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Effects of exercise dose on endogenous estrogens in postmenopausal women: A randomized trial

Friedenreich, Christine M.; Neilson, Heather K.; Wang, Qinggang; Stanczyk, Frank Z.; Yasui, Yutaka; Duha, Aalo; MacLaughlin, Sarah; Kallal, Ciara; Forbes, Cynthia C.; Courneya, Kerry S.

Authors

Christine M. Friedenreich

Heather K. Neilson

Qinggang Wang

Frank Z. Stanczyk

Yutaka Yasui

Aalo Duha

Sarah MacLaughlin

Ciara Kallal

Kerry S. Courneya



Abstract

Exercise dose comparison trials with biomarker outcomes can identify the amount of exercise required to reduce breast cancer risk and also strengthen the causal inference between physical activity and breast cancer. The Breast Cancer and Exercise Trial in Alberta (BETA) tested whether or not greater changes in estradiol (E2), estrone, and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) concentrations can be achieved in postmenopausal women randomized to 12 months of HIGH (300 min/week) vs MODERATE (150 min/week) volumes of aerobic exercise. BETA included 400 inactive postmenopausal women aged 50-74 years with BMI of 22-40 kg/m2. Blood was drawn at baseline and 6 and 12 months. Adiposity, physical fitness, diet, and total physical activity were assessed at baseline and 12 months. Intention-to-treat analyses were performed using linear mixed models. At full prescription, women exercised more in the HIGH vs MODERATE group (median min/week (quartiles 1,3): 253 (157 289) vs 137 (111 150); P smaller than 0.0001). Twelve-month changes in estrogens and SHBG were smaller than 10% on average for both groups. No group differences were found for E2, estrone, SHBG or free E2 changes (treatment effect ratios (95% CI) from linear mixed models: 1.00 (0.96–1.06), 1.02 (0.98–1.05), 0.99 (0.96–1.02), 1.01 (0.95, 1.06), respectively, representing the HIGH:MODERATE ratio of geometric mean biomarker levels over 12 months; n=382). In per-protocol analyses, borderline significantly greater decreases in total and free E2 occurred in the HIGH group. Overall, no dose effect was observed for women randomized to 300 vs 150 min/week of moderate to vigorous intensity exercise who actually performed a median of 253 vs 137 min/week. For total and free E2, the lack of differential effect may be due to modest adherence in the higher dose group.

Citation

Friedenreich, C. M., Neilson, H. K., Wang, Q., Stanczyk, F. Z., Yasui, Y., Duha, A., MacLaughlin, S., Kallal, C., Forbes, C. C., & Courneya, K. S. (2015). Effects of exercise dose on endogenous estrogens in postmenopausal women: A randomized trial. Endocrine-Related Cancer, 22(5), 863-876. https://doi.org/10.1530/ERC-15-0243

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 21, 2015
Publication Date 2015-10
Deposit Date Sep 5, 2018
Journal Endocrine-Related Cancer
Print ISSN 1351-0088
Publisher BioScientifica
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 22
Issue 5
Pages 863-876
DOI https://doi.org/10.1530/ERC-15-0243
Keywords Cancer Research; Oncology; Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism; Endocrinology
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/1021583
Publisher URL https://erc.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/erc/22/5/863.xml