Reuters Health Information: More physical activity linked to less risk for cancer
More physical activity linked to less risk for cancer
Last Updated: 2016-05-18
By Larry Hand
(Reuters Health) - Higher levels of leisure-time activity
may boost protection against a wide range of cancers, according
to a new meta-analysis from the U.S. and Europe.
Based on data from 12 studies involving a total 1.44
million people, researchers found that with few exceptions, high
versus low amounts of moderate to vigorous activity meant
lowered risk for 13 out of 26 types of cancer.
The results include a 42 percent lower risk of esophageal
cancer, 27 percent lower risk of liver cancer, 26 percent lower
risk of lung cancer and a 23 percent lower risk of kidney
cancer.
Even after adjusting for body weight, risk was lower for 10
of the 13 cancers with higher levels of leisure-time physical
activity, according to Dr. Steven C. Moore of the National
Institutes of Health in Rockville, Maryland, and colleagues.
Smoking status modified the association for lung cancer but
not other smoking-related cancers.
Higher levels of activity were tied to a 27 percent
increased risk of malignant melanoma, however, and a slightly
increased (5 percent) rise in prostate cancer risk.
"Our results support that these associations are broadly
generalizable to different populations, including overweight or
obese individuals, or those with a history of smoking. These
findings support promoting physical activity as a key component
of population-wide cancer prevention and control efforts," the
researchers conclude in JAMA Internal Medicine.
Dr. Moore did not respond to a request for comment.
The study team looked at physical activity levels across the
various studies in terms of Metabolic Equivalents of Task, or
METs, representing the amount of energy expended per minute in a
specific activity. For example, resting expends 1 MET per
minute, moderate activity like walking uses 3 to 5.9 METs and
vigorous exercise like running uses more than 6 METs.
The studies included in the analysis asked participants
about specific activities like walking, running or swimming, or
they quantified overall weekly participation in moderate and
vigorous activities. The middle-ground for most participants
worked out to eight METs per hour per week, or about 150 minutes
of moderate activity like walking.
The design of this analysis is "probably one of the
strongest ... we could have," said Dr. Marilie D. Gammon, of the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, senior author of a
commentary accompanying the study.
"The study authors also looked at a lot of rare tumors. In
some ways they were able to confirm what we've seen in the more
common tumors, but they also report on tumors that have been
much harder to nail down. I think this is good news, especially
when it comes to the rare tumor types. It gives us hope that
(physical activity) could be an important public health strategy
for risk reduction."
What's needed now is more research to determine what
mechanisms are involved in risk reduction, she added. "Physical
activity is just one of the cluster of healthy behaviors. It's
hard to know which healthy behavior it is (that leads to risk
reduction)."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1qnrIaN and http://bit.ly/1V611UR
JAMA Internal Medicine, online May 16, 2016.
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