[eng] Background: Physical activity (PA) provides health benefits across the lifespan and improves many established cardiovascular risk factors that have a significant
impact on overall mortality. However, discrepancies between self-reported and
device-based measures of PA make it difficult to obtain consistent results
regarding PA and its health effects. Moreover, PA may produce different health
effects depending on the type, intensity, duration, and frequency of activities
and individual factors such as age, sex, body weight, early life conditions/
exposures, etc. Appropriate biomarkers relating the degree of PA level with its
effects on health, especially in children and adolescents, are required and
missing. The main objective of the INTEGRActiv study is to identify novel useful
integrative biomarkers of PA and its effects on the body health in children and
adolescents, who represent an important target population to address
personalized interventions to improve future metabolic health.
Methods/design: The study is structured in two phases. First, biomarkers of PA and
health will be identified at baseline in a core cohort of 180 volunteers, distributed
into two age groups: prepubertal (n = 90), and postpubertal adolescents (n = 90).
Each group will include three subgroups (n = 30) with subjects of normal weight,
overweight, and obesity, respectively. Identification of new biomarkers will be
achieved by combining physical measures (PA and cardiorespiratory and
muscular fitness, anthropometry) and molecular measures (cardiovascular risk
factors, endocrine markers, cytokines and circulating miRNA in plasma, gene
expression profile in blood cells, and metabolomics profiling in plasma). In the
second phase, an educational intervention and its follow-up will be carried out
in a subgroup of these subjects (60 volunteers), as a first validation step of the
identified biomarkers.
Discussion: The INTEGRActiv study is expected to provide the definition of PA and healthrelated biomarkers (PA-health biomarkers) in childhood and adolescence. It will allow us to relate biomarkers to factors such as age, sex, body weight, sleep behavior, dietary factors, and pubertal status and to identify how these factors quantitatively affect the biomarkers’ responses. Taken together, the INTEGRActiv study approach is expected to help monitor the efficacy of interventions aimed to improve the quality of life of children/adolescents through physical activity.