Valle Carmina G, Heiling Hillary M, Deal Allison M, Diamond Molly A, Hales Derek P, Nezami Brooke T, Rini Christine M, Pinto Bernardine M, LaRose Jessica Gokee, Tate Deborah F
Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2024 Apr 12. doi: 10.1007/s11764-024-01577-4.
This study explored whether sociodemographic and health-related characteristics moderated mHealth PA intervention effects on total and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) at 6 months, relative to a self-help condition among young adult cancer survivors (YACS).
We conducted exploratory secondary analyses of data from a randomized controlled trial among 280 YACS. All participants received digital tools; intervention participants also received lessons, adaptive goals, tailored feedback, text messages, and Facebook prompts. Potential moderators were assessed in baseline questionnaires. PA was measured at baseline and 6 months with accelerometers. Linear model repeated measures analyses examined within- and between-group PA changes stratified by levels of potential moderator variables.
Over 6 months, the intervention produced MVPA increases that were ≥ 30 min/week compared with the self-help among participants who were males (28.1 vs. -7.7, p = .0243), identified with racial/ethnic minority groups (35.2 vs. -8.0, p = .0006), had baseline BMI of 25-30 (25.4 vs. -7.2, p = .0034), or stage III/IV cancer diagnosis (26.0 vs. -6.8, p = .0041). Intervention participants who were ages 26-35, college graduates, married/living with a partner, had a solid tumor, or no baseline comorbidities had modest MVPA increases over 6 months compared to the self-help (ps = .0163-.0492). Baseline characteristics did not moderate intervention effects on total PA.
The mHealth intervention was more effective than a self-help group at improving MVPA among subgroups of YACS defined by characteristics (sex, race, BMI, cancer stage) that may be useful for tailoring PA interventions.
These potential moderators can guide future optimization of PA interventions for YACS.
NCT03569605.
本研究探讨了社会人口统计学和健康相关特征是否会调节移动健康身体活动(PA)干预措施对年轻成年癌症幸存者(YACS)在6个月时的总体身体活动和中度至剧烈身体活动(MVPA)的影响,相对于自助条件。
我们对280名YACS的随机对照试验数据进行了探索性二次分析。所有参与者都获得了数字工具;干预组参与者还获得了课程、适应性目标、个性化反馈、短信和Facebook提示。在基线问卷中评估潜在的调节因素。在基线和6个月时使用加速度计测量PA。线性模型重复测量分析检查了按潜在调节变量水平分层的组内和组间PA变化。
在6个月的时间里,与自助组相比,干预措施使男性参与者(28.1对-7.7,p = 0.0243)、属于种族/族裔少数群体的参与者(35.2对-8.0,p = 0.0006)、基线BMI为25至30的参与者(25.4对-7.2,p = 0.0034)或患有III/IV期癌症诊断的参与者(26.0对-6.8,p = 0.0041)的MVPA每周增加≥30分钟。与自助组相比,年龄在26至35岁、大学毕业、已婚/与伴侣同住、患有实体瘤或无基线合并症的干预组参与者在6个月内的MVPA有适度增加(p值 = 0.0163 - 0.0492)。基线特征并未调节干预措施对总体PA的影响。
在由可能有助于定制PA干预措施的特征(性别、种族、BMI、癌症分期)定义的YACS亚组中,移动健康干预在改善MVPA方面比自助组更有效。
这些潜在的调节因素可以指导未来对YACS的PA干预措施进行优化。
NCT03569605。