Cardiorespiratory fitness, measured as VO2 max, is the strongest modifiable predictor of all-cause mortality ever identified — stronger than smoking, blood pressure, or cholesterol. Peter Attia calls it the most important number in medicine.
VO2 max is the maximum rate at which your body can consume oxygen during maximal exercise. It is expressed in millilitres of oxygen per kilogram of body weight per minute (mL/kg/min) and is the gold-standard measure of cardiorespiratory fitness. A 40-year-old male in the bottom 25% of fitness has a VO2 max of approximately 35 mL/kg/min; an elite endurance athlete of the same age might have 65–70 mL/kg/min. That difference in fitness corresponds to a dramatically different mortality trajectory.
A landmark 2018 study in JAMA Network Open followed 122,007 patients who underwent treadmill testing at the Cleveland Clinic between 1991 and 2014. After adjusting for all confounders, cardiorespiratory fitness was the strongest predictor of all-cause mortality in the dataset — stronger than smoking status, hypertension, diabetes, or coronary artery disease. Patients in the top 2.5% of fitness had a 5× lower mortality rate than those in the bottom 25%. Patients who were 'elite' fit had an 80% lower mortality risk than the least fit group.
The Cooper Institute data — the longest-running cardiorespiratory fitness cohort in the world, with over 100,000 patients followed for up to 30 years — consistently shows that moving from 'low' to 'moderate' fitness reduces all-cause mortality by 40–50%. Moving from 'moderate' to 'high' fitness provides an additional 20–30% reduction. There is no plateau: higher fitness is always associated with lower mortality, with no upper bound identified in any study.
Key finding
Low cardiorespiratory fitness (bottom 25%) carries a higher all-cause mortality risk than smoking, hypertension, diabetes, or obesity. Moving from the bottom to the middle quintile of fitness is the single most impactful health intervention available to most adults.
Vitaei verdict
VO2 max is the single most important modifiable predictor of longevity. Every 1 MET improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with a 13% reduction in all-cause mortality. If you invest in one fitness metric, make it this one.
Zone 2 cardio and longevity: why your aerobic base is the best investment you can make
VO2max is the single strongest predictor of all-cause mortality in the literature. Zone 2 training is the most efficient way to build it.
Strength training and longevity: muscle is the organ of longevity
Grip strength is one of the strongest predictors of all-cause mortality. Muscle mass protects against metabolic disease, falls, and cancer.
Walking and longevity: why 8,000 steps is the new minimum
The 10,000-step target was invented by a Japanese pedometer company in 1965. The science says 7,000–8,000 steps per day is where the mortality curve flattens — and the benefits are dose-dependent up to that point.