Moderate Physical Activity Is Critical For Reducing The Risk Of Chronic Disease In Older Women

Exercise melts intra-abdominal fat, a hidden risk for cancer, heart disease, diabetes.

Getting regular, moderate-intensity exercise may be critically important for postmenopausal women who want to reduce their risk of cancer, heart disease and other chronic diseases, according to a study led by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. The reason: exercise effectively reduces intra-abdominal fat, a hidden risk factor for many chronic illnesses.

Lead investigator Anne McTiernan, M.D., Ph.D., a member of Fred Hutchinson's Public Health Sciences Division, and colleagues report the results of the largest randomized clinical trial to assess the effect of exercise on overall and intra-abdominal obesity in postmenopausal women in the Jan. 15 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers from Fred Hutchinson, the University of Washington, Yale University and the University of Colorado collaborated on the study.

"Even if a woman who exercises regularly doesn't see the benefits of dramatic weight loss on her scale, our results indicate that she can feel confident that she is improving her health, because regardless of the amount of weight lost, we now know that exercise reduces hidden intra-abdominal fat, the most dangerous type of fat," said McTiernan, director of Fred Hutchinson's Prevention Center and an international expert on the impact of physical activity on cancer prevention. "This study gives us direct evidence that exercise can affect biology related to cancer and other chronic diseases in older women."

Reducing intra-abdominal, or visceral, fat is important because in addition to increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes, among other conditions, such fat can raise insulin levels, which promotes the growth of cancer cells.

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People with high levels of intra-abdominal fat may not even know it, McTiernan said, because it is hidden, deposited around the internal organs within the abdomen. "Most women don't know about intra-abdominal fat, but they should, since it is the most clinically significant type of fat and it's where women tend to store fat after menopause."

Although it is known that so-called "apple-shaped" people who store their fat around the stomach are at higher risk for conditions such as diabetes, hypertension and stroke than "pear-shaped" people who store their fat in their buttocks and thighs, visceral obesity is not necessarily correlated with body shape, McTiernan said. The only accurate way to determine the presence and extent of intra-abdominal fat is with imaging procedures such as CT or MRI scans.

"Because it is so costly to measure intra-abdominal obesity, until now very little data has existed on the impact of exercise on this dangerous, hidden health risk," she said.

This yearlong study involved more than 170 previously sedentary, overweight, postmenopausal Seattle-area women. None took hormone-replacement therapy. Half were randomly assigned to a moderate-intensity, aerobic-exercise group and half, who served as a comparison group, attended a weekly hour-long stretching class.

The members of the exercise group, who worked out at home and at a gym for at least 45 minutes five days a week - an amount similar to current national recommendations - achieved significant reductions in weight, total body fat and intra-abdominal fat. After a year on the program, while the amount of body weight lost was modest yet statistically significant, the exercisers lost between 3.4 percent and 6.9 percent intra-abdominal fat while maintaining their calorie intake. Women who had the highest adherence to the program experienced the largest decreases in weight, total and intra-abdominal fat. The women in the stretching group, in contrast, experienced a slight gain in intra-abdominal fat.

"The beauty of exercise as a method to reduce total and intra-abdominal fat - and therefore chronic disease - is that it can be done by most women at low cost and with low risk of side effects. In addition, exercise has many other health benefits. The good news is that it is never too late to enjoy the health benefits of exercise," McTiernan said.

Strengths of this study, compared to two previous trials that looked at the impact of activity on intra-abdominal obesity, include its large sample size (173 versus fewer than 25 subjects), the length of the exercise intervention (one year compared to less than six months), and its high adherence rates (81 percent of the exercisers completed 80 percent or more of their prescribed 225 minutes per week of exercise).

Another strength of this study was its randomized, controlled, clinical-trial design, considered the gold standard of study designs in medicine. The participants met three times a week with an exercise physiologist at an exercise facility, where they performed treadmill walking and stationary biking. They also exercised two days a week at home, doing exercises of their own choosing, mostly walking.

"In this type of study, we can directly control for extraneous factors and we directly observe what the women are doing rather than just relying on what they report on questionnaires. Therefore, we have more confidence in the results," she said.

The results of the study, funded by the National Cancer Institute, are significant for older women who seek a natural way to reduce their risk of chronic disease, said McTiernan, who is also a research associate professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine and School of Public Health and Community Medicine.

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"Most American women gain one to two pounds on average every year, and that adds up to dangerous levels over a lifetime. All women - especially those at risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer or high cholesterol - need to stop gaining weight," she said. "Regular, moderate-intensity exercise can help keep the weight from creeping on, which can translate to improved health in the long run."

Source: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center