Joint association between physical exercise, caffeine intake, and biological ageing: A cross-sectional analysis of population-based study
Guang Chen, Shichen Zhou, Yunqing Xun, Tung Leong Fong, Guoyi Tang, Jingyi Wang, Hongzheng Li, Xiangjun Yin, Jialiang Gao, Guanghui Zhu, Ying Wu, Jinlin Li, Ya Xuan Sun, Yige Li, Jiayan Zhou, Yibin Feng

TL;DR
This study finds that higher weekly physical exercise delays biological ageing, but benefits plateau after certain thresholds, with no effect from caffeine.
Contribution
The study identifies specific MET thresholds where exercise benefits plateau and confirms caffeine has no modifying effect on the relationship.
Findings
Each 100-MET increase in weekly exercise delays biological ageing by 0.2 years.
Exercise benefits plateau at 292 MET minutes for PhenoAge and 259 MET minutes for ENABL Age.
Caffeine intake does not modify the relationship between MET levels and biological ageing.
Abstract
Ageing is a significant risk factor for age-related diseases, accounting for 51% of global total disease burden. As thus, promoting healthy ageing is crucial. Although several potential anti-ageing drugs show promise, none have been approved for anti-ageing purpose. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends physical exercise exceeding 600 metabolic equivalent of task (MET) minutes per week for adults. However, whether physical exercise positively impacts healthy biological ageing remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the joint correlation between MET level, caffeine consumption, and biological ageing. We analyzed data from seven survey cycles (2007–2020) of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), involving 23,739 participants. Physical activity levels were measured in MET minutes per week, and biological ageing was assessed using both the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Physical Activity and Health · Coffee research and impacts
