Impact of obesity, lifestyle factors and health interventions on breast cancer survivors
Impact of obesity, lifestyle factors and health interventions on breast cancer survivors
The incidences of both breast cancer and obesity are rising in the United Kingdom. Obesity increases the risk of developing breast cancer in the postmenopausal population and leads to worse outcomes in those of all ages treated for early stage breast cancer. In this review we explore the multifactorial reasons behind this association and the clinical trial evidence for the benefits of physical activity and dietary interventions in the early and metastatic patient groups. As more people with breast cancer are cured, and those with metastatic disease are living longer, cancer survivorship is becoming increasingly important. Therefore, ensuring the long-term implications of cancer and cancer treatment are addressed is vital. Although there remains a lack of definitive evidence that deliberate weight loss after a diagnosis of breast cancer reduces disease recurrence, a number of studies have reported benefits of weight loss and of physical activity. However, the limited data currently available mean that clinicians remain unclear on the optimal lifestyle advice to give their patients. Further high quality research is needed to provide this evidence base, which will be required to optimise clinical care and for the commissioning of lifestyle interventions in the United Kingdom in breast cancer survivors.
breast cancer, lifestyle, obesity, survivorship
47 - 57
Campbell, Nicola J
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Barton, Charlotte
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Cutress, Ramsey I
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Copson, Ellen R
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Campbell, Nicola J
e84b64aa-92c7-43f5-b8e9-d84492586244
Barton, Charlotte
56d12f89-1744-40e3-90dc-080207345142
Cutress, Ramsey I
68ae4f86-e8cf-411f-a335-cdba51797406
Copson, Ellen R
a94cdbd6-f6e2-429d-a7c0-462c7da0e92b
Campbell, Nicola J, Barton, Charlotte, Cutress, Ramsey I and Copson, Ellen R
(2022)
Impact of obesity, lifestyle factors and health interventions on breast cancer survivors.
Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 82, .
(doi:10.1017/S0029665122002816).
Abstract
The incidences of both breast cancer and obesity are rising in the United Kingdom. Obesity increases the risk of developing breast cancer in the postmenopausal population and leads to worse outcomes in those of all ages treated for early stage breast cancer. In this review we explore the multifactorial reasons behind this association and the clinical trial evidence for the benefits of physical activity and dietary interventions in the early and metastatic patient groups. As more people with breast cancer are cured, and those with metastatic disease are living longer, cancer survivorship is becoming increasingly important. Therefore, ensuring the long-term implications of cancer and cancer treatment are addressed is vital. Although there remains a lack of definitive evidence that deliberate weight loss after a diagnosis of breast cancer reduces disease recurrence, a number of studies have reported benefits of weight loss and of physical activity. However, the limited data currently available mean that clinicians remain unclear on the optimal lifestyle advice to give their patients. Further high quality research is needed to provide this evidence base, which will be required to optimise clinical care and for the commissioning of lifestyle interventions in the United Kingdom in breast cancer survivors.
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Nutrition and Breast Cancer Survival - Copson et al 17.10.22 clean version
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Accepted/In Press date: 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 November 2022
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Keywords:
breast cancer, lifestyle, obesity, survivorship
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Local EPrints ID: 475057
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475057
ISSN: 0029-6651
PURE UUID: 78b5f8bf-7146-4dfd-8f06-8225a4b8cc86
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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2023 18:59
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 23:44
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Author:
Nicola J Campbell
Author:
Charlotte Barton
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