Reduce Breast Cancer Relapse Risk

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How can you reduce breast cancer relapse risk? According to the research linked below, by living a “healthy lifestyle” after your active therapies.

You’ve been diagnosed, gone through treatment, and maybe even rung the bell. You want to live the rest of your life cancer-free. So what is the best way to do that???

According to research, “Maintaining a healthy lifestyle after cancer has a noticeably positive effect on life expectancy…” But what is “maintaining a healthy lifestyle”?

Below are 10 lifestyle therapies with solid research support for breast cancer survivors (benefits include better quality of life, less fatigue, improved sleep/mental health, and, in some studies, better survival outcomes). I’m linking to the key studies/guidelines behind each.

I am a long-term survivor of a blood cancer called multiple myeloma. I have adopted a healthy lifestyle myself. But I have to admit that it took me a long time to adjust to some of the habits below.

My advice is to take your time. Create habits like going for a walk around the block every day. Cut out table sugar. Don’t diet. One glass of wine with dinner. Make sleep a priority.



1) Regular aerobic exercise (walking, cycling, swimming)

What to do: Build toward 150 min/week moderate (or 75 min/week vigorous) as tolerated, plus extra light movement on most days.
Why it helps: Strong evidence for improved fatigue, function, and quality of life; observational data link post-diagnosis activity with lower mortality in breast cancer survivors.

Research links:

reduce breast cancer relapse risk


2) Strength training (2–3 days/week)

What to do: Progressive resistance training (machines, free weights, bands), ideally supervised at first.
Why it helps: Improves strength and function; importantly, can be safe even with stable lymphedema when progressed slowly and appropriately.

Research links:

reduce breast cancer relapse risk


3) Reduce sitting time (break up long sitting bouts)

What to do: Stand/move a few minutes every 30–60 minutes, add short walks, use step goals if helpful.
Why it helps: Higher sedentary time (especially combined with low activity) is associated with worse outcomes in survivorship research, including mortality risk signals.

Research link:


4) Weight management (avoid post-diagnosis weight gain; aim for gradual fat loss if needed)

What to do: If overweight/obese, consider a structured lifestyle program (diet + activity + behavioral support).
Why it helps: Higher BMI and weight gain after diagnosis are repeatedly linked with worse prognosis; some dietary/weight-related interventions show improved outcomes.

Research links:


5) A “high-quality” dietary pattern (Mediterranean / prudent, plant-forward)

What to do: Emphasize vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts, olive oil, fish; limit ultra-processed foods and refined carbs.
Why it helps: Across survivorship cohorts, higher diet quality is associated with lower overall and cancer-specific mortality (evidence certainty varies, but direction is consistent).

Research links:


6) Lower dietary fat (especially if it supports modest weight loss)

What to do: If appropriate, a lower-fat approach that’s still nutrient-dense (often aligns with plant-forward eating).
Why it helps: A randomized dietary program (WINS) showed a reduced recurrence risk during the intervention period (benefit attenuated after).

Research link:

(For balance: another large dietary trial focused on very high fruit/veg/fiber and low fat did not show recurrence/survival benefit.) https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/208026


7) Limit alcohol (ideally minimal; some evidence suggests higher intake may raise recurrence risk)

What to do: If you drink, keep it low and discuss with your oncology team based on your risk profile and comorbidities.
Why it helps: Findings are mixed overall, but some survivor cohorts found ≥3–4 drinks/week after diagnosisassociated with higher recurrence risk in subgroups.

Research link:

After-diagnosis alcohol and recurrence (Kwan et al.): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2988633/


8) Don’t smoke (and get help to quit if you do)

  • What to do: Use evidence-based cessation supports (counseling + nicotine replacement/meds when appropriate).
    Why it helps: Meta-analyses show current smoking after diagnosis is linked to higher breast cancer–specific and overall mortality, and quitting reduces risk.

Research link:

Systematic review/meta-analysis: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5566657/


9) Treat insomnia and protect sleep (CBT-I is the gold standard)

What to do: If insomnia is present, consider CBT-I (in-person, telehealth, or validated digital programs).
Why it helps: Randomized trials in breast cancer survivors show CBT-I improves insomnia and related outcomes.

