figshare
Browse

Data from Recreational Physical Activity Is Associated with Reduced Breast Cancer Risk in Adult Women at High Risk for Breast Cancer: A Cohort Study of Women Selected for Familial and Genetic Risk

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 03:05
Abstract

Although physical activity is associated with lower breast cancer risk for average-risk women, it is not known if this association applies to women at high familial/genetic risk. We examined the association of recreational physical activity (self-reported by questionnaire) with breast cancer risk using the Prospective Family Study Cohort, which is enriched with women who have a breast cancer family history (N = 15,550). We examined associations of adult and adolescent recreational physical activity (quintiles of age-adjusted total metabolic equivalents per week) with breast cancer risk using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression, adjusted for demographics, lifestyle factors, and body mass index. We tested for multiplicative interactions of physical activity with predicted absolute breast cancer familial risk based on pedigree data and with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation status. Baseline recreational physical activity level in the highest four quintiles compared with the lowest quintile was associated with a 20% lower breast cancer risk (HR, 0.80; 95% confidence interval, 0.68–0.93). The association was not modified by familial risk or BRCA mutation status (P interactions >0.05). No overall association was found for adolescent recreational physical activity. Recreational physical activity in adulthood may lower breast cancer risk for women across the spectrum of familial risk.

Significance:

These findings suggest that physical activity might reduce breast cancer risk by about 20% for women across the risk continuum, including women at higher-than-average risk due to their family history or genetic susceptibility.

See related commentary by Niehoff et al., p. 23

CITE THIS COLLECTION

DataCite
No result found
or
Select your citation style and then place your mouse over the citation text to select it.

FUNDING

NCI

Cancer Australia

National Breast Cancer Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

NIH

SHARE

email

Usage metrics

Cancer Research

AUTHORS (25)

  • Rebecca D. Kehm
    Jeanine M. Genkinger
    Robert J. MacInnis
    Esther M. John
    Kelly-Anne Phillips
    Gillian S. Dite
    Roger L. Milne
    Nur Zeinomar
    Yuyan Liao
    Julia A. Knight
    Melissa C. Southey
    Wendy K. Chung
    Graham G. Giles
    Sue-Anne McLachlan
    Kristen D. Whitaker
    Michael Friedlander
    Prue C. Weideman
    Gord Glendon
    Stephanie Nesci
    kConFab Investigators
need help?