Indiana University School of Medicine, 535 Barnhill Dr. RT 473, Indianapolis, IN, 46205, USA.
Ohio State University School of Nursing, Columbus, OH, USA.
BMC Cancer. 2024 Sep 12;24(1):1137. doi: 10.1186/s12885-024-12883-6.
Exercise is associated with improved survival, physical functioning, treatment tolerability, and quality of life in early-stage breast cancer. These same endpoints matter in metastatic breast cancer (MBC). Prior trials in MBC have found exercise to be not feasible or of limited benefit, possibly due to inclusion of patients with heterogeneous disease trajectories. Patients with MBC have variable disease trajectories and supportive care needs; those with indolent MBC have longer life expectancy, lower symptom burden and distinct priorities, and are well-positioned to participate in and benefit from an exercise program. The EMBody trial aims to determine the impact of a multimodal exercise intervention on cardiorespiratory fitness, physical function, body composition, and patient-reported outcomes, specifically in patients with stable, indolent MBC.
Eligible patients have MBC with no evidence of disease progression on current therapy in the prior 12 months and cannot be receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy. The trial aims to enroll 100 patients, randomized 1:1 to the exercise intervention versus usual care, stratified by baseline function. The virtually-delivered exercise intervention arm achieves moderate intensity exercise with exercise physiologists 3 days/week for 16 weeks. The 60-minute sessions include aerobic, resistance, balance and stretching exercises. The exercise arm receives informational sessions on the role of exercise in cancer and principles of habit and self-efficacy. The primary endpoint is 16 week change in fitness on a ramp treadmill test between the exercise and control arms. Secondary endpoints include change in a physical function, muscle mass assessed by CT scans, and PROs of fatigue and quality of life. Exploratory analysis includes behavioral modifiers of exercise adherence and effectiveness and serologic measures of inflammatory, metabolic, and immune pathway biomarkers.
The EMBody trial evaluates exercise in a unique patient population with indolent, non-progressive MBC. Patients living with MBC experience similar symptom burden to those undergoing therapy for early-stage disease and the benefits achieved with exercise could be similarly impactful. This trial will contribute evidence to support expansion of exercise recommendations, among other survivorship care efforts, to those living with metastatic disease.
NCT05468034.
NCT05468034. Date of registration: 7/12/2022.
运动与早期乳腺癌患者的生存率提高、身体功能改善、治疗耐受性提高和生活质量提高有关。这些相同的终点在转移性乳腺癌(MBC)中也很重要。MBC 之前的试验发现运动是不可行的或益处有限,这可能是由于纳入了疾病轨迹不同的患者。MBC 患者的疾病轨迹和支持性护理需求存在差异;那些患有惰性 MBC 的患者预期寿命更长,症状负担和优先级明显不同,并且有能力参与并从运动计划中受益。EMBody 试验旨在确定一种多模式运动干预对心肺功能、身体功能、身体成分和患者报告的结果的影响,特别是在稳定、惰性 MBC 患者中。
符合条件的患者患有 MBC,在过去 12 个月内当前治疗没有疾病进展的证据,并且不能接受细胞毒性化疗。该试验旨在招募 100 名患者,按基线功能 1:1 随机分为运动干预组和常规护理组。虚拟提供的运动干预组由运动生理学家每周 3 天进行 16 周的中等强度运动。60 分钟的课程包括有氧运动、阻力训练、平衡和伸展运动。运动组接受关于运动在癌症中的作用和习惯和自我效能原则的信息课程。主要终点是在跑步机测试中,运动组和对照组在 16 周时的体能变化。次要终点包括身体功能、通过 CT 扫描评估的肌肉质量以及疲劳和生活质量的患者报告结果的变化。探索性分析包括运动依从性和有效性的行为修饰因子以及炎症、代谢和免疫途径生物标志物的血清学测量。
EMBody 试验评估了在患有惰性、非进展性 MBC 的独特患者群体中运动的效果。患有 MBC 的患者经历与接受早期疾病治疗的患者相似的症状负担,而运动带来的益处可能同样具有影响力。该试验将为支持在转移性疾病患者中扩大运动建议提供证据,以及其他生存护理努力。
NCT05468034。
NCT05468034。注册日期:2022 年 7 月 12 日。