Title: Cancer and Exercise
1Cancer and Exercise
- B. Elizabeth Delasobera, MD
- Sports Medicine Fellow
2Outline
- The mechanism for how exercise can prevent cancer
- The evidence for exercise and increased cancer
survival - The exercise prescription for cancer patients and
survivors
3Cancer Review
- Excessive, uncontrolled cellular proliferation
with potential for metastasis - Symptoms can be local or systemic
- Variety of treatments
- Surgery, Radiation, Chemotherapy, Immunotherapy
- Designed to attempt remission or cure, or for
disease control or symptom relief
4Mechanism for Cancer Reduction with Exercise
- Physical activity lowers levels of biologically
available sex hormones - Decreased lifetime exposure to endogenous sex
hormones -gt decreased risk of hormone-related
cancers - Breast, endometrial, ovaries, prostate, testes
5Mechanism for Cancer Reduction with Exercise
- Exercise decreases endogenous insulin production
- Higher levels of circulating insulin linked with
several cancers - Exercise associated with decreased levels of IGF
- High levels of IGF-1 a/w several cancers (colon,
prostate, breast, lung)
6Mechanism for Cancer Reduction with Exercise
- Adiposity and Cancer Risk
- Increased fat associated with increased risk of
cancers of colon, kidney, esophagus, endometrium,
thyroid, post-menopausal breast - Physical activity decreases colon transit time
- Decreases colonic exposure to carcinogens in
stool - Level of physical activity inversely related to
levels of C-reative protein - NSAID use in physically active
- NSAID use appears to decrease colon cancer risk
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8The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Risk
- Breast Cancer
- Invasive Breast Cancer risk decreased by 15-50
among physically active women - Women lt 40yo exercising 4 hrs/week or more during
reproductive years had 50 risk reduction - Postmenopausal women with higher rates of
recreational activity have lower incidence of
breast cancer - Confirmed in over 30 studies in multiple
demographic and population groups - Studies focused solely on in situ Breast Cancer
have shown similar reductions in risk - Estrogren receptor negative cancer seem to be
most reduced with exercise -
Bernstein L, AACR Education Book 2008225-231
(2008)
9The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Risk
- Breast Cancer
- Greatest reduction is risk found with exercise
during reproductive years, strenuous activity, at
least 5 hours per week - Estrogen receptor-negative Breast Cancer responds
better to exercise than receptor-positive cancer - Meta-analysis revealed a dose-response
relationship of 6 decrease in relative risk for
each additional hour of physical activity per
week - Monninkhof EM, et al. Epidemiol 20071813757.
Bernstein L, AACR Education Book 2008225-231
(2008)
10The Evidence Exercise and Cancer Survival
- Breast Cancer Survival Meta-Analysis
- 24 - 67 reduction in total deaths and 50
reduction in breast cancer recurrence in women
who are physically active - Best effect in women who underwent equivalent of
brisk walking 3h per week - Effect observed in pre and post-menopausal,
overweight and normal weight women, and those
with stage I-III disease
11The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Risk
- Colon Cancer
- 43 out of 51 studies demonstrated decreased risk
of colon cancer in the most physically active
participants - Risk reduction averaged 40-50, up to 70
- Consistent risk reduction despite differing study
designs and populations and types of exercise - Greater effect in men vs. women
- Hormone supplementation in postmenopausal women
also has protective effect - Unclear exercise effect on rectal cancer
Bernstein L, AACR Education Book 2008225-231
(2008) Friedenreich CM, et al. J Nutr
1323456-3464, 2002.
12The Evidence Exercise and Cancer Survival
- Colon cancer survival
- 3h per week of moderate physical activity after
colon cancer diagnosis - 39-59 decreased risk of colon cancer death
- 50-63 decreased risk of total death
- Effect essentially unchanged across age, sex,
BMI, disease stage, age at diagnosis - Meyerhardt JA, et al. J Clin Oncol
200624353541
13The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Prevention
- Prostate Cancer
- Less consistent data, risk reduction averaged 10
- 30 - Poor understanding of natural history of Prostate
Cancer - Exercise can also reduce risk of BPH
- Exercise lowers severity of disease and
fatalities from prostate cancer - Likely that very high level of exertion early in
life needed to influence implicated hormones
Bernstein L, AACR Education Book 2008225-231
(2008)
Friedenreich CM, et al. J Nutr 1323456-3464,
2002.
