Ligibel Jennifer A, Giobbie-Hurder Anita, Shockro Laura, Campbell Nancy, Partridge Ann H, Tolaney Sara M, Lin Nancy U, Winer Eric P
Breast Oncology Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Statistics and Computation Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Cancer. 2016 Apr 15;122(8):1169-77. doi: 10.1002/cncr.29899. Epub 2016 Feb 12.
Exercise interventions improve fitness, functional capacity, and quality of life in patients with early-stage breast cancer, but to the authors' knowledge there are few data regarding the feasibility or potential benefits of exercise in women with metastatic breast cancer.
Individuals with metastatic breast cancer were randomized 1:1 to a 16-week moderate-intensity exercise intervention or wait-list control group. Intervention goals included 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise per week. The baseline and 16-week evaluations included a modified Bruce Ramp treadmill test, 7-day Physical Activity Recall interview, and European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (EORTC QLQ C-30) questionnaire.
A total of 101 participants were randomized (48 to the intervention group and 53 to the control group). The median age of the participants was 49 years, the median time since the diagnosis of metastatic breast cancer was 1.1 years, and approximately 42% of participants were undergoing chemotherapy at the time of enrollment. Study attrition was higher in the intervention arm (14 participants vs 8 participants; P = .15). Women randomized to the exercise intervention experienced a nonsignificant increase with regard to minutes of weekly exercise (62.4 minutes vs 46.0 minutes; P = .17) and physical functioning (EORTC QLQ C30: 4.79 vs 0.93 [P = .23] and Bruce Ramp Treadmill test: 0.61 minutes vs 0.37 minutes [P = .35]) compared with control participants.
Participation in an exercise intervention did not appear to result in significant improvements in physical functioning in a heterogeneous group of women living with advanced breast cancer. Given the significant benefits of exercise in women with early-stage breast cancer, more work is needed to explore alternative interventions to determine whether exercise could help women with metastatic disease live more fully with fewer symptoms from disease and treatment.
运动干预可改善早期乳腺癌患者的体能、功能能力和生活质量,但据作者所知,关于运动对转移性乳腺癌女性患者的可行性或潜在益处的数据较少。
将转移性乳腺癌患者按1:1随机分为16周中等强度运动干预组或等待名单对照组。干预目标包括每周进行150分钟中等强度有氧运动。基线和16周评估包括改良布鲁斯递增式跑步机测试、7天体力活动回忆访谈以及欧洲癌症研究与治疗组织生活质量问卷核心30项(EORTC QLQ C-30)问卷。
共101名参与者被随机分组(48名至干预组,53名至对照组)。参与者的中位年龄为49岁,自诊断为转移性乳腺癌以来的中位时间为1.1年,约42%的参与者在入组时正在接受化疗。干预组的研究失访率更高(14名参与者对8名参与者;P = 0.15)。与对照组参与者相比,随机分配到运动干预组的女性在每周运动分钟数(62.4分钟对46.0分钟;P = 0.17)和身体功能方面(EORTC QLQ C30:4.79对0.93 [P = 0.23]以及布鲁斯递增式跑步机测试:0.61分钟对0.37分钟 [P = 0.35])有不显著的增加。
对于患有晚期乳腺癌的异质性女性群体,参与运动干预似乎并未显著改善身体功能。鉴于运动对早期乳腺癌女性有显著益处,需要开展更多工作来探索替代干预措施,以确定运动是否能帮助转移性疾病女性更充分地生活,减少疾病和治疗带来的症状。