Geelong Advertiser

Laziness linked to cancers

- GRANT McARTHUR

LAZINESS could be making Australian­s more likely to suffer from 13 different types of cancer, however more evidence is needed to know which diseases physical activity will save us from.

A new Melbourne research project is aiming to sort fact from fiction over which cancers are actually affected by sedentary lives in the hope of getting people moving and avoiding needless deaths.

Convincing evidence has shown postmenopa­usal breast, colon and endometria­l cancers are linked to physical activity, leading health authoritie­s to blame 1.6 per cent of cancers on inactivity.

However, doctors and scientists believe at least 10 other cancers may stem from a lack of exercise, prompting Cancer Council Victoria’s Brigid Lynch to undertake a series of state-backed studies to clarify their links.

“Certainly looking between different types of cancer we expect some will be more plausible than others,” Assoc Prof Lynch said.

“We clearly can’t make policy and public health practice decisions based on one study, we need to generate more evidence.

“If we can build some strong evidence around some of these other types of cancers, that will be really strong indicator to cancer control agencies in Australia and around the world that physical inactivity should be a higher priority for cancer control.”

Based on a UK study of 1.5 million people, the World Cancer Research Fund says there is “suggestive evidence” linking oesophagea­l, liver, lung and premenopau­sal breast cancers to a lack of physical activity. There is also a belief, but low evidence, link- ing kidney, gastric, myeloid leukaemia, myeloma, head and neck, rectal and bladder cancer.

But while the study found a lack of exercise raised the risk of some cancers by up to 42 per cent, it relied on people retrospect­ively self-reporting their levels of activity.

Assoc Prof Lynch will use accelerato­rs on subjects to gather data on their true levels of activity and how it relates to cancer diagnosis.

“If we can say ‘ It is much higher than we previously thought, how about putting some more resources into addressing inactivity?’, I think it is a good strategic way,” Assoc Prof Lynch said.

Announcing Assoc Prof Lynch as one of the 13 recipients of $10 million worth of Victorian Cancer Agency research grants, Health Minister Jill Hennessy said it was important to back the state’s leading researcher­s.

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