Changes in exercise capacity, quality of life and fatigue in cancer patients during an intervention
- PMID: 24724813
- DOI: 10.1111/ecc.12201
Changes in exercise capacity, quality of life and fatigue in cancer patients during an intervention
Abstract
The study explored the interdependence of changes in oxygen uptake, quality of life and cancer-related side-effect fatigue during a 4-month exercise intervention. Participants were during adjuvant (curative) or palliative therapy and post-adjuvant therapy (finished within the previous 12 months). Aerobic exercise capacity (VO2 peak), quality of life and fatigue symptom (EORTC QLQ-C30) were obtained in 101 cancer patients (30-77 years). After initial examination, patients participated in supervised and/or home-based training interventions. Patients were re-examined after 16-20 weeks and stratified into 3 subgroups (terciles) with respect to the absolute change in VO2 peak. The ANCOVA, with significant covariate effect for pretest fatigue score (F(5,101) = 8.150, P < 0.001), indicated significant differences between groups in outcome measures (P < 0.001). Based on the absolute change of VO2 peak (1.9 ± 1.7; 1.8 ± 0.8; 5.7 ± 2.8 ml/kg/min) there were significant differences in the quality of life improvement (17.2 ± 15.1 vs. 4.8 ± 22.0 points, P < 0.05) and cancer-related fatigue reduction (-6.1 ± 30.7; -11.5 ± 20.9; -21.2 ± 21.4 points) between upper and lower tercile. The findings point towards a relationship of exercise capacity enhancement, quality of life improvement and fatigue symptom reduction during and shortly after cancer treatment.
Keywords: cancer; cancer-related fatigue; exercise capacity; oxygen uptake; quality of life.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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