% 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{Viskochil:299010,
author = {R. H. Viskochil and T. Lin and B. Gigic and C. Himbert and
V. M. Bandera and S. Skender$^*$ and A. N. Holowatyj and P.
Schrotz-King$^*$ and K. Steindorf$^*$ and I. Strehli and M.
G. Mutch and D. Chao and A. T. Toriola and D. Shibata and E.
M. Siegel and C. I. Li and S. Hardikar and A. R. Peoples and
J. C. Figueiredo and M. Schneider and C. M. Ulrich and J.
Ose},
title = {{S}edentary behavior and physical activity one year after
colorectal cancer diagnosis: results from the {C}olo{C}are
{S}tudy.},
journal = {Journal of cancer survivorship},
volume = {nn},
issn = {1932-2259},
address = {New York, NY [u.a.]},
publisher = {Springer},
reportid = {DKFZ-2025-00420},
pages = {nn},
year = {2025},
note = {epub},
abstract = {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 $(\%)$ daily sedentary time by
age (age < 50: 64 ± $10\%;$ age 50-70: 67 ± $7\%;$ age >
70: 71 ± $7\%,$ p = 0.003). Within the multivariate model,
age was the primary measure consistently associated with
activity differences. Participants who wore accelerometers
12- and 24-month post-resection (n = 52) significantly
increased weekly exercise minutes (214 min ± 208 min vs.
288 min ± 316 min, p = 0.04).Age is the primary
clinicodemographic determinant separating physical activity
levels in colorectal cancer survivors, and increases in
exercise from 12 to 24 months are likely due to
consolidation of sporadic daily physical activity into bouts
of exercise.Colorectal cancer survivors experience different
volumes and changes in accelerometer-derived physical
activity based on some (e.g., age) but not all (e.g., stage)
clinicodemographic variables.},
keywords = {Accelerometer (Other) / Aging (Other) / Objective
measurement (Other) / Sex differences (Other)},
cin = {C120 / C110},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-He78)C120-20160331 / 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:39985691},
doi = {10.1007/s11764-025-01756-x},
url = {https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/299010},
}