# Physical Fitness Level in 9–11-Year-Old Italian Children Is Affected by Body Mass Index and Frequency of Sport Practice but Not by Peak Height Velocity and Relative Age Effect

**Authors:** Mattia Varalda, Alexandru Nicolae Ungureanu, Alberto Coassin, Nicolò Maffei, Damiano Li Volsi, Paolo Riccardo Brustio, Corrado Lupo

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/sports14010010 · Sports · 2026-01-03

## TL;DR

This study finds that physical fitness in Italian children aged 9–11 is influenced by BMI and sport practice, but not by growth patterns or relative age.

## Contribution

The study identifies BMI and sport frequency as key factors affecting physical fitness in pre-pubertal children, independent of peak height velocity and relative age.

## Key findings

- Higher sport practice and BMI levels are linked to better performance in specific physical tests.
- PHV and QD had minimal impact on physical fitness outcomes.
- Sex differences were observed only in specific sport practice subcategories.

## Abstract

This study was aimed at analyzing physical fitness in 9–11-year-old children and verifying whether it is affected by body mass index (BMI), peak height velocity (PHV), quartile distribution (QD), and sport practice (SP), also considering any potential effects of sex. One thousand one hundred forty-three Italian primary school children (50.7% males) underwent anthropometric measurements (body mass, height, and BMI) and physical tests for measuring coordination (Plate Tapping, PT), handgrip strength (HandGrip, HG), lower-limb power (standing long jump, SLJ), low-back flexibility (sit-and-reach, SR), and sprint (20 m sprint, 20 m) skills. A series of analyses of covariance (ANCOVAs) were conducted using age as a covariate to examine differences among subgroups for BMI, PHV, QD, and SP in relation to the different physical tests (i.e., PT, HG, SLJ, SL, 20 m). Sex was included in each model as fixed independent variable. Principally, participants with higher SP and BMI reported higher and lower performance (p < 0.001) in SLJ, SR, and 20 m tests, respectively. Differently, for higher BMI levels, higher HG performance was reported (p < 0.001). PHV and QD had isolated effects, whereas no effect emerged for PT. Sex interactions were found only for SP subcategories in SR (p ≤ 0.001, ES range = 0.74–1.30). Although physical performance in 9–11-year-old (non-competitive, pre-puberty) Italian students does not seem to be characterized by involuntary factors (such as PHV and QD), substantial opposite trends seem to exist for voluntary factors (such as BMI and SP), thus suggesting how an adequate lifestyle and physical activity could crucially lead to valuable fitness benefits.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** PT (MESH:D006526)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

33 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12845823/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12845823