Shi Yun, Li Tingting, Wang Ying, Zhou Lingling, Qin Qin, Yin Jieyun, Wei Sheng, Liu Li, Nie Shaofa
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and the Ministry of Education Key Lab of Environment and Health, School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei, China.
Sci Rep. 2015 Oct 7;5:14901. doi: 10.1038/srep14901.
Controversial results of the association between household physical activity and cancer risk were reported among previous epidemiological studies. We conducted a meta-analysis to investigate the relationship of household physical activity and cancer risk quantitatively, especially in dose-response manner. PubMed, Embase, Web of science and the Cochrane Library were searched for cohort or case-control studies that examined the association between household physical activity and cancer risks. Random-effect models were conducted to estimate the summary relative risks (RRs), nonlinear or linear dose-response meta-analyses were performed to estimate the trend from the correlated log RR estimates across levels of household physical activity quantitatively. Totally, 30 studies including 41 comparisons met the inclusion criteria. Total cancer risks were reduced 16% among the people with highest household physical activity compared to those with lowest household physical activity (RR = 0.84, 95% CI = 0.76-0.93). The dose-response analyses indicated an inverse linear association between household physical activity and cancer risk. The relative risk was 0.98 (95% CI = 0.97-1.00) for per additional 10 MET-hours/week and it was 0.99 (95% CI = 0.98-0.99) for per 1 hour/week increase. These findings provide quantitative data supporting household physical activity is associated with decreased cancer risk in dose-response effect.
以往的流行病学研究报告了家庭体力活动与癌症风险之间存在争议性的关联结果。我们进行了一项荟萃分析,以定量研究家庭体力活动与癌症风险之间的关系,特别是以剂量反应方式进行研究。检索了PubMed、Embase、Web of science和Cochrane图书馆,查找检验家庭体力活动与癌症风险之间关联的队列研究或病例对照研究。采用随机效应模型来估计汇总相对风险(RRs),进行非线性或线性剂量反应荟萃分析,以定量估计家庭体力活动各水平下相关对数RR估计值的趋势。总共30项研究(包括41项比较)符合纳入标准。与家庭体力活动最低的人群相比,家庭体力活动最高的人群的总体癌症风险降低了16%(RR = 0.84,95% CI = 0.76 - 0.93)。剂量反应分析表明家庭体力活动与癌症风险之间存在负线性关联。每周每增加10 MET-小时,相对风险为0.98(95% CI = 0.97 - 1.00),每周每增加1小时,相对风险为0.99(95% CI = 0.98 - 0.99)。这些发现提供了定量数据,支持家庭体力活动在剂量反应效应方面与降低癌症风险相关。