Eliassen A Heather, Hankinson Susan E, Rosner Bernard, Holmes Michelle D, Willett Walter C
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2010 Oct 25;170(19):1758-64. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.363.
Physical activity has many health benefits. Although greater activity has been related to lower postmenopausal breast cancer risk, important details remain unclear, including type, intensity, and timing of activity and whether the association varies by subgroups.
Within the prospective Nurses' Health Study, we assessed the associations of specific and total activity, queried every 2 to 4 years since 1986, with breast cancer risk. Cox proportional hazards models were used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Activity was measured as hours of metabolic equivalent task values (MET-h).
During 20 years of follow-up (1986-2006), 4782 invasive breast cancer cases were documented among 95 396 postmenopausal women. Compared with less than 3 MET-h/wk (<1 h/wk walking), women engaged in higher amounts of recent total physical activity were at lower breast cancer risk (≥27 MET-h/wk [approximately 1 h/d of brisk walking]: HR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.78-0.93; P < .001 for trend). Compared with women who were least active at menopause and through follow-up (<9 MET-h/wk [approximately 30 minutes of walking at an average pace on most days of the week]), women who increased activity were at lower risk (<9 MET-h/wk at menopause and ≥9 MET-h/wk during follow-up: HR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.82-0.98). Among specific activities modeled simultaneously, brisk walking was associated with lower risk (per 20 MET-h/wk [5 h/wk]: HR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84-0.98). The association with total activity did not differ significantly between estrogen and progesterone receptor-positive and -negative tumors (P = .65 for heterogeneity).
Our findings suggest that moderate physical activity, including brisk walking, may reduce postmenopausal breast cancer risk and that increases in activity after menopause may be beneficial.
体育活动对健康有诸多益处。尽管更多的活动与较低的绝经后乳腺癌风险相关,但重要细节仍不明确,包括活动的类型、强度、时间,以及这种关联是否因亚组而异。
在前瞻性护士健康研究中,我们评估了自1986年起每2至4年询问一次的特定活动和总活动与乳腺癌风险的关联。使用Cox比例风险模型计算风险比(HRs)和95%置信区间(CIs)。活动以代谢当量任务值(MET-h)小时数来衡量。
在20年的随访期(1986 - 2006年)内,95396名绝经后女性中有4782例浸润性乳腺癌病例被记录。与每周少于3 MET-h(每周步行少于1小时)相比,近期进行较多总体育活动的女性患乳腺癌的风险较低(每周≥27 MET-h [约每天快走1小时]:HR,0.85;95% CI,0.78 - 0.93;趋势P <.001)。与绝经时及随访期间最不活跃的女性(每周<9 MET-h [一周中大多数日子以平均速度步行约30分钟])相比,增加活动量的女性风险较低(绝经时每周<9 MET-h且随访期间每周≥9 MET-h:HR,0.90;95% CI,0.82 - 0.98)。在同时建模的特定活动中,快走与较低风险相关(每20 MET-h/周 [每周5小时]:HR,0.91;95% CI,0.84 - 0.98)。雌激素和孕激素受体阳性及阴性肿瘤与总活动的关联无显著差异(异质性P = 0.65)。
我们的研究结果表明,适度的体育活动,包括快走,可能会降低绝经后乳腺癌风险,且绝经后增加活动量可能有益。