Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The Juliane Marie Center, University Hospital (Rigshospitalet), Copenhagen, Denmark.
Faculty of Health Science, Institute for Clinical Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2018 Aug;65(8):e27100. doi: 10.1002/pbc.27100. Epub 2018 May 9.
The physical function of children with cancer is reduced during treatment, which can compromise the quality of life and increase the risk of chronic medical conditions. The study, "REhabilitation, including Social and Physical activity and Education in Children and Teenagers with cancer" (Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01772862) examines the efficacy of multimodal rehabilitation strategies introduced at cancer diagnosis. This article addresses the feasibility of and obstacles to testing physical function in children with cancer.
The intervention group comprised 46 males and 29 females aged 6-18 years (mean ± SD: 11.3 ± 3.1 years) diagnosed with cancer from January 2013 to April 2016. Testing at diagnosis and after 3 months included timed-up-and-go, sit-to-stand, flamingo balance, handgrip strength, and the bicycle ergometer cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET).
Of the 75 children, 92% completed a minimum of one test; two children declined testing and four were later included. Completion was low for CPET (38/150, 25%) but was high for handgrip strength (122/150, 81%). Tumor location, treatment-related side effects, and proximity to chemotherapy administration were primary obstacles for testing physical function. Children with extracranial solid tumors and central nervous system tumors completed significantly fewer tests than those with leukemia and lymphoma. Children with leukemia demonstrated reduced lower extremity function, that is, 24% reduction at 3 months testing in timed-up-and-go (P = 0.005) and sit-to-stand (P = 0.002), in contrast with no reductions observed in the other diagnostic groups.
Children with cancer are generally motivated to participate in physical function tests. Future studies should address diagnosis specific obstacles and design testing modalities that facilitate physical function tests in this target group.
癌症患儿在治疗过程中身体功能下降,这会降低生活质量并增加患慢性疾病的风险。研究“癌症儿童和青少年的康复,包括社会和身体活动及教育”(Clinicaltrials.gov:NCT01772862)检验了在癌症确诊时引入多模式康复策略的疗效。本文介绍了测试癌症患儿身体功能的可行性和障碍。
干预组包括 46 名男性和 29 名女性,年龄 6-18 岁(平均 ± 标准差:11.3 ± 3.1 岁),2013 年 1 月至 2016 年 4 月诊断患有癌症。诊断时和 3 个月后进行计时起坐、坐站、单腿平衡、握力和脚踏车心肺运动测试(CPET)测试。
75 名儿童中,92%完成了至少一项测试;有两名儿童拒绝测试,后来又有四人入组。CPET 测试完成率较低(38/150,25%),但握力测试完成率较高(122/150,81%)。肿瘤位置、治疗相关副作用和化疗时间是进行身体功能测试的主要障碍。无颅外实体瘤和中枢神经系统肿瘤患儿完成的测试明显少于白血病和淋巴瘤患儿。白血病患儿的下肢功能明显下降,在 3 个月测试中计时起坐(P=0.005)和坐站(P=0.002)测试的下降幅度为 24%,而其他诊断组没有观察到下降。
癌症患儿普遍有动力参与身体功能测试。未来的研究应解决特定诊断的障碍,并设计便于该目标群体进行身体功能测试的测试模式。