Background/Objectives: Subsequent musculoskeletal injuries are frequent among physically active young adults, yet the roles of body composition, training weekly load (TWL), and physical activity intensity in subsequent injury occurrence remain unclear. This study examined the associations of body composition indices and training-related variables with subsequent injuries in university students and explored whether combining key markers from body composition and training exposure improves discrimination compared with single markers. Methods: The analysis included 418 students from two cohorts merged after confirming negligible between-cohort differences. Participants completed questionnaires on injury history and physical activity and underwent standardized anthropometric and body composition assessments. Intrinsic factors included fat mass index (FMI) and skeletal muscle mass index (SMI), while extrinsic factors comprised training weekly load (TWL), total physical activity (TPA), and vigorous activity percentage (VPA%). Subsequent injury (yes/no) served as the primary outcome. Injuries were assessed retrospectively over the preceding 12 months; subsequent injury was defined as ≥1 injury occurring after a previous (index) injury within this recall period. Analyses used univariate and multivariable logistic regression and exploratory Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analyses for individual markers and combined models. Results: SMI was associated with subsequent injury (OR = 1.09, 95% CI: 1.03-1.15). TWL showed a weak, non-significant association (OR = 1.03, p = 0.307). Models combining SMI and TWL, including their interaction, did not meaningfully improve discrimination compared with SMI alone. ROC analyses indicated limited discriminatory ability across models (AUCs Conclusions: The examined body composition, training weekly load (TWL), and physical activity measures alone or combined showed limited discriminatory utility for subsequent injury status in this cross-sectional sample. These findings support the multifactorial nature of injury susceptibility and indicate that simple anthropometric or TWL-based measures are not suitable as standalone screening tools for subsequent injury in active university populations.
Kopacka et al. (Sun,) studied this question.