Cardiorespiratory fitness testing and cardiovascular disease risk in male steelworkers

B. J. Gray*, Jeffrey W. Stephens, S. P. Williams, C. A. Davies, D. Turner, R. M. Bracken, Kerry Morgan, Chris Cottrell, Vanessa Davies, Liz Newbury-Davies, Michael Thomas, Enzo M. Di Battista, Lesley Street, Fiona Judd, Cindy Evans, Jo James, Claire Jones, Carolyn Williams, Susan Smith, James ThorntonSally Williams, Rhys Williams, Sam Rice, Meurig Williams

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background The workplace has been advocated as a setting to perform cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk assessments. These risk assessments usually focus on traditional risk factors rather than cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) despite established associations between CRF and CVD. The lack of guidance on interpreting health-related CRF values has been suggested as a barrier to utilizing CRF in practice. Aims To assess the merits of CRF testing in the workplace and explore whether a CRF value identified male individuals above the recommended threshold for further clinical investigation. Methods Cross-sectional analysis of male steelworkers from Carmarthenshire, South Wales, UK who completed a workplace-based CVD risk assessment with an added CRF protocol based on heart rate responses (Chester Step Test). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was undertaken to explore the possibility of a CRF value to identify individuals at an increased 10-year risk of CVD (QRISK2 = 10%). Results There were 81 participants. ROC analysis revealed that a CRF level of 34.5 ml/kg/min identified those individuals above the = 10% QRISK2 threshold with the best sensitivity (0.800) and specificity (0.687) to discriminate against true- and false-positive rates. Further analysis revealed that individuals with either 'Average' or 'Below Average' CRF would be five times more likely to have a 10-year CVD risk above the = 10% QRISK2 threshold than individuals with an 'Excellent' or 'Good' level of fitness [OR 5.10 (95% CI 1.60-16.3)]. Conclusions This study suggests CRF assessments are a useful addition to a workplace CVD assessment and could identify male individuals at increased predicted risk of the condition.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)38-43
Number of pages6
JournalOccupational Medicine
Volume67
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2017
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author 2016.

Keywords

  • Cardiovascular diseases
  • Coronary heart disease
  • Exercise test
  • Physical fitness
  • Primary prevention
  • Risk assessment
  • Workplace health promotion

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