Mortality rates in patients with prostate cancer can be cut with fifteen minutes of exercise daily, says a new study.
Mortality rates in patients with prostate cancer can be cut with fifteen minutes of exercise daily, says a new study.
The study was presented at the American Association for Cancer Research Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research Conference."We saw benefits at very attainable levels of activity," said Stacey A. Kenfield, Sc.D., epidemiology research associate at the Harvard School of Public Health and lead author of the study.
The expert added: "The results suggest that men with prostate cancer should do some physical activity for their overall health."
To reach the conclusion, researchers assessed physical activity levels for 2,686 patients enrolled in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, both before and after diagnosis (men with metastases at diagnosis were excluded).
Men who engaged in three or more hours of Metabolic Equivalent Tasks (MET) a week - equivalent to jogging, biking, swimming or playing tennis for about a half-hour per week - had a 35 percent lower risk of overall mortality.
Specific to walking, the researchers found that men who walked four or more hours a week had a 23 percent lower risk of all-cause mortality compared to men who walked less than 20 minutes per week. Men who walked 90 or more minutes at a normal to brisk pace had a 51 percent lower risk of death from any cause than men who walked less than 90 minutes at an easy walking pace.
Advertisement
"This is the first large population study to examine exercise in relation to mortality in prostate cancer survivors," said Kenfield.
Advertisement
Source-ANI
TRI