# Leisure-time physical activity and risk of sudden cardiac death: a 28-year follow-up from the Copenhagen City Heart Study

**Authors:** Shotaro Isozaki, Tobias Skjelbred, Peder Emil Warming, Eleonora Casarini, Eva Irene Bossano Prescott, Reza Jabbari, Jasmin Mujkanovic, Jacob Tfelt-Hansen

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2026.103825 · eClinicalMedicine · 2026-03-10

## TL;DR

This study shows that higher leisure-time physical activity is linked to a lower long-term risk of sudden cardiac death over 28 years of follow-up.

## Contribution

The study provides long-term evidence that leisure-time physical activity reduces sudden cardiac death risk using time-updated analyses.

## Key findings

- Moderate and high leisure-time physical activity were associated with a 40-50% lower risk of sudden cardiac death compared to low activity.
- After 25 years, 33% of sudden cardiac deaths could be attributed to low physical activity.
- Standardized cumulative incidence of sudden cardiac death increased with lower levels of physical activity over 20 years.

## Abstract

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) remains a major public health challenge, yet the long-term association of leisure-time physical activity with SCD risk is not well established. We examined whether self-reported leisure-time physical activity is associated with SCD incidence over 28 years, accounting for competing risks from non-SCD mortality and time-updated changes in leisure-time physical activity.

We included 10,100 participants from the Copenhagen City Heart Study, examined in 1991–1994 and followed until 31 December 2021. SCD events were identified from Danish death certificates using a standardized protocol. Leisure-time physical activity was self-reported at baseline and at 10-year follow-up and incorporated as a time-updated exposure, categorized as low, moderate, or high. Cause-specific Cox models estimated associations with SCD, adjusting for age, sex, smoking, alcohol, and socioeconomic factors. Cumulative incidence was standardized to the Danish population, and population attributable risk for low activity was calculated. This study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02993172).

During a median follow-up of 28.6 years, 897 SCD events occurred among 10,100 participants (mean age 60.8 years; 56% women). Twenty-year standardized cumulative incidence rose with lower activity. In time-updated analyses, moderate and high leisure-time physical activity were associated with lower SCD risk compared with low activity (hazard ratio (HR) of 0.60, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.50–0.72; and HR 0.50, 95% CI 0.41–0.62, respectively). After 25 years, 33% (95% CI 21–46%) of SCD could be attributed to low activity.

Higher leisure-time physical activity is associated with lower long-term risk of SCD in this observational cohort. These findings support the potential public health relevance of promoting leisure-time physical activity, although causality cannot be established.

Research Fund of Tokai University Educational System, Asahikawa Medical University Alumni Fund, 10.13039/100007405Danish Heart Foundation, Birthe and John Meyer Family Foundation, 10.13039/501100009708Novo Nordisk Foundation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** sudden cardiac death (MONDO:0007264)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** SCD (MESH:D016757)
- **Chemicals:** alcohol (MESH:D000438)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

42 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12994074/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12994074