Calhoun Times

Link between physical activity and cancer

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Physical activity has long been known to increase a person’s chances of living healthy well past retirement.

The benefits of physical activity are numerous and include everything from a lower risk for overweight and obesity to improved mental health. Physical activity also has been linked to a lower risk for various diseases, including an assortment of cancers.

The National Cancer Institute notes that the evidence linking physical activity to lower cancer risk comes from observatio­nal studies. Observatio­nal studies are a type of study in which individual­s are observed or certain outcomes are measured. In observatio­nal studies examining physical activity, participan­ts will report on their levels of physical activity and are then followed for years. During these studies, no attempt, such as treatment, is made to affect the outcome. The NCI notes that observatio­nal studies cannot prove a causal relationsh­ip, though they still are invaluable to cancer researcher­s. Such studies also illustrate the important role that physical activity can play in preventing various types of cancer.

Bladder cancer

A 2014 meta-analysis of studies published in the British Journal of Cancer found that the risk of bladder cancer was 15% lower for individual­s with the highest level of recreation­al or occupation­al physical activity than in those with the lowest level. That informatio­n may be especially valuable to individual­s over 55, as the American Cancer Society notes about nine out of 10 people with bladder cancer are 55 or older.

Breast cancer

A meta-analysis published in the European Journal of Cancer in 2016 found that the most physically active women had a 12 to 21% lower risk of breast cancer than those who were the least physically active. Similarly, additional studies have linked physical activity after menopause to a lower risk of breast cancer. That’s important to know, as the NCI indicates that doctors most often diagnose breast cancer in women between the ages of 55 and 64.

Esophageal cancer

Cohort studies are used by researcher­s to investigat­e the causes of disease and to establish links between risk factors and health outcomes. A 2014 meta-analysis of nine cohort studies and 15 case-control studies, which compare patients who have a disease or outcome of interest to patients who do not have the disease or outcome, found that the individual­s who were the most physically active had a 21% lower of risk of esophageal adenocarci­noma than those who were the least physically active. Such findings are significan­t, as the Mayo Clinic reports that adenocarci­noma is the most common form of esophageal cancer in the United States, while the NCI notes the condition is not curable.

Kidney (renal cell)

cancer

A pooled analysis of more than one million individual­s published in JAMA Internal Medicine in 2016 found that leisure-time physical activity was linked to a 23% reduced risk of kidney cancer. Leisuretim­e physical activities can include anything from jogging to dancing to gardening.

Physical activity benefits the body in myriad ways and has been linked to significan­tly lower risks for various cancers.

 ?? Special ?? Physical activity has been linked to a lower risk for various diseases, including an assortment of cancers.
Special Physical activity has been linked to a lower risk for various diseases, including an assortment of cancers.

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