%0 Journal Article
%A Viskochil, Richard H
%A Lin, Tengda
%A Gigic, Biljana
%A Himbert, Caroline
%A Bandera, Victoria M
%A Skender, Stephanie
%A Holowatyj, Andreana N
%A Schrotz-King, Petra
%A Steindorf, Karen
%A Strehli, Ildiko
%A Mutch, Matthew G
%A Chao, Dante
%A Toriola, Adetunji T
%A Shibata, David
%A Siegel, Erin M
%A Li, Christopher I
%A Hardikar, Sheetal
%A Peoples, Anita R
%A Figueiredo, Jane C
%A Schneider, Martin
%A Ulrich, Cornelia M
%A Ose, Jennifer
%T Sedentary behavior and physical activity one year after colorectal cancer diagnosis: results from the ColoCare Study.
%J Journal of cancer survivorship
%V nn
%@ 1932-2259
%C New York, NY [u.a.]
%I Springer
%M DKFZ-2025-00420
%P nn
%D 2025
%Z epub
%X Physical activity plays key roles in colorectal cancer survivorship; however, the impact of different clinicodemographic outcomes on cross-sectional and longitudinal objectively measured physical activity 12 and 24 months post-diagnosis are unclear.ColoCare study participants (n = 165) wore an Actigraph GT3x accelerometer for 4-10 consecutive days to objectively assess activity levels 12 and 24 months after colorectal cancer diagnosis and resection. Associations between these clinical/demographic exposures and physical activity outcomes and longitudinal changes were determined using t-test, ANOVA F-test, and linear regression modeling, adjusting for common confounders (e.g., sex, age, stage).Key physical activity and sedentary behavior variables significantly differed by demographic status, including minutes of weekly exercise by sex and age (age < 50: 364 min ± 303 min; age 50-70: 232 min ± 263 min; age > 70: 93 min ± 135 min, p < 0.001) and (
%K Accelerometer (Other)
%K Aging (Other)
%K Objective measurement (Other)
%K Sex differences (Other)
%F PUB:(DE-HGF)16
%9 Journal Article
%$ pmid:39985691
%R 10.1007/s11764-025-01756-x
%U https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/299010