Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States of America; Cancer Control and Population Sciences Program, Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States of America.
Department of Health and Kinesiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States of America.
J Geriatr Oncol. 2024 Nov;15(8):102050. doi: 10.1016/j.jgo.2024.102050. Epub 2024 Aug 30.
Lifestyle (diet and exercise) interventions across the cancer care continuum among younger cancer survivors (<60 years of age) demonstrate utility in improving physical function, and other cancer relevant health outcomes. However, the impact of lifestyle interventions on physical function in older (≥60 years) cancer survivors is not entirely clear. This scoping review aims to map and characterize the existing literature on the effect of diet and exercise interventions on physical function in older cancer survivors. Conducted to the JBI Manual for Evidence Synthesis and reported to the PRISMA guidelines, the literature search was performed on multiple databases through March 2024. A total of 19,901 articles were identified for screening with 49 articles published between 2006 and 2024 selected for full-text review. Of these, 36 studies included an exercise intervention, two focused on diet intervention, while 11 studies included both diet and exercise intervention. These 49 studies included various cancer types, cancer stages, and timepoints across the cancer care continuum. Most studies described physical function as their primary outcome and demonstrated maintenance or improvement in physical function. We identified several gaps in the current evidence including lack of (adequately powered) trials focused only on older cancer survivors, and trials focused on dietary interventions alone or dietary interventions combined with exercise interventions within this population vulnerable for nutritional inadequacies and declining physical function. Considering the growing population of older cancer survivors, this represents an important area for further research.
生活方式(饮食和运动)干预贯穿癌症治疗全过程,可改善年轻癌症幸存者(<60 岁)的身体机能和其他与癌症相关的健康结果。然而,生活方式干预对老年(≥60 岁)癌症幸存者身体机能的影响尚不完全清楚。本系统评价旨在绘制和描述现有关于饮食和运动干预对老年癌症幸存者身体机能影响的文献。该研究按照 JBI 证据综合手册进行,并根据 PRISMA 指南进行报告,文献检索于 2024 年 3 月在多个数据库中进行。共确定了 19,901 篇文章进行筛选,其中有 49 篇文章发表于 2006 年至 2024 年,被选为全文审查。其中,36 项研究包括运动干预,2 项研究专注于饮食干预,11 项研究包括饮食和运动干预。这 49 项研究包括各种癌症类型、癌症阶段和癌症治疗全过程中的不同时间点。大多数研究将身体机能描述为主要结果,并表明身体机能得到了维持或改善。我们发现当前证据存在几个空白,包括缺乏(足够有力)专门针对老年癌症幸存者的试验,以及仅针对该人群中营养不足和身体机能下降的高危人群的饮食干预或饮食干预联合运动干预的试验。鉴于老年癌症幸存者人数不断增加,这是进一步研究的重要领域。