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Sedentary behaviour and cancer risk: a World Cancer Research Fund International Global Cancer Update Programme (CUP Global) systematic literature review and meta-analysis.

Georgios Markozannes ,
Ahmad Jayedi ,
Margarita Cariolou ,
Eirini Pagkalidou ,
Sayada Zartasha Kazmi ,
Katia Balducci ,
Sonia Kiss ,
Rita Vieira ,
Sofia Cividini ,
Dagfinn Aune ,
Darren C Greenwood ,
Amanda J Cross ,
Marc J Gunter ,
Shalini Jayasekar Zürn ,
Christian C Abnet ,
Vanessa L Z Gordon-Dseagu ,
Kristy Maskell ,
Christelle Clary ,
Helen Croker ,
Panagiota Mitrou ,
Elio Riboli ,
Monica Baskin ,
Rajiv Chowdhury ,
Mia Gaudet ,
Edward Giovannucci ,
Ellen Kampman ,
Sarah J Lewis ,
Anne M May ,
Yikyung Park ,
Tobias Pischon ,
Gianluca Severi ,
Lynette Hill ,
Matty P Weijenberg ,
John Krebs ,
Konstantinos K Tsilidis ,
Doris S M Chan

Abstract

METHODS

Within the Global Cancer Update Programme (CUP Global), we systematically searched the literature in PubMed and Embase until September 2024 for observational cohort studies on sedentary behaviour and adult cancer risk. Using dose-response meta-analyses, we investigated sedentary behaviour domains (total, occupational, recreational, transportation, and/or other) and dimensions (duration, frequency), and additionally pooled across domains. The quality of evidence was graded by the CUP Global Expert Panel (protocol registration: https://osf.io/7utbm/).

BACKGROUND

High levels of sedentary behaviour are an emerging global public health concern, but its impact on cancer risk remains unclear.

INTERPRETATION

Evidence supports that prolonged sedentary behaviour is probably a cause of breast and colon cancers, while limited suggestive evidence supports positive associations for several other exposure-cancer pairs, including lung and ovarian cancers. This evidence should lead to revised cancer prevention recommendations. Future research should focus on device-based exposure assessments, repeated measurements, exposure substitution models, inclusion of diverse populations and investigation of biological mechanisms.

FUNDING

World Cancer Research Fund network of charities (American Institute for Cancer Research; World Cancer Research Fund; Wereld Kanker Onderzoek Fonds).

FINDINGS

We identified 62 publications from 27 cohorts comprising 162,902 incident cancer cases across 19 anatomical sites. There was evidence for a probable causal positive association between sedentary time (mixed definitions) and breast (RRper 2 hours/day=1.03; 95%CI=1.02-1.05; I2=10%; n=11 studies) and colon (RR=1.05; 95%CI=1.03-1.07; I2=0%; n=9) cancer risk, and between television watching time and colon cancer risk (RRper 2 hours/day=1.08; 95%CI=1.05-1.11; I2=0%; n=6). Limited suggestive evidence supported positive associations between sedentary time (mixed definitions) and lung (RR=1.04; 95%CI=1.00-1.09; I2=69%; n=7), ovarian (RR=1.06; 95%CI=1.01-1.10; I2=0%; n=7), premenopausal (RR=1.03; 95%CI=0.99-1.08; I2=20%; n=7) and postmenopausal breast (RR=1.02; 95%CI=1.00-1.04; I2=7%; n=11), and colorectal (RR=1.02; 95%CI=1.00-1.04; I2=47%; n=11) cancers, and between occupational sitting time and breast (RRper 2 hours/day=1.05; 95%CI=1.01-1.09; I2=0%; n=4) and colon (RR=1.08; 95%CI=1.02-1.15; I2=28%; n=2) cancers. An interactive evidence platform is available at: https://teacup.cc.ic.ac.uk/sedentary-behaviour-cancer.html.

More about this publication

medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences

Publication date 29-06-2026

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.64898/2026.06.23.26355971
Europe PubMed Central 42428071
Pubmed 42428071

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