According to economictimes.indiatimes.com, a large-scale study published on 2 July 2026 in PLOS Medicine links uninterrupted sitting of 30 minutes or longer with elevated cancer mortality risk — findings drawn from activity-monitor data collected over seven days from 91,292 participants in the UK Biobank cohort.
Key Findings: Dose–Response Relationship
The research, led by Frederick Ho of the University of Glasgow and colleagues, established a statistically significant dose–response relationship: each additional hour per day spent in prolonged, uninterrupted sedentary behaviour was associated with a 9% higher risk of dying from cancer. This association held after adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, alcohol intake, body mass index, and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity levels.
The median follow-up period for health outcomes was 12.38 years. During this time, researchers observed increased incidence not only for overall cancer but specifically for obesity-related and type 2 diabetes–associated cancers — including liver, kidney, pancreatic, colorectal, breast, and thyroid malignancies.
Interrupted vs. Prolonged Sitting
Crucially, the study differentiated between two behavioural patterns rarely distinguished in current public health guidance: prolonged sedentary bouts (defined as ≥30 minutes with ≥90% of time spent sedentary) and interrupted sedentary behaviour (shorter or fragmented periods of inactivity). Only the former showed consistent, positive associations with adverse outcomes.
In contrast, interrupted sedentary behaviour correlated with lower risk across all measured endpoints — including overall cancer incidence, cancer mortality, and site-specific cancers. This suggests that frequency and duration of breaks matter more than total daily sedentary time alone.
Light Movement Delivers Measurable Benefit
Replacing just one hour per day of prolonged sitting with light physical activity — such as standing, slow walking, or light household tasks — was associated with a 12% reduction in cancer death risk. The authors noted this effect is biologically plausible, citing prior experimental work showing improved glucose metabolism, insulin sensitivity, and lipid profiles following brief movement interruptions.
“Current health guidelines place heavy emphasis on moderate or vigorous exercise but underestimate the value of lighter movement through the day,” the team wrote in the paper. They added:
“Moving forward, clinical trials will help us move beyond blanket advice and develop personalised strategies for breaking up sitting time.”
Limitations and Context
The study is observational and based on a single cohort. UK Biobank volunteers are known to be more physically active and socioeconomically advantaged than the general UK population — a limitation acknowledged by the researchers. As a result, the absolute risk estimates may not generalize to broader or less active populations.
Additionally, the study did not capture context: researchers had no data on whether sedentary time occurred while driving, watching television, or working at a desk — factors that may influence metabolic stress differently. The authors explicitly state the findings do not establish causation.
The research received funding from the American Cancer Society and the US National Institutes of Health. The full paper is available in PLOS Medicine at https://plos.io/4oi0sJO.
Source: economictimes.indiatimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










