Women with breast cancer who regularly exercise the equivalent of walking an hour or more per week survive longer than those who exercise less
Women with breast cancer who engaged in physical
activity equivalent to walking one or more hours per week had longer
survival than women who exercised less than that or not at all,
according to a study in the May 25th issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
There is reason to believe that physical
activity might extend survival in women with breast cancer, according
to information cited in the article. Physical activity has been
linked to lower levels of circulating ovarian hormones, which may
explain the relationship between physical activity and breast cancer.
Lower estrogen levels among physically active women with breast
cancer could potentially improve survival, although few data exist
to support this hypothesis.
Michelle D. Holmes, MD, and her American
colleagues conducted a study to examine whether higher levels of
physical activity after a breast cancer diagnosis would be associated
with longer survival. The study was based on responses from 2,987
female registered nurses in the Nurses’ Health Study who were diagnosed
with stage I, II, or III breast cancer between 1984 and 1998 and
who were followed until death or June 2002, whichever came first.
Physical activity was measured as metabolic equivalent task (MET)
hours. Three MET-hours is equivalent to walking at average pace
of 2.0 to 2.9 mph for one hour.
The researchers found that compared with
women who engaged in less than this level per week of physical activity,
the adjusted relative risk of death from breast cancer was 20 percent
lower for 3 to 8.9 MET-hours per week; 50 percent lower for 9 to
14.9 MET-hours per week; 44 percent lower for 15 to 23.9 MET-hours
per week; and 40 percent lower for 24 or more MET-hours per week.
The benefit of physical activity was particularly
apparent among women with hormone-responsive tumors. The risk of
breast cancer death was 50 percent lower for women with hormone-responsive
tumors who engaged in 9 or more MET-hours per week of activity compared
with women with hormone-responsive tumors who engaged in less than
9 MET-hours per week. Compared with women who engaged in less than
3 MET-hours per week of activity, the absolute unadjusted risk of
death reduction was 6 percent at 10 years for women who engaged
in 9 or more MET-hours per week.
“It has been estimated that women decrease
their levels of physical activity by 2 hours per week after a breast
cancer diagnosis, with greater decreases among obese women, and
that less than one third of breast cancer survivors participate
in levels of activity recommended by government agencies. Women
with breast cancer who follow the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention recommendations for all individuals in the United States
to exercise at moderate intensity for 30 or more minutes per day
for 5 or more days per week may survive longer,” the authors concluded.
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