People who exercise lower their risk of colorectal cancer
An ambitious new study has added considerable weight
to the claim that exercise can lower the risk for colon cancer. Researchers at
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Harvard University combined
and analyzed several decades worth of data from past studies on how exercise affects
colon cancer risk. They found that people who exercised the most were 24 percent
less likely to develop the disease than those who exercised the least.
"What's really compelling is that we see the association
between exercise and lower colon cancer risk regardless of how physical activity
was measured in the studies," says lead study author Kathleen Y. Wolin, Sc.D.,
a cancer prevention and control expert with the Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish
Hospital and Washington University. "That indicates that this is a robust
association and gives all the more evidence that physical activity is truly protective
against colon cancer."
Wolin's report was published Feb. 10, 2009 through advance
online publication in the British Journal of Cancer. In the study, she and her
colleagues gathered the results from all relevant studies published in English
on the effect of physical activity on colon cancer risk. They eliminated from
consideration any studies that combined both colon and rectal cancer because exercise
has not been shown to affect rectal cancer risk - including such studies would
have led to an underestimation of the effect of exercise on colon cancer risk.
In all, they analyzed 52 studies going back as far as 1984, making their analysis
the most comprehensive to date.
They found that the protective effect of exercise held
for all types of physical activity, whether that activity was recreational, such
as jogging, biking or swimming, or job related, such as walking, lifting or digging.
"The beneficial effect of exercise holds across
all sorts of activities," says Wolin, also assistant professor of surgery.
"And it holds for both men and women. There is an ever-growing body of evidence
that the behavior choices we make affect our cancer risk. Physical activity is
at the top of the list of ways that you can reduce your risk of colon cancer."
The difference between people who were the most physically
active and those who were the least varied from study to study in Wolin's analysis.
As an example, in a 2007 study by Wolin and colleagues, women who walked the most
realized a 23 percent reduction in their risk of colon cancer. Those highly active
women walked briskly for five to six hours each week. By comparison, the women
in that study who walked the least walked only a half hour each week.
Wolin KY, Yan Y, Colditz GA, Lee I-M. Physical activity
and colon cancer prevention: a meta-analysis. British Journal of Cancer. Feb.
10, 2009 (advance online publication).
|