Does exercise reduce all-cancer death rates?
Open Access
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in British Journal of Sports Medicine
- Vol. 26 (2) , 125-128
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsm.26.2.125
Abstract
A reanalysis is made of earlier data relating to initial physical fitness and the likelihood of death from all forms of cancer. It is argued that the original analysis may have been biased by an association between initial fitness and other health habits, particularly cigarette smoking. The association with fitness status remains after reanalysis of the data on the assumption that current smoking leads to a uniform doubling of the risk of cancer death, but the effect is weaker than previously reported. There remains some potential bias, in that the quantity of current smoking may have been linked to fitness status. Some 55% of deaths were untraced, but it is argued that any socioeconomic or other bias from this cause is likely to account for the association between cancer risk and low fitness status. Any reduction of cancer risk is associated with the change from an extremely sedentary to a moderately sedentary lifestyle. It thus cannot be explained in terms of the mechanisms previously invoked to explain low risks of colonic and reproductive cancers in endurance athletes.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physical Activity and CancerInternational Journal of Sports Medicine, 1990
- Physical fitness and all-cause mortality. A prospective study of healthy men and womenJAMA, 1989
- Adolphe Abrahams memorial lecture, 1988. Exercise and lifestyle change.British Journal of Sports Medicine, 1989
- Exercise and MalignancySports Medicine, 1986