Association between physical activity and the time course of cancer recurrence in stage III colon cancer

Author:

Brown Justin CORCID,Ma Chao,Shi Qian,Niedzwiecki Donna,Zemla Tyler,Couture Felix,Kuebler Philip,Kumar Pankaj,Hopkins Judith O,Tan Benjamin,Krishnamurthi Smitha,O'Reilly Eileen MORCID,Shields Anthony F,Meyerhardt Jeffrey A

Abstract

ObjectiveWe determined if postoperative physical activity prevents or delays cancer recurrence in patients with stage III colon cancer.MethodsThis cohort study nested within a randomised trial enrolled 1696 patients with surgically resected stage III colon cancer. Physical activity was calculated based on self-reporting during and after chemotherapy. Patients were classified as physically active (≥9 MET-h/wk, comparable with the energy expenditure of 150 min/wk of brisk walking, consistent with the current physical activity guidelines for cancer survivors) or physically inactive (<9 MET-h/wk). The confounder-adjusted hazard rate (risk of recurrence or death) and HR by physical activity category were estimated with continuous time to allow non-proportionality of hazards.ResultsDuring a median 5.9 years follow-up, 457 patients experienced disease recurrence or death. For physically active and physically inactive patients, the risk of disease recurrence peaked between 1 and 2 years postoperatively and declined gradually to year 5. The risk of recurrence in physically active patients never exceeded that of physically inactive patients during follow-up, suggesting that physical activity prevents—as opposed to delays—cancer recurrence in some patients. A statistically significant disease-free survival benefit associated with physical activity was observed during the first postoperative year (HR 0.68, 95% CI 0.51 to 0.92). A statistically significant overall survival benefit associated with physical activity was observed during the first three postoperative years (HR 0.32, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.51).ConclusionsIn this observational study of patients with stage III colon cancer, postoperative physical activity is associated with improved disease-free survival by lowering the recurrence rate within the first year of treatment, which translates into an overall survival benefit.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,General Medicine

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