University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA.
Acta Oncol. 2011 Feb;50(2):167-78. doi: 10.3109/0284186X.2010.529822. Epub 2010 Nov 24.
A growing body of evidence suggests that diet and exercise behaviors and body weight status influence health-related outcomes after a cancer diagnosis. This review synthesizes the recent progress in lifestyle interventions in light of current guidelines put forth by the American Cancer Society (ACS), the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR) and the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM).
The PubMed database was searched for terms of cancer survivor(s) or neoplasms/survivor, cross-referenced with MeSH terms of lifestyle, health behavior, physical activity, exercise, body weight, obesity, weight loss, diet, nutrition, and intervention studies and limited to randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that had retention rates exceeding 75%.
There has been an increase in the number and methodological rigor of the studies in this area, with 21 RCTs identified in the past three years. Results suggest that physical activity interventions are safe for cancer survivors and produce improvements in fitness, strength, physical function, and cancer-related psychosocial variables, whereas dietary interventions improve diet quality, nutrition-related biomarkers and body weight. Preliminary evidence also suggests that diet and exercise may positively influence biomarkers associated with progressive disease and overall survival (e.g., insulin levels, oxidative DNA damage, tumor proliferation rates).
The evidence base regarding health-related benefits of increased physical activity, an improved diet, and weight control continues to expand. Due to the large (and increasing) number of cancer survivors, more research is needed that tests the impact of lifestyle change on health-related outcomes in this population, especially research that focuses on high-reach, sustainable interventions that recruit diverse, representative samples to help increase the generalizability of findings to the population at large. Concurrent research also needs to address relative benefit in relation to various subpopulations as defined by phenotype, genotype, and/or exposures to treatment, and other lifestyle and environmental factors.
越来越多的证据表明,饮食和运动行为以及体重状况会影响癌症诊断后的健康结果。本综述根据美国癌症协会 (ACS)、世界癌症研究基金会/美国癌症研究所 (WCRF/AICR) 和美国运动医学学院 (ACSM) 目前提出的指南,综合了生活方式干预的最新进展。
在 PubMed 数据库中搜索癌症幸存者或肿瘤/幸存者的术语,并与生活方式、健康行为、身体活动、运动、体重、肥胖、减肥、饮食、营养和干预研究的 MeSH 术语交叉引用,并限制为保留率超过 75%的随机对照试验 (RCT)。
该领域的研究数量和方法严谨性有所增加,在过去三年中确定了 21 项 RCT。结果表明,身体活动干预对癌症幸存者是安全的,并能改善健康、力量、身体功能和与癌症相关的心理社会变量,而饮食干预能改善饮食质量、营养相关生物标志物和体重。初步证据还表明,饮食和运动可能对与疾病进展和总生存相关的生物标志物产生积极影响(例如,胰岛素水平、氧化 DNA 损伤、肿瘤增殖率)。
关于增加身体活动、改善饮食和控制体重对健康有益的证据基础不断扩大。由于癌症幸存者人数众多(且不断增加),需要进行更多的研究来测试生活方式改变对这一人群健康结果的影响,特别是需要研究注重高影响力、可持续的干预措施,招募多样化、有代表性的样本,以帮助提高研究结果在总体人群中的普遍性。同时还需要开展研究,确定不同亚组人群(根据表型、基因型和/或治疗暴露以及其他生活方式和环境因素定义)的相对获益。