# Is low-volume high intensity interval training a time-efficient strategy for improving body composition and cardiovascular health in children and adolescents? Evidence from a systematic review and three-level meta-analysis

**Authors:** Weihua Zheng, Yue Xing, Mingyue Yin, Yan Guo, Shunzhe Piao, Yang Cao, Hongbo Chen, Hansen Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2025.1736441 · Frontiers in Physiology · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

Low-volume high-intensity interval training (LV-HIIT) can improve body composition and cardiovascular health in children and adolescents, with effects similar to moderate-intensity training.

## Contribution

This study provides a systematic review and three-level meta-analysis to evaluate LV-HIIT's effectiveness in youth.

## Key findings

- LV-HIIT significantly reduced BMI, fat mass, and body fat in children and adolescents.
- LV-HIIT improved cardiovascular health markers like VO2max and SBP.
- Exercise effects may vary based on weight status, age, and training characteristics.

## Abstract

This meta-analysis assessed the impact of low-volume high-intensity interval training (LV-HIIT) on body composition and cardiovascular health in children and adolescents, while examining potential moderating factors.

A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library (CENTRAL), and CNKI from inception to April 2025. A three-level random-effects model was used to estimate the overall effects, and subgroup analyses supplemented with meta-regression were performed to explore potential moderators and sources of heterogeneity.

A total of 23 studies (996 participants, including 246 females) were included, with 6 studies on normal-weight and 17 on overweight/obese individuals. Compared with controls, low-volume high-intensity interval training (LV-HIIT) significantly reduced BMI (g = −1.24), fat mass (g = −0.99), body fat (g = −0.89), waistline (g = −0.42), weight (g = −0.34), and SBP (g = −0.37), while improving VO2max (g = 1.35). No significant differences were observed versus MICT. Subgroup and dose-response regressions suggested that weight status, age, intervention duration, training frequency, repetitions, and per-repetition time may alter the observed effects. Descriptive findings indicated comparable effects of LV-HIIT with small-sided games and sprint interval training but greater benefits over moderate-intensity interval training

LV-HIIT can effectively and time-efficiently improve body composition and cardiovascular health in children and adolescents, with overall effects comparable to MICT. Exercise prescriptions should carefully consider weight status, age, and intervention characteristics; however, given the limited number of studies and potential bias, the conclusions should be interpreted with caution. Limited descriptive comparisons indicate that LV-HIIT produces effects similar to SSG and SIT, and may offer greater benefits than MIIT.

https://osf.io/exhjm/.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** obese (MESH:D009765), overweight (MESH:D050177)
- **Chemicals:** MIIT (-), SIT (MESH:D012856)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

105 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12757267/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12757267