Background: Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) is the leading cause of non-cancer mortality among cancer survivors. Despite the known benefits of physical activity on cardiovascular health in the general population, evidence regarding post-diagnosis physical activity and CVD risk among cancer survivors is limited. Objectives: To explore the associations of wearable device-measured moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity (MVPA) with CVD risk in long-term cancer survivors. Methods: The retrospective analysis involved a prospective cohort of 6109 cancer survivors without CVD from the UK Biobank accelerometry subsample. Cancer diagnoses were obtained from national cancer registries (International Classification of Diseases-10 [ICD-10], C00-C97, except for non-melanoma skin cancer, in situ, and non-well-defined cancers), and participants were followed up through December 31, 2022. A machine-learning algorithm was utilized to categorize MVPA into four groups based on guideline-recommend MVPA duration (0-75 min/week, 75-150 min/week, 150-300 min/week, ≥300 min/week). Results: Over a median follow-up of 7.88 years, there were 539 incident CVD events, including 361 incident CAD events, 155 incident HF events, and 109 incident stroke events. A clear inverse linear dose-response relationship between MVPA volume and the incidence of CVD was observed (P for nonlinear=0.49), with no maximal threshold for the benefits. Adjusted CVD incidence rates (95% confidence intervals [CIs]) across MVPA groups (0-75 min/week, 75-150 min/week, 150-300 min/week, ≥300 min/week) were 15.30 (12.90, 18.10), 13.50 (11.00, 16.40), 12.00 (10.20, 14.10), and 9.86 (8.35, 11.60) per 1000 person-years, respectively. Adjusted hazard ratios (95% CI) for CVD, CAD, HF, and stroke in the highest MVPA group (≥300 min/week) compared with those with the lowest MVPA group (0-75 min/week) were 0.63 (0.49, 0.80), 0.68 (0.51, 0.91), 0.66 (0.42,1.06), 0.72 (0.42, 1.23), respectively. Conclusions: Findings from the UK Biobank study suggest that longer durations of MVPA are associated with reduced incident CVD risk in cancer survivors, particularly in CAD risk reduction, underscoring the potential for physical activity to serve as a key component in cardio-oncology care.
Read full abstract