% IMPORTANT: The following is UTF-8 encoded. This means that in the presence % of non-ASCII characters, it will not work with BibTeX 0.99 or older. % Instead, you should use an up-to-date BibTeX implementation like “bibtex8” or % “biber”. @ARTICLE{Markozannes:289938, author = {G. Markozannes and N. Becerra-Tomás and M. Cariolou and K. Balducci and R. Vieira and S. Kiss and D. Aune and D. C. Greenwood and M. J. Gunter and E. Copson and A. G. Renehan and M. Bours and W. Demark-Wahnefried and M. M. Hudson and A. M. May and F. T. Odedina and R. Skinner and K. Steindorf$^*$ and A. Tjønneland and G. Velikova and M. L. Baskin and R. Chowdhury and L. Hill and S. J. Lewis and J. Seidell and M. P. Weijenberg and J. Krebs and A. J. Cross and K. K. Tsilidis and D. S. M. Chan}, title = {{P}ost-diagnosis physical activity and sedentary behaviour and colorectal cancer prognosis: {A} {G}lobal {C}ancer {U}pdate {P}rogramme ({CUP} {G}lobal) systematic literature review and meta-analysis.}, journal = {International journal of cancer}, volume = {155}, number = {3}, issn = {0020-7136}, address = {Bognor Regis}, publisher = {Wiley-Liss}, reportid = {DKFZ-2024-00921}, pages = {426-444}, year = {2024}, note = {2024 Aug 1;155(3):426-444}, abstract = {Low physical activity and high sedentary behaviour have been clearly linked with colorectal cancer development, yet data on their potential role in colorectal cancer survival is limited. Better characterisation of these relationships is needed for the development of post-diagnosis physical activity and sedentary behaviour guidance for colorectal cancer survivors. We searched PubMed and Embase through 28 February 2022 for studies assessing post-diagnosis physical activity, and/or sedentary behaviour in relation to all-cause and cause-specific mortality and recurrence after colorectal cancer diagnosis. Total and recreational physical activity were assessed overall and by frequency, duration, intensity, and volume using categorical, linear, and non-linear dose-response random-effects meta-analyses. The Global Cancer Update Programme (CUP Global) independent Expert Committee on Cancer Survivorship and Expert Panel interpreted and graded the likelihood of causality. We identified 16 observational studies on 82,220 non-overlapping patients from six countries. Physical activity was consistently inversely associated with colorectal cancer morbidity and mortality outcomes, with $13\%-60\%$ estimated reductions in risk. Sedentary behaviour was positively associated with all-cause mortality. The evidence had methodological limitations including potential confounding, selection bias and reverse causation, coupled with a limited number of studies for most associations. The CUP Global Expert panel concluded limited-suggestive evidence for recreational physical activity with all-cause mortality and cancer recurrence. Total physical activity and its specific domains and dimensions, and sedentary behaviour were all graded as limited-no conclusion for all outcomes. Future research should focus on randomised trials, while observational studies should obtain objective and repeated physical activity measures and better adjustment for confounders.}, keywords = {colorectal cancer survival (Other) / evidence grading (Other) / meta‐analysis (Other) / physical activity (Other) / systematic review (Other)}, cin = {C110}, ddc = {610}, cid = {I:(DE-He78)C110-20160331}, pnm = {313 - Krebsrisikofaktoren und Prävention (POF4-313)}, pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-313}, typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16}, pubmed = {pmid:38692650}, doi = {10.1002/ijc.34903}, url = {https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/289938}, }