Exercise Reduces Blood Estrogens, Risk for Breast Cancer in Post
Menopausal Women
By the American Association for the Advancement
of Science
April 15, 2004
Three hours of
moderate exercise per week significantly reduced circulating estrogens in
postmenopausal women, according to a new study published in the current
issue of Cancer Research. The finding may explain why women who exercise
regularly lower their risk for breast cancer.
"Exercise is an effective way for postmenopausal
women to increase their chances of avoiding breast cancer," said Anne
McTiernan, M.D., Ph.D., a member of the Public Health Sciences Division,
Fred
Hutchinson
Cancer
Research
Center
,
Seattle
.
Dr. McTiernan led a year-long study that examined
differences between women who exercised regularly compared with women who
limited their activity to stretching. The study targeted postmenopausal
women who were sedentary, and overweight or obese at the beginning of the
trial.
Within three months of undertaking the five-day per
week exercise program, serum levels of estrogens dipped significantly in
the more active postmenopausal women. After 12 months of routine exercise,
women who decreased body fat by more than 2 percent also had a 16.7
percent reduction in free serum estradiol, a 13.7 percent reduction in
serum estradiol, and an 11.9 percent reduction in serum estrone, a less
estrogenic form of estrogen. Estradiol is a female sex steroid with a more
potent estrogenic effect than estrone, a different form of estrogen.
Estrone concentrations are equivalent to estradiol levels in the blood
prior to menopause, but normally increase in postmenopausal women.
The moderately intensive exercise regiment initially
aimed for aerobic activity resulting in the women reaching 40 percent of
maximal heart rate for 16 minutes per session. The exercise workload
increased gradually to the point where the women reached 60-75 percent
maximal heart rate for 45 minutes per session. The women trained primarily
on treadmills, stationary bicycles, or by walking outdoors. The women who
trained averaged 171 minutes of exercise per week in five workout sessions
performed either in their homes or in athletic gymnasiums.
"This study indicates that exercise can lower
levels of circulating estrogens and increase levels of a protein called
sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG--a blood-borne protein) that binds up
free-estrogen in the serum," Dr. McTiernan said. Increased levels of
SHBG act to regulate the circulating levels of free, biologically
available estrogens.
Dr. McTiernan noted studies showing that women on
low-fat diets reduced serum levels of estradiol by 6.2 percent. The active
women in the exercise study reduced estradiol level another ten percent
with no dietary limitations during the study. The women who persisted with
the exercise-training schedule lost an average of only 3 pounds of body
fat during the 12-month study, but reduced estradiol blood levels by about
one-sixth from pre-trial levels.
Although blood estrogen levels decreased, no drop in
whole-body bone density was evident in the women who exercised compared
with their pre-trial levels, or compared with the control group of women
who merely stretched for exercise.