Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Obstetrics and Gynecology, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, VA, USA.
Transl Behav Med. 2024 Sep 3;14(9):527-536. doi: 10.1093/tbm/ibae030.
Interventions for obesity-related cancers that combine nutrition and physical activity for weight loss exist; however, their application to survivors of endometrial cancer is unknown. Furthermore, little is known about pre-implementation perceptions of existing programs from a variety of interested persons (physicians, researchers) who may be part of the implementation team. Adapting an existing intervention rather than developing a new intervention may speed the translational lag time as long as intervention characteristics and fit within the delivery system are considered during the planning phase. To describe the process of determining the core elements of obesity-related interventions for cancer survivors and determine which one might be best delivered by an urban healthcare system that predominantly serves individuals who live in rural areas of Virginia and West Virginia. A pragmatic review of the literature was conducted via PubMed and Google Scholar with broad search terms of cancer survivor AND weight loss AND health intervention. Identified interventions were scored related to the Practical, Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model-which is an extension of RE-AIM framework to guide the understanding of who, what, where, when, and how the intervention was conducted. Intervention characteristics are reported. In addition, ratings from three independent reviewers on the validated 5-point Likert scale of an intervention's acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility in the intended delivery system were collected and summarized. Twelve interventions were identified with an average sample size of 241(±195) and a range of 48-683 participants. Target populations included survivors of colorectal, breast, and endometrial cancers as well as general cancer survivors and included both men and women or only women. Most participants (74%) identified as white/Caucasian and average age ranged from 47.1 to 65.9 years. Program duration ranged from 4 weeks to 18 months, with an average duration of 32 weeks. Intervention dosage ranged from three times a week to once a month. Intervention acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility had average and standard deviation ratings of 3.52(±0.46), 3.41(±0.45), and 3.21(±0.46), respectively, out of 5. The four interventions with the highest combined acceptable, appropriate, and feasible scores are being considered for potential use as an obesity-related intervention for survivors of endometrial cancer. Future work is needed to determine relevant adaptations and efficacy among survivors of endometrial cancer with obesity. Our approach may be beneficial for other interventionists aiming to speed intervention development and implementation.
针对肥胖相关癌症的干预措施,包括营养和体力活动以减轻体重,这些干预措施已经存在;然而,它们在子宫内膜癌幸存者中的应用尚不清楚。此外,对于可能成为实施团队一部分的各种利益相关者(医生、研究人员)对现有项目的实施前看法,我们知之甚少。只要在规划阶段考虑干预措施的特征和是否符合交付系统,改编现有的干预措施而不是开发新的干预措施可能会缩短转化时间。本研究旨在描述确定肥胖相关癌症幸存者干预措施核心要素的过程,并确定哪些干预措施最适合主要为弗吉尼亚州和西弗吉尼亚州农村地区居民提供服务的城市医疗保健系统实施。通过 PubMed 和 Google Scholar 进行了广泛的文献综述,使用了癌症幸存者和减肥和健康干预的广泛搜索词。确定的干预措施根据实用、强大的实施和可持续性模型进行评分,该模型是扩展后的 RE-AIM 框架,旨在帮助理解干预措施的实施者、实施内容、实施地点、实施时间和实施方式。报告了干预措施的特征。此外,还收集并总结了来自三位独立评审员对干预措施在预期交付系统中的可接受性、适当性和可行性的验证 5 分李克特量表的评分。确定了 12 项干预措施,平均样本量为 241(±195),范围为 48-683 名参与者。目标人群包括结直肠癌、乳腺癌和子宫内膜癌幸存者以及一般癌症幸存者,包括男性和女性或仅女性。大多数参与者(74%)为白种人/高加索人,平均年龄为 47.1 至 65.9 岁。项目持续时间从 4 周到 18 个月不等,平均持续时间为 32 周。干预措施剂量从每周三次到每月一次不等。干预措施的可接受性、适当性和可行性的平均和标准差评分分别为 3.52(±0.46)、3.41(±0.45)和 3.21(±0.46),满分均为 5 分。四项综合可接受性、适当性和可行性评分最高的干预措施正在考虑作为肥胖相关子宫内膜癌幸存者的干预措施。需要进一步研究以确定肥胖子宫内膜癌幸存者的相关适应性和疗效。我们的方法可能对其他希望加快干预措施开发和实施的干预者有益。