City
Epaper

Good cardiorespiratory fitness linked to 40 per cent decreased risk of 9 cancers

By ANI | Updated: August 16, 2023 22:05 IST

Washington DC [US], August 16 : A significant long-term study published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US], August 16 : A significant long-term study published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine reveals that good cardiorespiratory fitness when young is associated with a 40% decreased chance of acquiring 9 particular cancers later in life, at least in men.

These include cancers of the head and neck, food pipe (oesophagus), stomach, pancreas, liver, bowel, kidney, and lung.

Cardiorespiratory fitness refers to a person’s ability to do aerobic exercise, such as running, cycling, and swimming for sustained periods, or even to climb stairs. It's known to be associated with lower risks of certain cancers, but few large, long term studies of multiple cancer sites have been reported.

The researchers therefore drew on linked Swedish registry data up to the end of 2019, covering background information, medical diagnoses, and deaths for conscripts who started their military service between 1968 and 2005.

At the start of their stint, when they were aged between 16 and 25, conscripts underwent a standard battery of assessments. These included height, weight (BMI), blood pressure, muscular strength and cardiorespiratory fitness..

Conscripts with a low level of cardiorespiratory fitness were slightly more likely to be obese, more likely to have a history of alcohol and substance misuse, and to have parents with lower educational attainment than conscripts with a higher fitness level. 

In all, 365,874 conscripts had a low level of cardiorespiratory fitness; 519,652 had a moderate level; and 340,952 had a high level.

The final analysis included more than 1 million men (1,078,000), 84,117 (7%) of whom subsequently developed cancer in at least one site during an average monitoring period of 33 years.

Compared with men with a low level of fitness at conscription, higher cardiorespiratory fitness was linearly associated with a lower risk of developing specific types of cancer.

It was associated with a 5% lower risk of rectal cancer (2337); a 12% lower risk of pancreatic cancer (1280); an 18% lower risk of bowel cancer (3222); a 19% lower risk of head and neck cancer (2738 men); a 20% lower risk of kidney cancer (1753); a 21% lower risk of stomach cancer (902); a 39% lower risk of food pipe cancer (689); a 40% lower risk of liver cancer (1111); and a 42% lower risk of lung cancer (1635). 

But higher cardiorespiratory fitness was also associated with a 7% heightened risk of prostate cancer (14, 232 men) and a 31% heightened risk of skin cancer (23, 064). Prostate cancer screening and exposure to sunlight might account for these findings, suggest the researchers.

This is an observational study, so no firm conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, and the researchers acknowledge that they didn’t have full data on other potentially influential lifestyle risk factors, such as diet, alcohol intake, and smoking, in particular. Nor were they able to track any changes in cardiorespiratory fitness over time or gather any genetic information on participants.

Nevertheless, their findings are reflected in the American Society of Clinical Oncology guidelines on exercise during cancer treatment, they point out.

And they conclude: “This study shows that higher fitness in healthy young men is associated with a lower hazard of developing 9 out of 18 investigated site-specific cancers, with the most clinically relevant hazard rates in the gastrointestinal tract. 

“These results could be used in public health policymaking, further strengthening the incentive for promoting interventions aimed at increasing [cardiorespiratory fitness] in youth.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Hit and Run: Drunk Audi Driver Runs Over Sleeping Families in Vasant Vihar, Including 8-Year-Old Girl

NationalViral Video: BJP Leader Rahul Balmiki Caught in Obscene Act with Woman at Cremation Ground in Bulandshahr

NationalDelhi’s Radisson Blu Hotel Catches Fire at Midnight as Sauna Room Engulfed in Flames (Watch Video)

Entertainment"Once You're Onboard, Commit Fully": Mohit Suri Reacts to Deepika Padukone's 8-Hour Shift Debate

NationalDelhi: Massive Fire Breaks Out in Sadar Bazaar Shop; 15 Fire Tenders Rushed to Spot (Watch Video)

Health Realted Stories

HealthManipur logs five new Covid cases, state tally rises to 323

HealthActive lifestyle at any point in adulthood may extend lifespan: Study

HealthDr Jitendra Singh bats for holistic healthcare, calls for restoring doctor-patient trust

HealthDelegation of Nepal Embassy visits AIIMS Bhopal, holds meetings with foreign students

HealthS. Korean PM welcomes protesting medical students' decision to return to school