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单独接受放射治疗的癌症成人的运动干预。

Exercise interventions for adults with cancer receiving radiation therapy alone.

机构信息

Department of Radiation Oncology, Cyberknife and Radiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany.

Cochrane Cancer, Department I of Internal Medicine, Center for Integrated Oncology Aachen Bonn Cologne Düsseldorf, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023 Mar 13;3(3):CD013448. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013448.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Radiation therapy (RT) is given to about half of all people with cancer. RT alone is used to treat various cancers at different stages. Although it is a local treatment, systemic symptoms may occur. Cancer- or treatment-related side effects can lead to a reduction in physical activity, physical performance, and quality of life (QoL). The literature suggests that physical exercise can reduce the risk of various side effects of cancer and cancer treatments, cancer-specific mortality, recurrence of cancer, and all-cause mortality.

OBJECTIVES

To evaluate the benefits and harms of exercise plus standard care compared with standard care alone in adults with cancer receiving RT alone.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), CINAHL, conference proceedings and trial registries up to 26 October 2022.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that enrolled people who were receiving RT without adjuvant systemic treatment for any type or stage of cancer. We considered any type of exercise intervention, defined as a planned, structured, repetitive, objective-oriented physical activity programme in addition to standard care. We excluded exercise interventions that involved physiotherapy alone, relaxation programmes, and multimodal approaches that combined exercise with other non-standard interventions such as nutritional restriction.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We used standard Cochrane methodology and the GRADE approach for assessing the certainty of the evidence. Our primary outcome was fatigue and the secondary outcomes were QoL, physical performance, psychosocial effects, overall survival, return to work, anthropometric measurements, and adverse events.

MAIN RESULTS

Database searching identified 5875 records, of which 430 were duplicates. We excluded 5324 records and the remaining 121 references were assessed for eligibility. We included three two-arm RCTs with 130 participants. Cancer types were breast and prostate cancer. Both treatment groups received the same standard care, but the exercise groups also participated in supervised exercise programmes several times per week while undergoing RT. Exercise interventions included warm-up, treadmill walking (in addition to cycling and stretching and strengthening exercises in one study), and cool-down. In some analysed endpoints (fatigue, physical performance, QoL), there were baseline differences between exercise and control groups. We were unable to pool the results of the different studies owing to substantial clinical heterogeneity. All three studies measured fatigue. Our analyses, presented below, showed that exercise may reduce fatigue (positive SMD values signify less fatigue; low certainty). • Standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.96, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.27 to 1.64; 37 participants (fatigue measured with Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI)) • SMD 2.42, 95% CI 1.71 to 3.13; 54 participants (fatigue measured with BFI) • SMD 1.44, 95% CI 0.46 to 2.42; 21 participants (fatigue measured with revised Piper Fatigue Scale) All three studies measured QoL, although one provided insufficient data for analysis. Our analyses, presented below, showed that exercise may have little or no effect on QoL (positive SMD values signify better QoL; low certainty). • SMD 0.40, 95% CI -0.26 to 1.05; 37 participants (QoL measured with Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Prostate) • SMD 0.47, 95% CI -0.40 to 1.34; 21 participants (QoL measured with World Health Organization QoL questionnaire (WHOQOL-BREF)) All three studies measured physical performance. Our analyses of two studies, presented below, showed that exercise may improve physical performance, but we are very unsure about the results (positive SMD values signify better physical performance; very low certainty) • SMD 1.25, 95% CI 0.54 to 1.97; 37 participants (shoulder mobility and pain measured on a visual analogue scale) • SMD⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 3.13 (95% CI 2.32 to 3.95; 54 participants (physical performance measured with the six-minute walk test) Our analyses of data from the third study showed that exercise may have little or no effect on physical performance measured with the stand-and-sit test, but we are very unsure about the results (SMD 0.00, 95% CI -0.86 to 0.86, positive SMD values signify better physical performance; 21 participants; very low certainty). Two studies measured psychosocial effects. Our analyses (presented below) showed that exercise may have little or no effect on psychosocial effects, but we are very unsure about the results (positive SMD values signify better psychosocial well-being; very low certainty). • SMD 0.48, 95% CI -0.18 to 1.13; 37 participants (psychosocial effects measured on the WHOQOL-BREF social subscale) • SMD 0.29, 95% CI -0.57 to 1.15; 21 participants (psychosocial effects measured with the Beck Depression Inventory) Two studies recorded adverse events related to the exercise programmes and reported no events. We estimated the certainty of the evidence as very low. No studies reported adverse events unrelated to exercise. No studies reported the other outcomes we intended to analyse (overall survival, anthropometric measurements, return to work).

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is little evidence on the effects of exercise interventions in people with cancer who are receiving RT alone. While all included studies reported benefits for the exercise intervention groups in all assessed outcomes, our analyses did not consistently support this evidence. There was low-certainty evidence that exercise improved fatigue in all three studies. Regarding physical performance, our analysis showed very low-certainty evidence of a difference favouring exercise in two studies, and very low-certainty evidence of no difference in one study. We found very low-certainty evidence of little or no difference between the effects of exercise and no exercise on quality of life or psychosocial effects. We downgraded the certainty of the evidence for possible outcome reporting bias, imprecision due to small sample sizes in a small number of studies, and indirectness of outcomes. In summary, exercise may have some beneficial outcomes in people with cancer who are receiving RT alone, but the evidence supporting this statement is of low certainty. There is a need for high-quality research on this topic.