14The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Prevention
- Endometrial Cancer
- Strong association with Breast Cancer
- Fewer/lower quality studies
- Majority still show decreased risk of endometrial
cancer with increased physical activity - Risk Reduction varied 0 90, average 30 - 40
- Majority of studies show dose response effect
Bernstein L, AACR Education Book 2008225-231
(2008) Friedenreich CM, et al. J Nutr
1323456-3464, 2002.
15The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Prevention
- Lung Cancer
- Physical activity probably decreases risk of lung
cancer, but effect not well-established - Meta-analysis shows 13 risk reduction with
moderate recreational physical activity and 30
decreased risk with strenuous activity - Studies may not reflect differences in smoking
habits
Tardon A, et al. Cancer Causes Control
20051638997.
16The EvidenceExercise and Cancer Prevention
- Limited and/or insufficient evidence
- Ovarian Cancer
- Testicular Cancer
- Renal Cell Cancer
- Pancreatic Cancer
- Thyroid Cancer
- Melanoma
17Survivors and Obesity
- Improvements in treatment means more survivors
- 11 million cancer survivors in US alone
- Obesity and a sedentary lifestyle prevalent among
cancer survivors (Irwin ML, BJSM 20094332-38) - Higher than general population
- Increases risk of cancer recurrence and death
- In breast cancer survivors, obesity assoc w/ 50
increase in cancer recurrence and death (Kroenke
CH, et al. J Clin Oncol 20052313708) - Cancer survivors die from non-cancer related CVD
and DM2 at a higher rate than the general
population
18So Are Cancer Pts Exercising?
- Despite these well documented dramatic effects,
the great majority of cancer survivors do not
participate in regular physical activity - Many cancer survivors decrease their physical
activity after diagnosis - Women with breast cancer exercise, on average, 2
hours less per week 1 year after diagnosis than
pre-diagnosis.
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20Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- Goal is to preserve and possibly improve function
- Must be individualized
- Tailor to level of function
- Accommodate for periods of increased fatigue and
cycles of treatment - Make exercise an integral part of everyday life
21Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- 30-50 of breast cancer deaths among
post-menopausal women can be attributed to being
overweight - Cancer survivors die of non-cancer causes at a
higher rate than persons in the general
population (CV dz, DM, etc)
22Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- Special Considerations for Cancer and Exercise
- Cancer treatment can cause osteoporosis bony
metastases may weaken bone higher risk of
pathologic fracture - Be aware of Hickman cathethers, Port-a-caths,
other access lines - If platlet count is below 50k, consider risk of
bleeding - Consider concomitant effects of CVD and anemia
23Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- Medications That Can Effect Exercise Tolerance
- Glucocorticoids may cause muscle weakness and
wasting - Growth factors may cause bone pain
- Chemotherapy may cause anemia, fatigue, and
nausea possibly myopathies and neuropathies - Anthracyclines can cause cardiomyopathy, heart
failure and coronary vasospasm - Radiation may cause skin breakdown, muscle and
joint constriction, and cardiopulmonary fibrosis
24Recs for Exercising with Cancer
25Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- American Cancer Society Recs
- While getting adjuvant treatment recs 3-5
days/week for 20-30 mins tailored to fitness
level and tx side effects (ex, walking,
resistance training, yoga) - Survivors use ACSM sports prescription guidelines
(keep in mind any limitations based on prior
slides)
26Recs for Exercising with Cancer
- Things to Keep in Mind with Return to Sport
- Immunocompromised? (neutropenia, on chemo, etc)
- At risk of bleeding? (platlet count, coags, meds)
- At risk of CV issues? (meds)
- Neck check
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28Summary
- Multiple biologic explanations for benefits of
exercise with respect to cancer risk reduction
and survival - Exercise and Cancer Prevention
- Convincing evidence for increased activity and
prevention of colon, breast, and prostate cancer - Probable evidence for endometrial and lung cancer
- Insufficient evidence for all others
29Summary
- Exercise and Cancer Survival
- Increasing numbers of survivors in population
- Decreasing physical activity among survivors
- Increased physical activity significantly lowers
cancer recurrence and total death in survivors - Exercise Prescription
- Must be individualized
- Many confounding factors (be aware of meds and
side effects) - Keep it simple, make it regular, progress
gradually
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