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Walking could improve Prostate Cancer
Outcomes
Newswise,
May 29, 2011--Men with prostate cancer can
improve their outcomes if they walk briskly
for at least three hours a week following
their diagnosis, according to a recent study
in Cancer Research, a journal of the
American Association for Cancer Research.
“It appears that men who walk briskly after
their diagnosis may delay or even prevent
progression of their disease,” said lead
researcher Erin Richman, Sc.D., a research
associate at the University of California,
San Francisco.
Richman said the evidence adds to the
growing body of literature that suggests
walking regularly may prevent a variety of
adverse health problems, including
cardiovascular disease and certain types of
cancer.
“Walking is something everyone can and
should do to improve their health,” she
said.
Richman and colleagues observed 1,455 men
who were diagnosed with prostate cancer that
had not spread beyond the prostate. These
patients reported their physical activity by
questionnaire about 27 months after their
diagnosis and prior to any evidence of
recurrence or second treatment.
Researchers recorded 117 events, including
biochemical recurrences (elevations in PSA),
secondary treatments, bone metastasis and
prostate cancer-specific death. They found
that men who walked briskly for at least
three hours a week had a 57 percent lower
rate of progression of disease than men who
walked at an easy pace for less than three
hours a week.
“The benefit from walking truly depended on
how quickly you walked. Walking at an easy
pace did not seem to have any benefit,” said
Richman.
This collaborative group also recently
reported in a separate cohort of men with
prostate cancer that vigorous physical
activity after diagnosis was associated with
a reduced risk of prostate cancer-specific
death.
Prostate cancer is the second leading cause
of cancer death among men, and more than 2.2
million men in the United States currently
live with the disease. In 2010, there were
217,000 new cases.
Stephen M. Schwartz, Ph.D., a full member at
the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
and a senior editor of Cancer Research, said
this study is important because research on
the role of physical activity in prostate
cancer has been relatively sparse.
“We have had some studies that show a
reduced risk of developing prostate cancer,
but this is strong evidence of a benefit
after someone is diagnosed,” said Schwartz.
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The mission of the American Association for
Cancer Research is to prevent and cure
cancer. Founded in 1907, the AACR is the
world’s oldest and largest professional
organization dedicated to advancing cancer
research. The membership includes 33,000
basic, translational and clinical
researchers; health care professionals; and
cancer survivors and advocates in the United
States and more than 90 other countries.
The AACR marshals the full spectrum of
expertise from the cancer community to
accelerate progress in the prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of cancer through
high-quality scientific and educational
programs. It funds innovative, meritorious
research grants, research fellowships and
career development awards.
The AACR Annual Meeting attracts more than
18,000 participants who share the latest
discoveries and developments in the field.
Special conferences throughout the year
present novel data across a wide variety of
topics in cancer research, treatment and
patient care.
Including Cancer Discovery, the AACR
publishes seven major peer-reviewed
journals: Cancer Research; Clinical
Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer
Therapeutics; Molecular Cancer
Research; Cancer Epidemiology,
Biomarkers & Prevention; and Cancer
Prevention Research. AACR journals
represented 20 percent of the market share
of total citations in 2009.
The AACR also publishes CR, a magazine for
cancer survivors and their families, patient
advocates, physicians and scientists.
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