Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity

Background According to the 2018 Third Expert Report from the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research, there is strong evidence that physical activity of all types and intensities protects against colon, endometrial and breast cancers. We aimed to estimate the percentage an...

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Main Authors: Franciska J Gudenkauf, Aaron P Thrift
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group
Series:BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health
Online Access:https://nutrition.bmj.com/content/early/2020/07/27/bmjnph-2020-000087.full
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spelling doaj-0be2fc16f68f40499653cb280c1c7c982020-11-25T03:15:48ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health2516-554210.1136/bmjnph-2020-000087Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activityFranciska J Gudenkauf0Aaron P Thrift1Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USADepartment of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USABackground According to the 2018 Third Expert Report from the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research, there is strong evidence that physical activity of all types and intensities protects against colon, endometrial and breast cancers. We aimed to estimate the percentage and number of incident cancer cases diagnosed in Texas in 2015 that were attributable to insufficient physical activity, and we examined for differences across racial/ethnic subgroups to reveal important causes of and potential avenues for reductions to cancer health disparities.Methods We calculated population attributable fractions for cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity using prevalence data from the Texas Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and relative risk estimates associated with insufficient physical activity from prior studies. Cancer incidence data were gathered from the Texas Cancer Registry.Results Overall, approximately 2.0% of all new cancers or 2094 excess cancer cases diagnosed in 2015 in Texans aged ≥25 years were attributable to insufficient physical activity, with more cancers in women (3.2%) than in men (0.8%). Of all cancer sites, the highest population attributable fraction for insufficient physical activity was observed for endometrial cancers (21.7% compared with 12.7% for colon cancers, 10.9% for premenopausal breast cancers and 2.0% for postmenopausal breast cancers). Hispanics (2.6%) and non-Hispanic blacks (2.5%) had higher proportions of cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity than non-Hispanic whites (1.8%).Conclusions Public health programmes should stress physical activity as a means of cancer prevention, especially among minority groups, who may have disproportionately higher percentages of cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity.https://nutrition.bmj.com/content/early/2020/07/27/bmjnph-2020-000087.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Franciska J Gudenkauf
Aaron P Thrift
spellingShingle Franciska J Gudenkauf
Aaron P Thrift
Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health
author_facet Franciska J Gudenkauf
Aaron P Thrift
author_sort Franciska J Gudenkauf
title Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
title_short Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
title_full Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
title_fullStr Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
title_full_unstemmed Preventable causes of cancer in Texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
title_sort preventable causes of cancer in texas by race/ethnicity: insufficient physical activity
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health
issn 2516-5542
description Background According to the 2018 Third Expert Report from the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research, there is strong evidence that physical activity of all types and intensities protects against colon, endometrial and breast cancers. We aimed to estimate the percentage and number of incident cancer cases diagnosed in Texas in 2015 that were attributable to insufficient physical activity, and we examined for differences across racial/ethnic subgroups to reveal important causes of and potential avenues for reductions to cancer health disparities.Methods We calculated population attributable fractions for cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity using prevalence data from the Texas Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and relative risk estimates associated with insufficient physical activity from prior studies. Cancer incidence data were gathered from the Texas Cancer Registry.Results Overall, approximately 2.0% of all new cancers or 2094 excess cancer cases diagnosed in 2015 in Texans aged ≥25 years were attributable to insufficient physical activity, with more cancers in women (3.2%) than in men (0.8%). Of all cancer sites, the highest population attributable fraction for insufficient physical activity was observed for endometrial cancers (21.7% compared with 12.7% for colon cancers, 10.9% for premenopausal breast cancers and 2.0% for postmenopausal breast cancers). Hispanics (2.6%) and non-Hispanic blacks (2.5%) had higher proportions of cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity than non-Hispanic whites (1.8%).Conclusions Public health programmes should stress physical activity as a means of cancer prevention, especially among minority groups, who may have disproportionately higher percentages of cancers attributable to insufficient physical activity.
url https://nutrition.bmj.com/content/early/2020/07/27/bmjnph-2020-000087.full
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