Our 24/7 cancer helpline provides information and answers for people dealing with cancer. We can connect you with trained cancer information specialists who will answer questions about a cancer diagnosis and provide guidance and a compassionate ear.
Chat live online
Select the Live Chat button at the bottom of the page
Our highly trained specialists are available 24/7 via phone and on weekdays can assist through online chat. We connect patients, caregivers, and family members with essential services and resources at every step of their cancer journey. Ask us how you can get involved and support the fight against cancer. Some of the topics we can assist with include:
- Referrals to patient-related programs or resources
- Donations, website, or event-related assistance
- Tobacco-related topics
- Volunteer opportunities
- Cancer Information
For medical questions, we encourage you to review our information with your doctor.
- Triggering Signals of BRCA1 Breast Cancer (K Kessenbrock)
- Testing Diverse Groups Finds New Breast Cancer Genes (L Teras)
- Black Women & Genetic Testing (J Palmer)
- Women 65+ & Genetic Tests for Breast Cancer Risk (L Teras)
- High-Risk Genes and Screening (A Patel)
- New Risk Calculation May Affect Breast Cancer Screening (L Teras)
- Black Men and Breast Cancer (H Sung)
- Platelets May Help Breast Cancer Spread (E Battinelli)
- Natural Killer Cells & TNBC (R. Chakrabarti)
- Improving Chemotherapy (O Sahin)
- Combo Treatment for TNBC (K Varley)
- Treatments Attack Cell Division (A Holland)
- ER+ Treatment in Mice (P Kenny)
- Blood DNA Monitors Metastasis Treatment (H P Ji)
- PTK6 Gene as Treatment Target (H Irie)
- Time-Lapse Cell Movies (S Spencer)
- 3D Mini Breast Tumors May Help ID New Cancer Treatments
- AI Tool Improves Breast Cancer Prognosis Accuracy
- Exercise & Sitting Time (E. Rees-Punia)
- Cancer Risk Factors in LGBTQ Populations (B. Charlton)
- CPS-3 Disparities Studies
- Cancer Disparities in the US (F. Islami)
- Housing Assistance and Mammograms (H Lee)
- Clinical Trial Treatment Cost App (L Hamel)
- Podcasts, TheoryLab
- Patients Health Insurance Tool (M. Politi)
- Breast Cancer Treatment in Ethiopia (A. Jemal)
- Better Survival Requires Better Insurance (J Zhao)
- Medicaid Eligibility Limits (J Zhao)
- New Treatment for Neuroblastoma (A Heczey)
- Oncogenic Fusions AML (S Meshinchi)
- Genetic Risks (L Teras)
- New Medulloblastoma Drugs (J Rodriguez-Blanco)
- Potential New Hope for MLL (J Grembecka)
- Increase in Brain Tumor Diagnosis (K Miller)
- Longer Life Expectancy for Survivors (J Yeh)
- Potential Target for New Osteosarcoma Drugs (C Benavente)
- At-Home Chemo for Children with HR ALL (L Ranney)
- Childhood Cancer Research Landscape Report
- Tumor-Infiltrating Neutrophils (R. Sumagin)
- New Epigenetic Target (K Rai)
- Extra Chromosomes (Aneuploidy) Effect on Cancer (J. Sheltzer)
- Discovery of a New Biomarker Is the First Step to New Treatment (C. Maher)
- Designer Virus Targets and Kills CRC Cells in Mice (S. Warner)
- Tiny Sensor in Mice May Find Cancer That's Trying to Spread (L. Hao)
- Targeting a Protein “Turned on” by Mistake (N. Gao)
- Spatial Map Intestines (J Hickey)
- CRC Treatment Podcasts
- Keto Molecule & Colorectal Cancer (M Levy)
- Availability of Healthy Food (L Tussing-Humphreys)
- 45 Min/Day of Physical Activity (A Minihan)
- Fewer than 10K Steps/Day (A Patel)
- Yogurt & Cheese & ER- Breast Cancer (M McCullough)
- Stage 2 Clinical Trials for New Endometrial Cancer Drug (V Bae-Jump)
- Hard-to-Starve Pancreatic Cancer Cells (N Kalaany)
- Coffee Risks for Colorectal Cancer (C Um)
- Food Parasite & Brain Cancer Risk (J Hodge)
- Exercise & Quality of Life in Older Survivors (E Rees-Punia)
- 21 Metabolites Linked with Breast Cancer (Y Wang)
- Replacing Sitting May Affect Weight (E Rees-Punia)
- CPS-3 Researchers Ask What People Eat and Check Urine Samples (Y Wang)
- Video Games Motivate Exercise? (E. Lyons)
- Food Choices and Colon Cancer Risk (P. Chandler)
- Race, Exercise & Breast Cancer (C. Dallal)
- Diet with Colorectal Cancer (M. Guinter)
- Biomarkers May Improve Prediction (Y Wang)
- Kickstart NSCLCs Clinical Trials (L. Eichner)
- Mapping Mitochondria's “Dance” (D. Shackleford)
