Sommario
Il cancro al seno è la neoplasia più comunemente diagnosticata tra le donne e la causa più comune di mortalità cancro-correlata nel sesso femminile. Esistono diversi tipi di tumore al seno classificati sulla base delle loro differenti caratteristiche molecolari; tuttavia, ad oggi quello più comunemente diagnosticato è il carcinoma estrogeno- e progestinico-sensibile. Dati scientifici hanno dimostrato il ruolo positivo dell’esercizio fisico nella riduzione significativa del rischio di insorgenza e nella gestione del trattamento del tumore, in quanto fattore coadiuvante le tradizionali terapie farmacologiche. In questa rassegna abbiamo focalizzato la nostra attenzione su dati clinici riguardanti l’impatto dell’esercizio fisico nei diversi livelli di prevenzione del tumore al seno positivo al recettore degli estrogeni.
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Gli autori Cristina Antinozzi, Ivan Dimauro, Marco Lista, Elisa Grazioli, Attilio Parisi e Paolo Sgrò dichiarano di non avere conflitti di interesse.
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Antinozzi, C., Dimauro, I., Lista, M. et al. Ruolo dell’esercizio fisico nel trattamento del carcinoma della mammella positivo al recettore degli estrogeni. L'Endocrinologo 23, 238–246 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40619-022-01063-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40619-022-01063-y