Breast cancer risk reduced by exercise

Published: May 15, 2008 at 5:24 PM

ST. LOUIS, May 15 (UPI) -- Girls and young women who exercise regularly between ages 12 to 35 have a substantially lower risk of breast cancer before menopause, a U.S. study said.

The study of nearly 65,000 women, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, found that those who were physically active had a 23 percent lower risk of breast cancer before menopause. High levels of physical activity from ages 12 to 22 contributed most strongly to the lower breast cancer risk.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Harvard University in Boston said that one-quarter of all breast cancers are diagnosed in women 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," lead investigator Dr. Graham Colditz of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis said in a statement.

The researchers found the age-adjusted incidence rates for invasive breast cancer dropped from 194 cases per 100,000 person-years in the least active women to 136 cases in the most active. The most active women reported the equivalent of running 3.25 hours a week or walking 13 hours a week.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Poland's bears putting off bedtime (1 min)
Toyota top of sudden acceleration list (56 min)
UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News
NASA starts U.S-Arab student program
Market gains flatten Monday
Earth sensitivity to CO2 is studied
NASA offers 2010 space station calendar
fark
NASA employee insists (fairy) tale of porn-watching Muslim hijackers is true
You want to see your incarcerated boyfriend. Do you a) wait for visiting hours? b) wait for him...
Bartender refuses to serve alcohol to man because he appeared loaded. Unfortunately so was the AK-47...
Six mile trail of mixed guts, up to 30cm deep in places, causing traffic accidents. That's offal...
A female polar bear named Aisaqvaq, gives birth to two cubs at a Canadian Zoo. Employees state she...
PETA would like to place a statue of an angry, bandaged, bloodied, crippled chicken on crutches...