Physical activity has been associated
with lower risk of heart disease and all cause mortality, but its association
with risk of cancer is not well understood.
Moore et al research published in JAMA Internal Medicine, suggests that
exercise is a powerful cancer-preventive and found that physical activity drove
down the rates of a broad array of cancers even among smokers, former smokers, the
overweight and obese.
Researchers collected data from 12
prospective studies from the United States and Europe and analyzed associations
between self-reported physical activities with the incidence of 26 types of
cancer in the study period, which lasted 11 years between 1987 and 2004.
A total of 1.44 million
participants (median [range] age, 59 [19-98] years; 57% female) and 186 932 cancers were included. High versus
low levels of physical activity were associated with lower risk of 13 cancers:
esophageal adenocarcinoma, liver, lung, kidney, gastric, endometrial, myeloid leukemia,
myeloma, colon, head and neck, rectal, bladder, and breast. The
data indicated that a higher level of activity was tied to a 7 percent lower
risk of developing any type of cancer. Individuals who were very active had a
20% lower risk of cancers of the esophagus, lung, kidney, stomach, endometrium compared
with people who were less active. The
reduction was slightly lower for colon, bladder, and breast cancers.
Body mass index adjustment modestly
attenuated associations for several cancers, but 10 of 13 inverse associations
remained statistically significant after this adjustment. Leisure-time physical
activity was associated with higher risks of malignant melanoma and prostate
cancer. Associations were generally
similar between overweight/obese and normal-weight individuals. Smoking status
modified the association for lung cancer but not other smoking-related cancers.
Health care professionals should
emphasize that physical activity was associated with lower risks of many cancer
types and most of these associations were evident regardless of body size or
smoking history.
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Friday, July 1, 2016
Exercise linked to reduced risk of several cancers
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