A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Cardiorespiratory fitness from childhood to midlife and Life's Essential 8 cardiovascular health score




AuthorsFraser, Brooklyn J.; Blizzard, Leigh; Tomkinson, Grant R.; Dwyer, Terence; Venn, Alison J.; Magnussen, Costan G.

Publication year2026

Journal: Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases

Article number104640

ISSN0939-4753

eISSN1590-3729

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.numecd.2026.104640

Publication's open availability at the time of reportingOpen Access

Publication channel's open availability Partially Open Access publication channel

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.numecd.2026.104640


Abstract
Background and aims

Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a modifiable cardiovascular risk factor for children and adults. However, little is known how variations in CRF across the life course impact long-term cardiovascular health. Therefore, we examined how CRF from childhood to mid-adulthood associates with the American Heart Association's (AHA) Life's Essential 8 (LE8), a measure of overall cardiovascular health.

Methods and results

As part of the longitudinal Childhood Determinants of Adult Health Study, 240 participants had their CRF measured as physical work capacity at 170 beats per minute (PWC170) in childhood (1985: 9, 12, 15 years), young adulthood (2004-06: 26-36 years), and mid-adulthood (2014-19: 36-49 years). In mid-adulthood, diet, physical activity, smoking, sleep, body mass index, blood lipids, blood glucose and blood pressure was assessed, with LE8 scores created following AHA recommendations. Associations were examined using linear regression and the Bayesian relevant life course model. The relationship between CRF across the life course and adult LE8 was best characterised by a lifetime growth model, where higher childhood CRF (β = 3.48, 95%CI = 1.36-5.60), and increased CRF between childhood and young adulthood (β = 3.64, 95%CI = 2.12-5.17) and between young and mid-adulthood (β = 4.15, 95%CI = 2.23-6.06) were positively associated with LE8 in midlife. When the relative importance of CRF within this relationship was quantified, CRF was important at each examined life stage, with a sensitive period in midlife.

Conclusion

These findings support a life course approach to the prevention of adverse cardiovascular health, highlighting the cardiovascular benefits of higher CRF in both childhood and adulthood, and increasing CRF over time.


Funding information in the publication
The CDAH Study was supported by grants and fellowships from the Commonwealth Departments of Sport, Recreation and Tourism, and Health, the Commonwealth Schools Commission, the National Heart Foundation (GOOH 0578), the National Health and Medical Research Council (211316, 1128373), Veolia Environmental Services and the Mostyn Family Foundation. BJF is supported by a National Heart Foundation of Australia Postdoctoral Fellowship (106588). Funding bodies and sponsors did not play a role in the study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data, in the writing of the manuscript, or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.


Last updated on 22/04/2026 10:39:13 AM