Wurz Amanda, McLaughlin Emma, Janzen Anna, Cripps Hannah, Huang Longlong, Molina Heather, Cowley Lauren, Dreger Julianna, Culos-Reed S Nicole, Quinn Kaitlyn, Currey In Memory Of Lisa, Pacelli Maria-Hélèna, Coombs Melissa, Shamshad Sundas
School of Kinesiology, University of the Fraser Valley, Chilliwack, BC, Canada.
Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Glob Adv Integr Med Health. 2024 Dec 22;13:27536130241305130. doi: 10.1177/27536130241305130. eCollection 2024 Jan-Dec.
Cancer among young adults (18-39 years) is relatively rare, but remains a leading cause of disability, morbidity, and mortality. Identifying strategies to support young adults' health following a diagnosis of cancer is important. Yoga may enhance health and could be delivered by videoconference. However, little research exploring yoga, and no research exploring videoconference delivery of yoga has been conducted with this cohort. We worked with young adults affected by cancer and developed, piloted, and refined a yoga intervention delivered by videoconference.
To evaluate our yoga intervention in a full-scale, mixed methods, single-arm, hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial.
Young adults 18 years or older, diagnosed with cancer between the ages of 18-39 years of age, and at any stage along the cancer trajectory are eligible. Participants receive 2 yoga classes/week over 12-weeks by videoconference and complete assessments at baseline, post-intervention, and 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Assessments include self-reported questionnaires (ie, stress, yoga barriers, physical activity behaviour, fatigue, cognition, cancer-related symptoms, general health, health-related quality of life, self-compassion, mindfulness, group identification), physical assessments (ie, aerobic endurance, flexibility, range of motion, balance, functional mobility), and a semi-structured interview (post-intervention only; exploring perceptions of acceptability, feasibility, and experiences). Quality improvement cycles occur every 6 months. Repeated measures analysis of variance will be conducted to explore effectiveness, descriptive statistics and responder/non-responder analyses will be used to explore implementation, and qualitative interview data, analyzed using content analysis and reflexive thematic analysis, will bolster effectiveness and implementation findings.
As the first full-scale trial to evaluate yoga delivered by videoconference for this cohort, findings will make substantial contributions to young adults' supportive cancer care.
This protocol, reporting on yoga delivered by videoconference for young adults diagnosed with cancer, will enhance transparency and reproducibility and provide a reference for forthcoming trial results.
NCT05314803 at clinicaltrials.gov.
年轻成年人(18 - 39岁)患癌症相对罕见,但仍是导致残疾、发病和死亡的主要原因。确定癌症诊断后支持年轻成年人健康的策略很重要。瑜伽可能会改善健康状况,并且可以通过视频会议进行授课。然而,针对这一年龄段人群,探索瑜伽的研究很少,而探索通过视频会议进行瑜伽授课的研究则尚无开展。我们与受癌症影响的年轻成年人合作,开发、试点并完善了一种通过视频会议进行的瑜伽干预方案。
在一项全面的、混合方法、单臂、兼具效果评估与实施评估的试验中评估我们的瑜伽干预方案。
年龄在18岁及以上、在18 - 39岁之间被诊断患有癌症且处于癌症病程任何阶段的年轻成年人符合条件。参与者通过视频会议每周接受2次瑜伽课程,为期12周,并在基线、干预后、6个月和12个月随访时完成评估。评估包括自我报告问卷(如压力、瑜伽障碍、身体活动行为、疲劳、认知、癌症相关症状、总体健康状况、健康相关生活质量、自我同情、正念、群体认同)、身体评估(如有氧耐力、柔韧性、关节活动范围、平衡能力、功能性活动能力)以及一次半结构化访谈(仅在干预后进行;探讨对可接受性、可行性和体验的看法)。每6个月进行一次质量改进循环。将进行重复测量方差分析以探索效果,使用描述性统计和反应者/非反应者分析来探索实施情况,而定性访谈数据则通过内容分析和反思性主题分析进行分析,以支持效果和实施情况的研究结果。
作为评估通过视频会议为该年龄段人群提供瑜伽干预的首个全面试验,研究结果将为年轻成年人的癌症支持性护理做出重大贡献。
本方案报告了为诊断患有癌症的年轻成年人通过视频会议提供瑜伽干预的情况,将提高透明度和可重复性,并为即将得出的试验结果提供参考。
clinicaltrials.gov上的NCT05314803。