摘要

背景

约一半的癌症患者接受放射治疗(RT)。单独使用 RT 治疗各种癌症的不同阶段。虽然这是一种局部治疗,但可能会出现全身症状。癌症或治疗相关的副作用可能导致身体活动减少、身体机能下降和生活质量(QoL)下降。文献表明,身体锻炼可以降低癌症和癌症治疗、癌症特异性死亡率、癌症复发和全因死亡率的各种副作用风险。

目的

评估运动加标准护理与单独接受标准护理的癌症患者接受单独 RT 的益处和危害。

搜索方法

我们检索了 CENTRAL、MEDLINE(Ovid)、Embase(Ovid)、CINAHL、会议记录和试验注册处,截至 2022 年 10 月 26 日。

选择标准

我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验招募了正在接受 RT 治疗且没有辅助全身治疗的任何类型或阶段的癌症患者。我们考虑了任何类型的运动干预,定义为除标准护理外,还进行计划、结构化、重复、以目标为导向的身体活动计划。我们排除了仅涉及物理治疗、放松计划以及将运动与其他非标准干预措施(如营养限制)相结合的多模式方法的运动干预。

数据收集和分析

我们使用标准的 Cochrane 方法和 GRADE 方法评估证据的确定性。我们的主要结局是疲劳,次要结局是生活质量、身体机能、心理社会影响、总生存、重返工作、人体测量学测量和不良事件。

主要结果

数据库搜索确定了 5875 条记录,其中 430 条是重复的。我们排除了 5324 条记录,其余 121 条参考文献被评估是否符合纳入标准。我们纳入了三项两臂 RCT,共有 130 名参与者。癌症类型为乳腺癌和前列腺癌。两组治疗均接受相同的标准护理,但运动组在接受 RT 的同时还参加了多次监督性运动计划。运动干预包括热身、跑步机行走(此外还包括骑自行车和伸展和强化运动)和冷却。在一些分析结局(疲劳、身体机能、生活质量)中,运动组和对照组之间存在基线差异。由于研究之间存在很大的临床异质性,我们无法对不同的研究结果进行汇总分析。三项研究均测量了疲劳。我们的分析表明,运动可能会减轻疲劳(阳性 SMD 值表示疲劳程度较低;低确定性)。•标准平均差(SMD)0.96,95%置信区间(CI)0.27 至 1.64;37 名参与者(使用简短疲劳量表(BFI)测量疲劳)•SMD 2.42,95%CI 1.71 至 3.13;54 名参与者(使用 BFI 测量疲劳)•SMD 1.44,95%CI 0.46 至 2.42;21 名参与者(使用修订版 Piper 疲劳量表测量疲劳)。三项研究均测量了生活质量,但其中一项提供的数据不足无法进行分析。我们的分析表明,运动可能对生活质量几乎没有影响(阳性 SMD 值表示生活质量较好;低确定性)。•SMD 0.40,95%CI -0.26 至 1.05;37 名参与者(使用前列腺癌功能评估-治疗方案(FACT-P)测量生活质量)•SMD 0.47,95%CI -0.40 至 1.34;21 名参与者(使用世界卫生组织生活质量问卷(WHOQOL-BREF)测量生活质量)。三项研究均测量了身体机能。我们对两项研究的分析表明,运动可能改善身体机能,但我们对结果非常不确定(阳性 SMD 值表示身体机能较好;非常低确定性)。•SMD 1.25,95%CI 0.54 至 1.97;37 名参与者(使用视觉模拟量表测量肩部活动度和疼痛)•SMD 3.13(95%CI 2.32 至 3.95;54 名参与者(使用六分钟步行试验测量身体机能)。我们对第三项研究的数据进行分析的结果表明,运动对使用站立和坐下测试测量的身体机能可能几乎没有影响,但我们对结果非常不确定(SMD 0.00,95%CI -0.86 至 0.86,阳性 SMD 值表示身体机能较好;21 名参与者;非常低确定性)。两项研究测量了心理社会影响。我们的分析(如下所示)表明,运动对心理社会影响可能几乎没有影响,但我们对结果非常不确定(阳性 SMD 值表示心理社会幸福感较好;非常低确定性)。•SMD 0.48,95%CI -0.18 至 1.13;37 名参与者(使用 WHOQOL-BREF 社会子量表测量心理社会影响)•SMD 0.29,95%CI -0.57 至 1.15;21 名参与者(使用贝克抑郁量表测量心理社会影响)。两项研究记录了与运动计划相关的不良事件,但没有报告任何事件。我们将证据的确定性估计为非常低。没有研究报告与运动无关的不良事件。没有研究报告我们打算分析的其他结局(总生存、人体测量学测量、重返工作)。

作者结论

单独接受 RT 的癌症患者的运动干预效果的证据很少。虽然所有纳入的研究都报告了运动干预组在所有评估结局中的益处,但我们的分析并未一致支持这一证据。有低确定性证据表明,在所有三项研究中,运动都可以改善疲劳。关于身体机能,我们的分析表明,在两项研究中,运动非常有可能改善身体机能,而在一项研究中,运动对身体机能没有影响,这一结果非常不确定。我们发现,在运动和不运动对生活质量或心理社会影响的效果方面,有非常低的证据表明没有差异。我们将证据的确定性等级下调,原因可能是结局报告偏倚的可能性、小样本量导致的研究内精度降低,以及结局的间接性。综上所述,运动可能对单独接受 RT 的癌症患者有一些有益的结局,但支持这一说法的证据确定性较低。因此,非常有必要对此主题进行高质量的研究。

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