# Age-specific association between moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and bone health: insights from a universal pDXA screening cohort in rural China

**Authors:** Bin Huang, Minzhi Yang, Wenting Zhao, Qiong Wu, Ying Xiao, Qin Liu, Fangfang Li, Huan Du

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2026.1717078 · Frontiers in Endocrinology · 2026-02-10

## TL;DR

This study finds that physical activity improves bone health in elderly people, especially women aged 60–69, in rural China.

## Contribution

The study identifies age- and gender-specific effects of physical activity on bone health in rural elderly populations.

## Key findings

- High MVPA is linked to better bone density only in those aged 60–69.
- The MVPA-BMD association is stronger in females than in males.
- Older age and low MVPA independently predict lower bone density.

## Abstract

To identify age-specific and gender-specific correlations between moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and forearm bone mineral density (BMD, via pDXA) in rural elderly (≥ 60 years) and define optimal bone health intervention windows.

Cross-sectional analysis of 3, 530 participants from a universal pDXA screening cohort (Suzhou, 2021). BMD was expressed as forearm T-scores; MVPA was categorized (low: < 150, moderate: 150–300, high: > 300 min/week) via WHO GPAQ. Age was stratified into 60–69, 70–79, ≥ 80 years. Statistical analyses included Kruskal-Wallis H test, Spearman correlation, and multivariable linear regression with MVPA × age group and MVPA × gender interaction terms.

Median T-score was -2.1 (IQR: -3.9 to -0.8). T-scores decreased with age (-1.8 vs. -2.3 vs. -2.9, p < 0.001). MVPA × age group interaction was significant (p = 0.008), with high MVPA associated with higher T-scores only in 60–69 years (-1.5 vs. -2.0, p=0.003). The MVPA-BMD association was stronger in females (β = 0.27) than males (β = 0.16). Female gender (β = -0.52), older age (β = -0.03/year), and low MVPA (β = -0.21) independently predicted lower T-scores (all p < 0.001).

The association between MVPA and BMD is age-dependent and gender-specific, with the strongest positive correlation observed in 60–69 years females. These findings suggest a potential age-specific intervention window for MVPA to promote bone health in rural elderly populations, but causal inferences are limited by the cross-sectional design.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** chronic diseases (MESH:D002908), estrogen deficiency (MESH:D056828), joint dysfunction (MESH:D007592), bone loss (MESH:D001847), OP (MESH:D010024), forearm fracture (MESH:D000092503), hypertension (MESH:D006973), frailty (MESH:D000073496), fragility fracture (MESH:D005600), BMD (MESH:D001851), osteoporotic fracture (MESH:D058866), Diabetes (MESH:D003920), bone cancer (MESH:D001859), fracture (MESH:D050723), sarcopenia (MESH:D055948), hyperglycemia (MESH:D006943)
- **Chemicals:** calcium (MESH:D002118), alcohol (MESH:D000438), MVPA (-), ethanol (MESH:D000431), blood glucose (MESH:D001786), Vitamin D (MESH:D014807)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

39 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12929147/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12929147