Alejandro Pérez Fidalgo
Medical doctor in the Oncology and Haematology Department at the Valencia Clinical Health Research Institute (INCLIVA), Valencia Clinical Hospital and member of the Long-Term Survivors and Adolescents and Young Adults working groups of the Spanish Society of Medical Oncology
Is the study of good quality?
“This study evaluates the impact of physical activity—or, more specifically, sedentary behaviour—on the incidence of cancer in a group of volunteers. To do this, participants underwent detailed monitoring of their physical activity over a seven-day period and were then followed for several years to determine whether they developed any form of cancer. The volunteers were grouped according to the average number of hours they spent being sedentary over a 24-hour period.
The study has several strengths. Firstly, it included a very large cohort of participants, with a total of 91,292 volunteers, all from the UK. Secondly, the follow-up period was substantial: participants were followed for an average of 12.38 years (range 11.56–13.15 years).”
Are there any limitations that should be taken into account? One that stands out to me is that physical activity was only measured over seven days.
“There are indeed several important limitations. The first is the one you mention: physical activity was only monitored for seven days. Participants' activity during that single week determined which group they were assigned to. This approach assumes that most people maintain broadly similar levels of physical activity over many years, which is true for many individuals but certainly not for all. People's activity levels can change over time as their circumstances change, so extrapolating from just one week's worth of data is a clear limitation.
Another limitation is that the study was conducted exclusively in the UK. As a result, the findings may not be fully generalisable to countries where adherence to a Mediterranean diet—which is thought to offer greater protection against cancer—is more common.
A further limitation is the well-recognised 'healthy volunteer' effect. Healthy volunteers tend to have better overall health and higher educational attainment than the general population. Indeed, more than half of the participants had either a university degree or A-level qualifications. This may also mean they are generally more physically active than average.
It is also worth noting that there were only minimal differences between the most and least sedentary groups in terms of smoking status and diet. Ordinarily, one might expect higher levels of sedentary behaviour to be associated with poorer dietary habits and greater tobacco or alcohol consumption. While this is actually helpful in isolating the specific effect of sedentary behaviour from these other lifestyle factors, it also raises questions about how representative the study population is.
Finally, an important limitation is that the researchers did not know why participants were sedentary. The monitoring identified how long people spent sitting, but not whether this was due to work, watching television at home, or spending long periods driving. These different contexts may have different implications for health.”
What are the implications of the findings, and how do they fit with the existing evidence?
“The findings are certainly very interesting. Prolonged uninterrupted sedentary behaviour has been shown to increase cancer risk by up to 10% compared with people who are more physically active. Importantly, participants who regularly broke up long periods of sitting had a lower risk than those who remained seated or lying down for extended periods while awake.
These results once again highlight the importance of physical activity in cancer prevention. They are consistent with a substantial body of research suggesting that exercise triggers a range of metabolic processes which, potentially through epigenetic modulation of DNA, help protect against cancer.
The real novelty of this study is that it suggests you do not have to be a Rafael Nadal to reduce your cancer risk. Simply cutting down on prolonged periods of sitting—or interrupting them with even moderate levels of activity—appears to lower that risk.”
How do these findings fit with current thinking that places greater emphasis on vigorous exercise?
“I think this is one of the most interesting aspects of the study. Rather than focusing on exercise intensity, it evaluates physical activity from the perspective of reducing sedentary time. It simply compares people who spend long periods sitting with those who are more active, and finds a reduction in cancer risk.
That said, the study did not assess the intensity of exercise among the more active participants, so it cannot answer whether vigorous exercise offers additional benefits. What it does show is that even participants who were generally sedentary, but who regularly interrupted prolonged periods of sitting, experienced a lower risk of cancer.
This reinforces the point that perhaps being an elite athlete is not what matters most. Instead, avoiding prolonged sedentary behaviour may itself be an important strategy for reducing cancer risk.”
Is there now enough evidence to include exercise as part of cancer prevention strategies?
“Absolutely. A growing body of evidence—and this study adds further support—shows that people who exercise regularly have a lower risk of developing several types of cancer. This latest publication also suggests that simply avoiding prolonged sedentary behaviour may have meaningful health benefits and help reduce cancer risk.
One practical implication is that employers and policymakers could encourage periods of physical activity rather than simply rest breaks in occupations associated with prolonged sitting. For example, taxi drivers, office workers and others in sedentary jobs could be encouraged—or even required—not just to stop work every couple of hours to rest, but to get up and walk for a few minutes in order to promote better long-term health.”