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It has long been known that physical activity has a great
impact on our health. Now, new research comes to support that by saying that
exercising between the ages of 12 and 35 cuts women’s risk of developing breast
cancer.
Researchers at the Washington
University School
of Medicine in St. Louis and Harvard University
in Boston evaluated
questionnaires from 64,777 premenopausal women involved in the Nurses Health
Study II. The women detailed their physical activity starting from the age 12
to the present.
The study found that the women whose activity equaled 13
walking hours a week or 3.25 running hours per week had a 23 percent lower risk
of premenopausal breast cancer compared with the less active women. Within six
years of enrolling, 550 women were diagnosed with breast cancer before
menopause.
“We don't have a lot of prevention strategies for premenopausal breast
cancer, but our findings clearly show that physical activity during adolescence
and young adulthood can pay off in the long run by reducing a woman's risk of
early breast cancer,” said lead researcher Graham Colditz, professor and
associate director of prevention and control at the Alvin J. Siteman Cancer
Center at Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
Colditz further added that the findings should be “one more
reason to encourage young girls and women to exercise regularly.”
Women’s risks to develop breast cancer often include factors
that are unchangeable such as how early they start menstruating, how late
menopause hits, family history of the disease. But physical activity and body
weight are two factors that women can control, this way protecting themselves
against breast cancer.
“I'd say you and your daughter are getting off the couch. Women who engage
in physical activity not only during adolescence but during adulthood lower
their risk,” Dr. Alpa Patel, a cancer prevention specialist at the American
Cancer Society, who praised the new research, said as quoted by the Associated
Press.
Although death rates from breast cancer have been declining,
possibly due to earlier detection and diagnosis, on a national level, breast
cancer still represents the second leading cause of cancer death for women. The
first cause is lung cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, more than
180,000 American women are diagnosed with breast cancer every year, and almost
41,000 will die because of it.
The results of the study, funded by grants from the National
Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society, were published in the May 13
issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
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