While measured VO2 and HRI-derived VO2 were almost identical, predicted VO2 from treadmill parameters was significantly over-predicted by 21.1% compared to HRI-derived VO2.
Systematic Review (n=116,521)
Does the heart rate index (HRI) accurately predict maximal oxygen uptake compared to measured or conventionally predicted VO2peak during treadmill testing?
The heart rate index provides an accurate surrogate measure of measured VO2peak, whereas conventional treadmill prediction equations significantly overestimate cardiorespiratory fitness.
Effect estimate: 21.1% difference
Absolute Event Rate: 6.71% vs 8.12%
p-value: p=<0.001
BACKGROUND: Cardiorespiratory fitness measured by treadmill testing has prognostic significance in determining mortality with cardiovascular and other chronic disease states. The accuracy of a recently developed method for estimating maximal oxygen uptake (VO2peak), the heart rate index (HRI), is dependent only on heart rate (HR) and was tested against oxygen uptake (VO2), either measured or predicted from conventional treadmill parameters (speed, incline, protocol time). METHODS: The HRI equation, METs = 6 x HRI- 5, where HRI = maximal HR/resting HR, provides a surrogate measure of VO2peak. Forty large scale treadmill studies were identified through a systematic search using MEDLINE, Google Scholar and Web of Science in which VO2peak was either measured (TM-VO2meas; n = 20) or predicted (TM-VO2pred; n = 20) based on treadmill parameters. All studies were required to have reported group mean data of both resting and maximal HRs for determination of HR index-derived oxygen uptake (HRI-VO2). RESULTS: The 20 studies with measured VO2 (TM-VO2meas), involved 11,477 participants (median 337) with a total of 105,044 participants (median 3,736) in the 20 studies with predicted VO2 (TM-VO2pred). A difference of only 0.4% was seen between mean (±SD) VO2peak for TM- VO2meas and HRI-VO2 (6.51±2.25 METs and 6.54±2.28, respectively; p = 0.84). In contrast, there was a highly significant 21.1% difference between mean (±SD) TM-VO2pred and HRI-VO2 (8.12±1.85 METs and 6.71±1.92, respectively; p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Although mean TM-VO2meas and HRI-VO2 were almost identical, mean TM-VO2pred was more than 20% greater than mean HRI-VO2.
Wicks et al. (Tue,) conducted a systematic review in Cardiorespiratory fitness (n=116,521). Heart rate index (HRI) derived VO2 vs. Treadmill predicted VO2 (TM-VO2pred) was evaluated on Mean maximal oxygen uptake (VO2peak) in METs (21.1% difference, p=<0.001). While measured VO2 and HRI-derived VO2 were almost identical, predicted VO2 from treadmill parameters was significantly over-predicted by 21.1% compared to HRI-derived VO2.
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