American College of Sports Medicine Roundtable Report on Physical Activity, Sedentary Behavior, and Cancer Prevention and Control

Alpa V Patel, Christine M Friedenreich, Steven C Moore, Sandra C Hayes, Julie K Silver, Kristin L Campbell, Kerri Winters-Stone, Lynn H Gerber, Stephanie M George, Janet E Fulton, Crystal Denlinger, G Stephen Morris, Trisha Hue, Kathryn H Schmitz, Charles E Matthews, Alpa V Patel, Christine M Friedenreich, Steven C Moore, Sandra C Hayes, Julie K Silver, Kristin L Campbell, Kerri Winters-Stone, Lynn H Gerber, Stephanie M George, Janet E Fulton, Crystal Denlinger, G Stephen Morris, Trisha Hue, Kathryn H Schmitz, Charles E Matthews

Abstract

Introduction: The American College of Sports Medicine convened an International Multidisciplinary Roundtable on Exercise and Cancer in March 2018 to evaluate and translate the evidence linking physical activity and cancer prevention, treatment, and control. This article discusses findings from the Roundtable in relation to the biologic and epidemiologic evidence for the role of physical activity in cancer prevention and survival.

Results: The evidence supports that there are a number of biologically plausible mechanisms, whereby physical activity can influence cancer risk, and that physical activity is beneficial for the prevention of several types of cancer including breast, colon, endometrial, kidney, bladder, esophageal, and stomach. Minimizing time spent in sedentary behavior may also lower risk of endometrial, colon and lung cancers. Conversely, physical activity is associated with higher risk of melanoma, a serious form of skin cancer. Further, physical activity before and after a cancer diagnosis is also likely to be relevant for improved survival for those diagnosed with breast and colon cancer; with data suggesting that postdiagnosis physical activity provides greater mortality benefits than prediagnosis physical activity.

Conclusions: Collectively, there is consistent, compelling evidence that physical activity plays a role in preventing many types of cancer and for improving longevity among cancer survivors, although the evidence related to higher risk of melanoma demonstrates the importance of sun safe practices while being physically active. Together, these findings underscore the importance of physical activity in cancer prevention and control. Fitness and public health professionals and health care providers worldwide are encouraged to spread the message to the general population and cancer survivors to be physically active as their age, abilities, and cancer status will allow.

Figures

Figure 1.. Multivariable hazard ratios (HRs) and…
Figure 1.. Multivariable hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for 10 types of cancer when comparing high versus low levels of physical activity.
The figure above depicts the hazard ratios for 10 types of cancer when comparing high versus low levels of physical activity. The hazard ratio for the most recent meta-analysis is shown by the black dot, and the hazard ratio for the large pooled analysis by Moore et al. (13) is shown by the open triangle. The top 8 types of cancer are those for which the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Advisory Committee (PAGAC) determined there was strong or moderate evidence for a protective effect of physical activity. The meta-analysis hazard ratios depicted here were derived from meta-analyses, as follows: colon (20), breast (5), kidney (47), endometrial (19), bladder (18), esophageal adenocarcinoma (15), stomach (cardia) (15), lung (17), liver (16). The bottom two cancers—liver cancer and melanoma—are those that we determined had substantial evidence from the pooled analysis but which the PAGAC report had not assigned a level of evidence.

Source: PubMed

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