Credit: www.emaxhealth.com |
Women can reduce
their breast cancer risk by exercising and maintaining their weight.
A new analysis has found that physical activity – either
mild or intense and before or after menopause – may reduce breast cancer risk,
but substantial weight gain may negate these benefits.
While studies have shown that physical activity reduces
breast cancer risk, many questions remain. For example, how often, how long,
and how intense does physical activity have to be to provide benefits? Also, do
women with all body types experience a reduced risk when they exercise, and
does exercise reduce the risk of all types of breast cancer?
To investigate, Lauren McCullough, of the University of
North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health in Chapel
Hill, and her colleagues looked for a link between recreational
physical activity, done at different time points in life, and the risk of
developing breast cancer.
The study included 1,504 women with breast cancer (233
noninvasive and 1,271 invasive) and 1,555 women without breast cancer who were
20 to 98 years old and were part of the Long Island Breast Cancer Study
Project, an investigation of possible environmental causes of breast cancer.
Women who exercised either during their reproductive or
postmenopausal years had a reduced risk of developing breast cancer. Women who
exercised 10 to 19 hours per week experienced the greatest benefit with an
approximate 30% reduced risk. Risk reductions were observed at all levels of
intensity, and exercise seemed to preferentially reduce the risk of hormone
receptor positive breast cancer (ER or PR positive), which is the most commonly
diagnosed tumor type among American women.
“The observation of a reduced risk of breast cancer for
women who engaged in exercise after menopause is particularly encouraging given
the late age of onset for breast cancer,” said McCullough.
When the researchers looked at the joint effects of physical
activity, weight gain, and body size, they found that even active women who
gained a significant amount of weight – particularly after menopause – had an
increased risk of developing breast cancer, indicating that weight gain can
eliminate the beneficial effects of exercise on breast cancer risk.
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The above story is based on the June 25, 2012 news release by
Wiley-Blackwell,
which publishes Cancer on behalf of the American Cancer Society.
The research is published early online in CANCER:
Lauren
E. McCullough, Sybil M. Eng, Patrick T. Bradshaw, Rebecca J. Cleveland, Susan
L. Teitelbaum, Alfred I. Neugut, Marilie D. Gammon. Fat or fit: The joint effects of physical activity, weight gain, and
body size on breast cancer risk. Cancer,
2012; DOI: 10.1002/cncr.27433
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