Physical activity reduces breast cancer risk in African American women

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-1-2011

Abstract

Objective: To examine the relationship between physical activity and breast cancer in African American women. Design: A population-based case-control study was conducted with 199 women (97 cases and 102 controls) from the Washington, DC metro area. A physical activity questionnaire elicited responses on frequency of walking for exercise and vigorous physical activity (eg, running, aerobics) in the past year. Responses were used to calculate a metabolic equivalent (MET) score (MET-hours/week = hours/week vigorous activity X 7 + hours/week walking X 3). The MET score was categorized into low, medium, and high tertiles. Multivariate logistic regression examined the association between physical activity and breast cancer. Results: African American women who engaged in vigorous physical activity (≥2 hours/ week in the past year) had a 64% reduced risk of breast cancer compared to those who did not participate in any vigorous activity (odds ratio, OR = .36; 95% confidence interval, CI = .17-.75). We also found a 64% reduced breast cancer risk in women with a high vs low tertile of total activity (OR = .36; 95% CI = .16-.79). For postmenopausal women, vigorous physical activity and total activity (high vs low tertile) also had an inverse relationship with breast cancer (P<.05). Conclusion: Data regarding the association of physical activity and breast cancer have been equivocal and lacking for African American women. This study found that modest levels of physical activity reduced breast cancer risk in this group. Targeted efforts are needed to encourage more African American women to engage in physical activity.

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