Exercise reduces adiposity, but its influence on bone marrow fat fraction (BMFF) is unknown; nor is it known whether a reduction in liver fat content mediates this reduction. (i) To determine whether incorporating exercise into a lifestyle program reduces the lumbar spine (LS)-BMFF, and (ii), to investigate whether changes in liver fat mediate any such effect. Ancillary analysis of a two-arm, parallel, non-randomized clinical trial. Primary care centres in Vitoria-Gasteiz (Spain). A total of 116 children with overweight/obesity were assigned to a 22-week family-based lifestyle program (control group [n=57]) or the same program plus an exercise intervention (exercise group [n=59]. The compared interventions consisted of a family-based lifestyle program (two 90-minute sessions/month) and the same program plus supervised exercise (three 90-minute sessions/week). The primary outcome examined was the change in LS-BMFF between baseline and 22 weeks, as estimated by MRI. The effect of changes in hepatic fat on LS-BMFF were also recorded. Mean weight loss difference between groups was 1.4±0.5 kg favour of the exercise group. Only the children in the exercise group experienced a reduction in LS-BMFF (effect size [Cohen d] -0.42, CI: -0.86, -0.01). Importantly, 40.9% of the reductions in LS-BMFF were mediated by changes in percentage hepatic fat (indirect effect: β=-0.104, 95%CI=-0.213, -0.019). The impact of changes in hepatic fat on LS-BMFF was independent of weight loss. The addition of exercise to a family-based lifestyle program designed to reduce cardiometabolic risk improves bone health by reducing LS-BMFF in children with overweight or obesity. This beneficial effect on bone marrow appears to be mediated by reductions in liver fat.
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