable to daily practice. Rather than dividing physical activity of grade 1 or higher intensity into several groups using quartile or tertile, we evaluated them together on the basis of our clinical practice, where most of the HD patients were involved in light-intensity activities (grade 1–3). A multivariable analysis was performed by using the Cox proportional hazards regression model to estimate the independent prognostic effect of physical activity time on survival after adjustment for confounders. Within the present study population, there were 34 all-cause deaths, which allowed for a maximum of three variables to be included in the multivariable regression model. To avoid overfitting, all potential confounding factors of physical activity time (which include age, sex, BMI, time on HD, comorbidity score, and serum albumin and serum C-reactive protein levels) were reduced to one composite characteristic by applying a propensity score (27). The propensity score was estimated by a multiple linear regression analysis. For the Kaplan-Meier estimate of the survival curves, we truncated the data for the 7-year follow-up period so that the number at risk was not too small. Patients were categorized into two physical activity groups by a physical activity cutoff value of 50 min/d, and the difference between groups was tested using a log-rank test. This cutoff value predicted whether the HD patients could reach the gait speed obtained by age-matched healthy adults in a previous study (20). The 7-year cumulative survival probability was estimated using the life table method with the interval length set at 1 month. P values of 0.05 or less were used to determine statistical significance. Analyses were performed using SPSS software, version 12.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY).
Results
Baseline Characteristics and Habitual Physical Activity
Four hundred thirty Japanese outpatients were assessed for their eligibility for inclusion. Ninety-five patients not satisfying the inclusion criteria were excluded; 133 patients declined to participate in the study. As a result, a total of 202 HD patients were recruited (Figure 1).
Flow diagram of patient selection and exclusion process.
The demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients are summarized in Table 1. The patients consisted of 97 men and 105 women age 35–88 years (median age, 64 years). The time on HD was 40.0 (25th, 75th percentiles, 16.8, 119.3) months at baseline. The most common underlying kidney diseases in the HD patients was GN (33.2%), and the next most common was diabetic nephropathy (32.7%). The comorbidity score was 4.0 (25th, 75th percentiles, 2.0, 7.0). Ninety-nine percent of patients were involved in grade 1–3 physical activity. The duration of physical activity for all patients was 42.7 (25th, 75th percentiles, 22.8, 65.8) min/d. The number of steps was 3925 (25th, 75th percentiles, 2287, 6244). No patients except one ever participated in cycling.
Patient characteristics and habitual physical activity at baseline
Table 2 shows the baseline characteristics of the patients according to physical activity time (<50 min/d and ≥50 min/d). The patients in the ≥50 min/d group were significantly younger than those in the <50 min/d group (P<0.001). The comorbidity score in the ≥50 min/d group was significantly lower than that in the other group (P=0.03). Other baseline characteristics did not significantly differ between groups.
Baseline characteristics in patients exercising <50 min/d and ≥50 min/d
Kaplan-Meier Estimate of Patient Survival
Patients were followed for up to 7 years. The overall follow-up durations ranged from 2 to 84 months (mean, 45 months). A total of 34 patients were dead at the end of the follow-up: 19 of cardiovascular disease, 5 of infection, 2 of cancer, 1 of cerebral vascular disease, 1 of gastroenterologic disease, and 6 of unknown causes. The 7-year cumulative survival rates were 93.3% in the ≥50 min/d group and 77.2% in the <50 min/d group. More than half of patients in each group were alive at the end of follow-up. Twenty-five percent of the patients with lower physical activity time died after 51 months. On the other hand, the mortality rate of patients with greater physical activity time at the end of the follow-up was less than 25%. This finding indicates superior survival in patients with greater physical activity time (P=0.001) (Figure 2).
Kaplan-Meier analysis of survival for 202 hemodialysis patients. Patients with physical activity time above the median value of 50 min/d (thick dark line) at baseline had significantly better survival than those with lower values (dotted line) (P=0.001 by log-rank test).
Effect of Physical Activity Time on Survival with Multivariable Analysis
With a Cox proportional hazards model, the crude hazard ratio (HR) of physical activity time increased per 10 min/d was 0.72 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.62–0.85; P<0.001), which indicated that maintaining physical activity at a higher level was associated with reduction in all-cause mortality (Table 3). After adjustment for the effect of age, sex, BMI, time on HD, comorbidity score, and serum albumin and C-reactive protein levels, the HR changed to 0.78 (95% CI, 0.65–0.93; P=0.006). An analysis with the propensity score, performed to adjust for the effect of physical activity time by transforming all other confounding variables into a single estimator, revealed that after the adjustment, greater physical activity time still conferred a significant survival benefit (HR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.66–0.92; P=0.002).
Univariable and multivariable analysis for the effects of physical activity time on survival
Discussion
In this prospective study, we examined all-cause mortality in a cohort of 202 HD patients. After an observation period lasting as long as 7 years, 16.8% of the patients had died; cardiovascular disease was the leading cause of death. The main finding of this study is the significant effect of habitual physical activity measured at study entry on mortality in HD patients, independent of age, sex, BMI, time on HD, comorbid conditions, and markers of nutrition and inflammation. To our knowledge, this is the first study showing the correlation between mortality and habitual physical activity evaluated using an accelerometer rather than self-report questionnaires. On the basis of our findings, HD patients spending more time on physical activity on nondialysis days had a lower mortality risk.
