C-Reactive Protein Is Associated with Physical Fitness in Breast Cancer Survivors
Fecha
2022-12-21Autor
Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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El estudio de Romero-Elías et al. (2023) evalúa la relación entre la proteína C-reactiva (CRP) y la condición física en mujeres supervivientes de cáncer de mama. En un estudio transversal con 84 participantes, se analizaron diferentes componentes de la forma física (cardiorrespiratoria, muscular, motora y composición corporal) junto con biomarcadores hormonales y metabólicos. Los resultados mostraron que niveles elevados de CRP se asociaron con menor capacidad cardiorrespiratoria, mayor índice de masa corporal y menor fuerza muscular en extremidades inferiores. También se observó una relación significativa entre CRP y un índice global de condición física (IPF). Los autores concluyen que la CRP puede ser un marcador útil para evaluar el estado físico y el riesgo cardiovascular en supervivientes de cáncer de mama, recomendando intervenciones basadas en ejercicio y hábitos saludables para reducir la inflamación y mejorar la salud cardiovascular y funcional de esta población. Background: Physical fitness (PF) is an expression of the physiological functioning of
multiple body components. PF is an important prognostic factor in terms of cardiovascular mortality,
cancer mortality, and all-cause mortality. PF has been related to some biomarkers in the
general population but not in breast cancer survivors (BCS). Purpose: To evaluate the effects of
PF on biomarkers potentially related to physical activity (PA) in a sample of BCS. Methods: Crosssectional
study. A total of 84 BCS (mean age 54) who had finished their treatment were recruited.
Different components of PF were evaluated, namely body composition (anthropometry), cardiorespiratory
fitness (one-mile walk test), muscular (handgrip and sit-to-stand timed test), and motor
(gait speed) components. Sexual hormones, inflammation, and insulin resistance biomarkers were
measured. Results: C-Reactive Protein (CRP) was associated with every component of physical
fitness: cardiorespiratory fitness (p-value = 0.002), muscular (sit-to-stand timed test, p-value = 0.002)
and motor (gait speed, p-value = 0.004) components, and body composition (body mass index,
p-value = 0.003; waist, p-value < 0.000; and waist-to-hip index, p-value = 0.012). CRP also was associated
with “poor physical condition,” a constructed variable that encompasses all components of
physical fitness (p-value < 0.001). Insulin was associated with cardiorespiratory fitness and gait speed
(p-values = 0.002 and 0.024, respectively). Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 was negatively associated with
waist perimeter and waist-to-hip ratio. Conclusions: CRP can also be considered an indicator of poor
PF in BCS. Implications for cancer survivors: in case of elevation of CRP indicating cardiovascular risk,
health professionals should recommend lifestyle changes to improve BCS physical condition.
C-Reactive Protein Is Associated with Physical Fitness in Breast Cancer Survivors
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
2077-0383Palabras Clave
proteína C-reactiva, cáncer de mama, condición física, inflamación, supervivientes, biomarcadores, ejerciciobiomarkers; cardiorespiratory fitness; physical condition; breast cancer; physical activity


