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Correlates of physical activity and sedentary behavior among cancer survivors and cancerfree women: The Women's Health Accelerometry Collaboration

  • Samantha Schilsky
  • , Annie Green Howard
  • , Christopher C. Moore
  • , Carmen C. Cuthbertson
  • , Humberto Parada
  • , I. Min Lee
  • , Chongzhi Di
  • , Michael J. LaMonte
  • , Julie E. Buring
  • , Eric J. Shiroma
  • , Andrea Z. LaCroix
  • , Kelly R. Evenson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background Describing correlates of physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior (SB) among postmenopausal cancer survivors can help identify risk profiles and can be used to support development of targeted interventions to improve PA and reduce SB in this population. Objective To describe PA/SB and identify correlates of PA/SB among cancer and cancer-free postmenopausal women. Methods Women from the Women's Health Study (N = 16,629) and Women's Health Initiative/Objective Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Health Study (N = 6,079) were asked to wear an accelerometer on the hip for 7 days. Multiple mixed-effects linear regression models were used to identify sociodemographic-, health-, and chronic condition-related correlates(independent variables) associated with PA and SB (dependent variables) among women with (n = 2,554) and without (n = 20,154) a history of cancer. All correlates were mutually adjusted for each other. Results In unadjusted analyses, women with a history of cancer took fewer mean daily steps (4,572 (standard deviation 2557) vs 5,029 (2679) steps/day) and had lower mean moderate-To-vigorous PA (74.9 (45.0) vs. 81.6 (46.7) minutes/day) than cancer-free women. In adjusted analyses, for cancer and cancer-free women, age, diabetes, overweight, and obesity were inversely associated with all metrics of PA (average vector magnitude, time in moderate-Tovigorous PA, step volume, time at ≥40 steps/minutes, and peak 30-minute step cadence). In unadjusted analyses, mean SB was similar for those with and without cancer (529.7 (98.1) vs. 521.7 (101.2) minutes/day). In adjusted analyses, for cancer and cancer-free women, age, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, current smoking, overweight, and obesity were positive correlates of SB, while Black or Hispanic race/ethnicity, weekly/daily alcohol intake, and excellent/very good/good self-rated health were inverse correlates of SB. Conclusion Several sociodemographic, health, and chronic conditions were correlates of PA/SB for postmenopausal women with and without cancer. Future studies should examine longitudinal relationships to gain insight into potential determinants of PA/SB.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0301233
JournalPLOS ONE
Volume19
Issue number4 April
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024

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