Dose-dependent effects of aerobic exercise on clinically relevant biomarkers among healthy women at high genetic risk for breast cancer: A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled study.
Christopher J EhretShouhao ZhouJulia C TchouKathryn H SchmitzKathleen M SturgeonPublished in: Cancer reports (Hoboken, N.J.) (2021)
Women at high genetic risk for breast cancer should maintain healthy weights and aerobic capacities through aerobic exercise to achieve measurable benefits on overall health. For overweight women, exercise appears to improve subclinical metabolic dysregulation. However, normal weight women were unaffected by aerobic exercise as their biomarker levels may be below the threshold for improvement. VO2 max increases solely quantified the benefits of exercise in already healthy women at high-risk for breast cancer.
Keyphrases
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- breast cancer risk
- pregnancy outcomes
- physical activity
- cervical cancer screening
- high intensity
- healthcare
- weight loss
- public health
- insulin resistance
- body mass index
- genome wide
- pregnant women
- health information
- adipose tissue
- climate change
- risk assessment
- weight gain
- body composition
- resistance training