- E-Cig Use Ages 18 to 29 (P. Bandi)
- Stopping Smoking Earlier in Life (F Islami)
- Most with Lung Cancer Smoked (A Jemal)
- Furthering Lung Cancer Screening & Equity (S Fedewa)
- Mouse Lung Organoids for Research (C Kim)
- Quality of Life for Lung Cancer Survivors (J Temel)
- Precision Therapies for NSCLC (P Jänne)
- Cancer Deaths from Smoking (F Islami)
- Lung Cancer Surgery Disparities (A Jemal)
- BRG1-Deficient Lung Cancers (C Kim)
- Yoga for Couples with Lung Cancer (K Milbury)
- Metabolic Differences as New Drug Targets (A Marcus)
- CPS-II & CPS-3 Inform About Risks of Ovarian Cancer
- Machine Learning & Glowing Nanosensors (D Heller)
- Ovarian Cancer May Start in Fallopian Tube Cells (K Lawrenson)
- New Gene Linked with Deadliest Type (C Han)
- Gene-Testing Tools May Personalize Care (A Sood)
- Chromosome-Hoarding Ovarian Cancer Cells & Treatment (J Sheltzer)
- Nanoparticles as Drug Delivery for Metastases (X Lu)
- Turning Off 2 Proteins to Slow HGSC (P Kreeger)
- Targeted Light Therapy in Mice (M Bai)
- Nanoparticles, CAR T, and CRISPR (M Stephan)
- Endometriosis & Ovarian Cancer in Mice (M Wilson)
- Ovarian Cancer Special Section
- UV Exposure, Melanoma, & Dark Skin Types (A. Adamson)
- Melanoma and Lipid Droplets (R. White)
- Zebrafish and Acral Melanoma (R. White)
- T-Cell Lymphoma and PD1 (J. Choi)
- New Drug Destroys Cancer-Causing Protein (C. Crews)
- Virus & Merkel Cell Skin Cancer (R. Wang)
- Non-Genetic Drug Resistance (S. Spencer)
- Hijacking the Body's Sugar (R. Wang)
- Telling about High Risk (P. Kanetsky)
- Brain Metastasis and Alzheimer’s (E. Hernando)
- Exhausted Melanoma "Killer" Cells (W. Cui)
Clinical Trial to Keep Colorectal Cancer Survivors Exercising
Heather J. Leach, PhD, an ACS research grantee is leading a clinical trial to compare physical activity programs for colorectal cancer survivors.
The Challenge
Studies have shown that people who exercise regularly after being diagnosed with colon or rectal cancer have a better quality of life and may live longer than those who don’t exercise. However, many colorectal cancer survivors don't get enough physical activity to enjoy these benefits.
The Research
Does working out with the social support of a group make colorectal cancer survivors more likely to keep exercising? That's one of the things Heather J. Leach, PhD, an American Cancer Society grantee from Colorado State University in Fort Collins, wants to find out. She’s leading a clinical trial to compare two 12-week physical activity programs. Both programs are led by an exercise specialist trained to work with cancer survivors. One involves working out with a group and the other involves individual, supervised physical activity, like personal training. Leach’s goal is to find out which program is more likely to help colorectal cancer survivors continue to exercise when the programs end.
The study’s participants have been diagnosed with stage II or III colorectal cancer and had surgery within the past 3 to 24 months. Half have one-on-one sessions with the exercise specialist. The other half exercise in groups of 5 to 15 with the leader using behavior change strategies that focus on how members of the group interact with each other. The goal is to encourage bonding with others in the group because such connection has been shown to help people stick with an exercise routine over time. All participants keep a diary to help give information during follow-up visits.
At follow-up visits researchers check the amount of exercise being done, ask each person how much he or she is exercising and ask about the quality of life and group connection. They also test each survivor’s aerobic fitness and muscle strength. Leach’s team is also considering whether someone lives near parks, sidewalks, or fitness centers. The area where a person lives may be especially key for colorectal cancer survivors who have more than one physical limitation.
Why It Matters
Insights from this research will help identify ways to encourage life-long exercise in colorectal cancer survivors. The results could even affect physical activity programs provided as part of supportive care for all cancer survivors.