Kruk Joanna, Aboul-Enein Basil Hassan, Gołębiewska Marta Ewelina, Duchnik Ewa, Czerniak Urszula, Marchlewicz Mariola
Faculty of Physical Culture and Health, University of Szczecin, Piastów 40b/6, 71-065 Szczecin, Poland.
College of Arts & Sciences Health & Society Program, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 285 Old Westport Rd., North Dartmouth, MA 02747, USA.
Cancers (Basel). 2025 Apr 23;17(9):1410. doi: 10.3390/cancers17091410.
There is strong evidence that not enough physical activity is among the most critical risk factors for cancer disease and premature mortality. The literature on the benefits of regular physical activity regarding cancer disease has grown in the last decades. This review aimed to present the current findings on the effect of prediagnosis physical activity on cancer incidence and mortality published between January 2019 and October 2024; this study summarizes the previous evidence, as well as the literature underlying biological mechanisms operating in the exercise-cancer relationship. The review also highlights gaps in the existing research and identifies future research directions. Medline/PubMed, ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar were searched with the search terms "physical activity" and "physical exercise" in conjunction with the MeSH terms for "cancer" and "carcinoma". Primary, review, and meta-analysis studies published in English were included if they reported a measure of the effect size of prediagnosis physical activity on cancer incidence and/or cancer mortality. Evidence from 37 observational studies and 10 reviews were included in this systematic review; 22 studies reported the effect of physical activity on cancer incidence, and 15 studies on cancer mortality. Of the 37 included observational studies, 19 confirmed the previous evidence that physical activity significantly decreased all-cancer-combined and cancer-specific site incidences, and 10 studies focused on cancer mortality. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in this process require future studies. The most convincing evidence maintains the effects of physical activity on body weight and fat, insulin resistance, sex hormones, regulation of redox homeostasis, enhancing the antioxidant defense system, and reducing oxidative stress. These data demonstrate substantial prevention against several cancer incidences and mortality among patients who performed regular physical activity, of which dose meets at least the WHO's guidelines. Further prospective cohort studies and long-term RCT studies are warranted to address a safe and personalized activity dose for cancer-site prevention, identify more precisely the biological mechanisms operating in the physical activity-cancer relationship, and promote the benefits of being physically active.
有充分证据表明,身体活动不足是癌症和过早死亡的最关键风险因素之一。在过去几十年中,关于定期进行体育活动对癌症有益的文献不断增加。本综述旨在介绍2019年1月至2024年10月期间发表的关于诊断前身体活动对癌症发病率和死亡率影响的当前研究结果;本研究总结了先前的证据以及运动与癌症关系中潜在生物学机制的文献。该综述还强调了现有研究中的差距,并确定了未来的研究方向。使用搜索词“身体活动”和“体育锻炼”,并结合“癌症”和“癌”的医学主题词,对Medline/PubMed、ScienceDirect和谷歌学术进行了检索。如果英文发表的原始研究、综述和荟萃分析研究报告了诊断前身体活动对癌症发病率和/或癌症死亡率的效应大小测量,则将其纳入。本系统综述纳入了37项观察性研究和10篇综述的证据;22项研究报告了身体活动对癌症发病率的影响,15项研究报告了对癌症死亡率的影响。在纳入的37项观察性研究中,19项证实了先前的证据,即身体活动显著降低了所有癌症合并发病率和特定癌症部位的发病率,10项研究关注癌症死亡率。然而,这一过程中涉及的分子机制需要未来的研究。最有说服力的证据表明,身体活动对体重和脂肪、胰岛素抵抗、性激素、氧化还原稳态调节、增强抗氧化防御系统以及降低氧化应激有影响。这些数据表明,对于进行规律身体活动且运动量至少符合世界卫生组织指南的患者,可有效预防多种癌症的发生和死亡。有必要进行进一步的前瞻性队列研究和长期随机对照试验研究,以确定预防癌症部位的安全且个性化的活动剂量,更精确地确定身体活动与癌症关系中起作用的生物学机制,并推广身体活动的益处。