Postmenopausal women who in the past four years had undertaken regular physical
activity equivalent to at least four hours of walking per week had a lower risk
for invasive breast cancer compared with women who exercised less during those
four years, according to data published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers
& Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer
Research.
"Twelve MET-h
[metabolic equivalent task-hours] per week corresponds to walking four hours
per week or cycling or engaging in other sports two hours per week and it is
consistent with the World Cancer Research Fund recommendations of walking at
least 30 minutes daily," said Agnès Fournier, PhD, a researcher in the
Centre for Research in Epidemiology and Population Health at the Institut
Gustave Roussy in Villejuif, France. "So, our study shows that it is not
necessary to engage in vigorous or very frequent activities; even walking 30
minutes per day is beneficial."
Postmenopausal women who
in the previous four years had undertaken 12 or more MET-h of physical activity
each week had a 10 percent decreased risk of invasive breast cancer compared
with women who were less active. Women who undertook this level of physical
activity between five and nine years earlier but were less active in the four
years prior to the final data collection did not have a decreased risk for
invasive breast cancer.
"Physical activity
is thought to decrease a woman's risk for breast cancer after menopause,"
said Fournier. "However, it was not clear how rapidly this association is
observed after regular physical activity is begun or for how long it lasts
after regular exercise stops.
"Our study answers
these questions," Fournier continued. "We found that recreational
physical activity, even of modest intensity, seemed to have a rapid impact on
breast cancer risk. However, the decreased breast cancer risk we found
associated with physical activity was attenuated when activity stopped. As a
result, postmenopausal women who exercise should be encouraged to continue and
those who do not exercise should consider starting because their risk of breast
cancer may decrease rapidly."
Fournier and colleagues
analyzed data obtained from biennial questionnaires completed by 59,308
postmenopausal women who were enrolled in E3N, the French component of the
European Prospective Investigation Into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study. The
mean duration of follow-up was 8.5 years, during which time, 2,155 of the women
were diagnosed with a first primary invasive breast cancer.
The total amount of
self-reported recreational physical activity was calculated in MET-h per week.
The breast cancer risk-reducing effects of 12 or more MET-h per week of
recreational physical activity were independent of body mass index, weight
gain, waist circumference, and the level of activity from five to nine years
earlier.
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