Christopher Cami N, Chandler Paulette D, Zhang Xuehong, Tobias Deirdre K, Hazra Aditi, Gaziano J Michael, Buring Julie E, Lee I-Min, Sesso Howard D
Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Nutrition, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Cancer Causes Control. 2025 Jan;36(1):81-91. doi: 10.1007/s10552-024-01925-w. Epub 2024 Oct 8.
Physical activity (PA) can improve cancer survival; however, whether the timing of PA differentially affects mortality risk is unclear. We evaluated the association between PA levels pre- and post-diagnosis and mortality risk in the Women's Health Study (WHS), Physicians' Health Study (PHS)-I, and PHS-II prospective cohorts.
We categorized PA pre- and post-diagnosis as active (WHS: ≥ 7.5 metabolic equivalent (MET)-h/week; PHS: vigorous PA ≥ 2-4 times/week) or inactive. We analyzed changes in pre- and post-diagnosis PA levels as four joint categories: (1) Inactive → Inactive, (2) Active → Inactive, (3) Inactive → Active, and (4) Active → Active, on mortality risk using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression.
We identified 10,541 participants with incident cancer and 3,696 deaths during follow-up. Compared to maintaining inactivity in both periods, remaining active pre- and post-diagnosis observed lower all-cause (Hazard Ratio [95% confidence interval]: WHS: 0.55 [0.47-0.64]; PHS-I: 0.77 [0.67-0.88]), cancer (WHS: 0.55 [0.45-0.67]; PHS-I: 0.75; [0.61-0.92]) and non-cancer/cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality risks (WHS: 0.49 [0.38-0.65]). Similarly, becoming active post-diagnosis was associated with lower all-cause (WHS: 0.60 (0.48-0.75]; PHS-I: 0.72 [0.61-0.88]), cancer (WHS: 0.65 [0.49-0.86]; PHS-I: 0.64 [0.49-0.84]), and non-cancer/CVD mortality risk (WHS: 0.49 [0.33-0.75]). Being active pre- and post-diagnosis was associated with lower mortality risks in separate analyses, although significance differed by cohort and outcome.
Remaining active pre- and post-diagnosis and becoming active post-diagnosis may be associated with improvements in cancer survival, however, research is needed across diverse cancer populations.
体育活动(PA)可提高癌症生存率;然而,PA的时间安排是否会对死亡风险产生不同影响尚不清楚。我们在女性健康研究(WHS)、医生健康研究(PHS)-I和PHS-II前瞻性队列中评估了诊断前后PA水平与死亡风险之间的关联。
我们将诊断前后的PA分为活跃(WHS:≥7.5代谢当量(MET)-小时/周;PHS:剧烈PA≥2-4次/周)或不活跃。我们将诊断前后PA水平的变化分析为四个联合类别:(1)不活跃→不活跃,(2)活跃→不活跃,(3)不活跃→活跃,以及(4)活跃→活跃,使用多变量Cox比例风险回归分析其对死亡风险的影响。
我们确定了10541名新发癌症参与者,随访期间有3696人死亡。与两个时期都保持不活跃相比,诊断前后均保持活跃的参与者全因死亡风险较低(风险比[95%置信区间]:WHS:0.55[0.47-0.64];PHS-I:0.77[0.67-0.88])、癌症死亡风险较低(WHS:0.55[0.45-0.67];PHS-I:0.75;[0.61-0.92])以及非癌症/心血管疾病(CVD)死亡风险较低(WHS:0.49[0.38-0.65])。同样,诊断后变得活跃与较低的全因死亡风险(WHS:0.60(0.48-0.75];PHS-I:0.72[0.61-0.88])、癌症死亡风险(WHS:0.65[0.49-0.86];PHS-I:0.64[0.49-0.84])以及非癌症/CVD死亡风险(WHS:0.49[0.33-0.75])相关。在单独分析中,诊断前后均活跃与较低的死亡风险相关,尽管不同队列和结局的显著性有所不同。
诊断前后均保持活跃以及诊断后变得活跃可能与癌症生存率的提高有关,然而,需要在不同癌症人群中开展研究。