Research links:


10) Mind–body stress reduction (mindfulness, yoga, tai chi/qigong)

What to do: Try 8-week mindfulness programs (MBSR/MBCT) and/or gentle yoga or tai chi/qigong 2–3x/week.
Why it helps: Meta-analyses and RCTs show improvements in stress, mood, fatigue, sleep, and quality of life for many survivors.

Research links:


Quick safety note

If you have bone metastases, neuropathy, severe anemia, cardiopulmonary limitations, or active lymphedema flares, it’s worth asking your oncology team or a cancer-exercise specialist to tailor the plan.

reduce breast cancer relapse risk


One step at a time. Scroll down the page, post a question or a comment and I will reply to you ASAP.

Hang in there.

David Emerson

  • Cancer Survivor
  • Cancer Coach
  • Director PeopleBeatingCancer

Maintaining a healthy lifestyle after cancer has a noticeably positive effect on life expectancy, according to a large prospective population-based cohort study of more than 6000 cancer survivors.

Researchers at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) in Heidelberg, Germany, reported that adherence to key lifestyle recommendations remained strongly associated with lower mortality even years after diagnosis, with direct implications for clinicians’ approach to cancer survivorship care.

The findings, published in the European Journal of Epidemiology, showed that individuals who were diagnosed with cancer at least 5 years in the past and who did not smoke, exercised sufficiently, and maintained a healthy body weight lived on average significantly longer than other long-term cancer survivors with less healthy habits.

Speaking with Medscape’s German edition, Volker Arndt, PhD, head of the Cancer Survivorship Research Group at the DKFZ and director of the Epidemiological Cancer Registry of Baden-Württemberg, Heidelberg, Germany, said, “Many patients ask after completing treatment for cancer what they themselves can still do for their health. Our study provides an encouraging answer: lifestyle factors such as not smoking, sufficient physical activity, and a healthy body weight remain important even in the long term.”

Lifestyle Factors

The research team, led by the corresponding author Melissa Thong, PhD, analyzed data from 6057 individuals with a mean age of 69 years who had been diagnosed with breast, prostate, or colorectal cancer at least 5 years earlier. The mean interval between the initial diagnosis and the current diagnosis was 8 years. The study aimed to analyze the relationships between individual and combined factors of a healthy lifestyle and mortality in long-term cancer survivors.

Participants were enrolled in the CAESAR study, a multicenter population-based study initiated in 2008 across six German regions: Bremen, Hamburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland, and Schleswig-Holstein. Women comprised 52.1% of the study cohort.

Among the participants, 2654 had a history of breast cancer, 2186 had prostate cancer, and 1212 had colorectal cancer.

Between 2009 and 2011, participants completed questionnaires addressing four lifestyle factors: smoking behavior, alcohol consumption, body weight, and physical activity. Diet was not assessed…

“A particular strength of our study is the large number of long-term cancer survivors and the long follow-up period,” said Arndt. This allowed for a robust investigation of the relationship between lifestyle and mortality. “Unlike many previous studies, we don’t just look at individual factors in isolation, but at the interplay of several of them — which is much closer to reflecting individuals’ lived experiences.”

Mortality Outcomes

Compared with participants with an unhealthy lifestyle, the mortality rate was 27% and 32% lower among those with an intermediate and healthy lifestyle, respectively.

The association between healthy behaviors and lower mortality rate was consistent across age and sex and independent of cancer type and the presence of other chronic conditions, including metabolic and cardiovascular diseases.

“A healthy lifestyle not only helps prevent cancer but can also make a substantial difference after a cancer diagnosis,” said Arndt.

Smoking status was the most strongly associated with survival. Individuals who had never smoked had 49% fewer deaths during follow-up than those who were current smokers. Those who quit smoking had a 29% lower mortality rate than current smokers.

Physical activity lowered the mortality rate by 22% reduction when comparing the highest and lowest activity groups. Maintaining a healthy BMI was associated with a 13% reduction in mortality rate.

The findings on the effects of alcohol consumption were less consistent. Although low alcohol intake initially appeared to be beneficial, this association lost statistical significance after adjusting for other lifestyle factors. Arndt noted that, in clinical practice, the focus should be less on individual measures and more on the overall pattern of a healthy lifestyle.

“We were surprised by how consistent and clear the link between a healthy lifestyle and lower mortality was, even many years after a cancer diagnosis,” Arndt said. “This suggests that health-promoting behavior remains relevant even at a stage of life when many may underestimate the influence of lifestyle…”

reduce breast cancer relapse risk

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