Some earlier studies reported the association of physical activity with survival. Tentori et al. reported that mortality risk among HD patients who regularly exercised was 27% lower than that of patients who did not exercise (28). Stack et al. also found that HD patients who exercised 2–3 or 4–5 times per week had an approximately 30% lower mortality than those who exercised 0–1 time per week (12). Furthermore, Beddhu et al. reported that the death rate of inactive patients with CKD was about 40% higher than that of active patients (8). Our findings agree with those of these studies.
Several possible reasons may explain these results. First, physical activity may help reduce mortality in HD patients, partly through improving the prognoses of their comorbid conditions. Multiple lines of evidence from previous observational studies of large-scale populations have suggested that increased physical activity is strongly and inversely associated with mortality from cardiovascular causes (5–7). The main cause of death in the HD population is cardiovascular disease, as found in this study. Previous studies have shown that HD patients engaging in physical activity or participating in low-intensity walking exercise improved their risk factors for cardiovascular disease (hypertension, arterial stiffness, plasma triglyceride and high-density LDL cholesterol levels, dysfunction of the cardiac autonomic system, and reduced maximal oxygen consumption) (21,29–32).
Second, a strong correlation between poor sleep quality and sedentary lifestyle has been previously reported (28,33). Recently, a positive effect of aerobic exercise on sleep quality has been described in HD patients (34). Poor sleep quality has been suggested as contributing to the higher mortality in a large international sample of HD patients (33). Thus, it remains a possibility that the patients with less habitual physical activity in our study might have a sleep problem that subsequently increases the risk for death compared with the patients who exercised more.
Third, maintaining a higher level of physical activity among HD patients might prevent deterioration of physical function and being bedridden. In a previous cohort study, the prognosis of bedridden patients undergoing HD was poor compared with that of patients who were not bedridden (35). Increasing the physical activity of HD patients improves their muscle mass and walking ability (20,36,37). In general, patients with low physical function are at increased risk for falls, and falls tend to predict hospitalization or the need for long-term institutional care (38,39).
On the basis of these reasons, HD patients could greatly benefit from engaging in increased physical activity. At the present time, however, interventions to increase their physical activity are not yet included in routine care.
To maintain good health, the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association have stated that it is necessary for adults to perform moderate-intensity exercise for at least 30 min/d 5 times per week (40,41). However, a previous study showed that 42% of HD patients have severe limitations in moderate physical activities (12). Furthermore, the adverse symptoms related to HD, low physical function, or poor adherence to exercise restrict regular exercise in HD patients (42–46). Besides, a previous study showed that physical activity on dialysis days was significantly less than that on nondialysis days (18). The time constraint caused by the 4-hour HD procedure was cited as the most important reason for decreased physical activity; however, many benefits of exercise during dialysis have been reported recently (47,48). In addition, no studies have reported on adverse events caused by intradialytic exercise. In this sense, it should be taken as one option to encourage HD patients to increase their habitual physical activity on nondialysis days as well as dialysis days. In our study, the average duration of physical activity on a nondialysis day was 43 minutes, which corresponds to approximately 4000 steps. This result was markedly lower than that among healthy controls (16,17) and was similar to that of patients with chronic diseases (49). Thus, our results could be generalized to a wide variety of HD patients. This study also offers room for further investigation to determine the target value for HD patients.
We evaluated the habitual physical activity of HD patients using an accelerometer over 1 week, as indicated by other studies using pedometers. This method for investigation leads to a more reliable and objective assessment (5,50). It may be considered a strength of this study. In addition, we adopted physical activity time as an index of habitual physical activity rather than number of steps or energy expenditure. We used physical activity time because it is a simple index and better suited for the setting goals for habitual physical activity in HD patients. In this case, patients need only their wristwatches.
This study had some limitations. First, because it was an observational study, residual confounders remained possible. Thus, further randomized, controlled studies are needed. However, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to identify objectively evaluated physical activity time as a strong predictor of survival. Second, because we evaluated habitual physical activity of HD patients only at baseline, we could not evaluate fluctuation of physical activity over time. However, because we recruited clinically stable and adequately dialyzed patients, their physical activity was assumed not to fluctuate dramatically. Third, we excluded patients who needed assistance with walking. As a result, the comorbid conditions in the participants seemed mild. This should be considered in generalizing our study results to more severely limited patients. Moreover, because the activity monitor does not capture activities such as cycling or swimming, physical activity diaries would help validate the accelerometer data. Finally, although we reported that patients with shorter physical activity time experienced a higher mortality risk compared with the others, the underlying mechanisms remain to be elucidated.
In conclusion, engaging in habitual physical activity is associated with decreased mortality risk. Future studies of HD patients are needed to determine the potential mechanisms.
Disclosures
None.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank the renal staff for their support and the patients for giving their time to complete the research protocol.
Footnotes
Published online ahead of print. Publication date available at www.cjasn.org.
See related editorial, “Physical Activity in ESRD: Time to Get Moving” on pages 1927–1929.
- Received April 13, 2012.
- Accepted August 7, 2012.
- Copyright © 2012 by the American Society of Nephrology