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Lifetime physical activity and breast cancer risk in the Shanghai Breast Cancer Study
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  • Regular Article
  • Open access
  • Published: 03 April 2001

Lifetime physical activity and breast cancer risk in the Shanghai Breast Cancer Study

  • C E Matthews1,
  • X-O Shu1,2,4,
  • F Jin3,
  • Q Dai1,3,4,
  • J R Hebert1,
  • Z-X Ruan3,
  • Y-T Gao3 &
  • …
  • W Zheng1,4 

British Journal of Cancer volume 84, pages 994–1001 (2001)Cite this article

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Abstract

Overall physical activity in adolescence and adulthood, and changes in activity over the lifespan were analysed by in-person interviews among 1459 women newly diagnosed with breast cancer and 1556 age-matched controls in urban Shanghai. Physical activity from exercise and sports, household, and transportation (walking and cycling) was assessed in adolescence (13–19 y) and adulthood (last 10 y), as was lifetime occupational activity. Logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence limits (OR (95% CL)) while controlling for confounders. Risk was reduced for exercise only in adolescence (OR = 0.84 (0.70–1.00)); exercise only in adulthood (OR = 0.68 (0.53–0.88)), and was further reduced for exercise in both adolescence and adulthood (OR = 0.47 (0.36–0.62)). Graded reductions in risk were noted with increasing years of exercise participation (OR1–5 yrs= 0.81 (0.67–0.94); OR6–10 yrs= 0.74 (0.59–0.93); OR11–15 yrs= 0.55 (0.38–0.79); OR16 + yrs= 0.40 (0.27–0.60);Ptrend,< 0.01). Lifetime occupational activity also was inversely related to risk (Ptrend< 0.01). These findings demonstrate that consistently high activity levels throughout life reduce breast cancer risk. Furthermore, they suggest that women may reduce their risk by increasing their activity levels in adulthood. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign

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  • 16 November 2011

    This paper was modified 12 months after initial publication to switch to Creative Commons licence terms, as noted at publication

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of South Carolina School of Public Health and the South Carolina Cancer Center, Columbia, 29208, SC

    C E Matthews, X-O Shu, Q Dai, J R Hebert & W Zheng

  2. Department of Pediatrics and Epidemiology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, 29203, SC

    X-O Shu

  3. Department of Epidemiology, Shanghai Cancer Institute, Shanghai, 200032, People’s Republic of China

    F Jin, Q Dai, Z-X Ruan & Y-T Gao

  4. Vanderbilt Center for Health Services Research and the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 37232, TN

    X-O Shu, Q Dai & W Zheng

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From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

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Matthews, C., Shu, XO., Jin, F. et al. Lifetime physical activity and breast cancer risk in the Shanghai Breast Cancer Study. Br J Cancer 84, 994–1001 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1054/bjoc.2000.1671

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  • Received: 16 October 2000

  • Revised: 05 January 2001

  • Accepted: 09 January 2001

  • Published: 03 April 2001

  • Issue date: 06 April 2001

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1054/bjoc.2000.1671

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Keywords

  • exercise
  • epidemiology
  • breast cancer
  • prevention

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