Last updated:
Author(s):
Rongqi Zhang, Ying Lu, Zilong Bian, Siyun Zhou, Liying Xu, Fangyuan Jiang, Shuai Yuan, Xiao Tan, Xiangjun Chen, Yuan Ding, Xue Li
Publish date:
9 May 2024
Journal:
iScience
PubMed ID:
38974470

Abstract

Large prospective studies are required to better elucidate the associations of physical activity, sedentary behaviors (SBs), and sleep with overall cancer and site-specific cancer risk, accounting for the interactions with genetic predisposition. The study included 360,271 individuals in UK Biobank. After a median follow-up of 12.52 years, we found higher total physical activity (TPA) level and higher sleep scores were related to reduced risk of cancer while higher SB level showed a positive association with cancer. Compared with high TPA-healthy sleep group and low SB-healthy sleep group, low TPA-poor sleep group and high SB-poor sleep group had the highest risk for overall cancer, breast cancer, and lung cancer. Adherence to a more active exercise pattern was associated with a lower risk of cancer irrespective of genetic risk. Our study suggests that improving the quality of sleep and developing physical activity habits might yield benefits in mitigating the cancer risk.

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Institution:
Zhejiang University, China

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