Strong exercise may cut breast cancer risk

Last Updated: 2007-02-27 9:48:51 -0400 (Reuters Health)

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Strenuous exercise -- such as lap swimming, aerobics and running -- appears to cut the risk of some breast cancers in women, a study said on Monday.

While it is still not clear how hard or long women need to exercise, the study adds to a growing body of evidence that rigorous activity lowers breast cancer risk.

The team at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles said exercise may reduce cancer risk through changes in metabolism and the immune system, and by reducing weight gain.

The study, appearing in the Archives of Internal Medicine, involved 110,599 women in California whose health histories were tracked from 1995 onward.

Women who said they engaged in strenuous activity for more than five hours a week had a 20 percent lower risk of invasive breast cancer and a 31 percent lower risk of early stage breast cancer, compared to women who participated in less than 30 minutes of such activity every week.

Through 2002, a total of 2,649 of the women were diagnosed with invasive breast cancer, and 593 with early-stage forms of the disease.

The study is the first to look at the cumulative effect of exercise over time, as opposed to women's reports of whether they had exercised shortly before being diagnosed with breast cancer.

"These results provide additional evidence supporting a protective role for long-term strenuous recreational physical activity on risk of invasive and (early stage) breast cancer, whereas the beneficial effects of moderate activity are less clear," the study concluded.

What breastcancer.org says about this article…

Strong exercise may cut breast cancer risk

The study reviewed here reinforces the findings from a very similar study reviewed on Feb. 21, 2007: regular, strenuous exercise can lower your risk of breast cancer. The study reviewed here is important because it was very large. More than 110,000 women were followed for about seven years to see whether they developed breast cancer. The women's exercise routines also were recorded.

The Feb. 21 study was retrospective. This means that women already diagnosed with breast cancer were asked to remember their past exercise habits.

When it comes to exercise, more seems to be better. A significant reduction in breast cancer risk requires:

  • a substantial weekly time commitment (five or more hours per week)
  • a strenuous routine (lap swimming, aerobics, running, kickboxing, etc.)
  • a regular routine that's done for years

This amount and level of exercise sounds like a lot, and it is. The trick is to find a routine that works with your schedule, then stick with it. Make sure you like the exercise you're doing and the place at which you do it. For example, if you don't like gyms or being around people when exercising, then a group exercise class probably isn't for you.

To learn more about the role of exercise and a healthy lifestyle in lowering your risk of breast cancer visit breastcancer.org's Risk Factors You Can Control section.

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