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Home-Combo: an Online Home-based Combined Exercise Intervention for Women With Breast Cancer
Sponsor: Grupo Lusófona
Summary
Background. Chemotherapy drugs carry many side effects that may hinder the functional performance of women with breast cancer (BC). Chemoresistance can lead to treatment failure. A relative dose intensity of chemotherapy \<85% is associated with a worse diagnosis and lower treatment efficacy. Exercise may modulate treatment response through its effects on the tumor microenvironment and treatment tolerability. The need for a pleasant and sustainable exercise practice is important, considering the psychological and physiological stress that accompanies women with a BC diagnosis during treatment. Studies investigating the effects of exercise interventions on chemotherapy completion rates are needed. Background. Chemotherapy drugs carry many side effects that may hinder the functional performance of women with breast cancer (BC). Chemoresistance can lead to treatment failure. A relative dose intensity of chemotherapy \<85% is associated with a worse diagnosis and lower treatment efficacy. Exercise may modulate treatment response through its effects on the tumor microenvironment and treatment tolerability. The need for a pleasant and sustainable exercise practice is important, considering the psychological and physiological stress that accompanies women with a BC diagnosis during treatment. Studies investigating the effects of exercise interventions on chemotherapy completion rates are needed. Purpose. This study will be a 2-arm pragmatic randomized controlled trial, Home-Combo, which will target Portuguese women with a breast cancer diagnosis undergoing either neo-adjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. The Home-Combo study primarily aims to investigate the effects of a structured, supervised, home-based combined exercise intervention with self-selected intensity, conducted across the chemotherapy treatment period, on the chemotherapy completion rates of women with BC. Secondly, this study intends to analyze the impact of this intervention on functional performance, body composition, PA levels, and quality of life. A 3-month follow-up will be performed to investigate short-term outcomes and active lifestyle sustainability post-intervention. Methods. A 2-arm randomized controlled trial will be implemented in a real-world exercise setting to compare an online structured and supervised group aerobic and strength exercise intervention with an active control group during chemotherapy treatments. The study recruitment goal is 98 women with a BC diagnosis stage I-III who are scheduled to have neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. Outcome measures will be obtained at baseline, mid-treatment (≈3 months), post-intervention (≈6 months), and 3-month follow-up. A mediation analysis will also be conducted. Hypothesis 1: Women in the intervention will have a better completion rate than those in the control group. Hypothesis 2: Women in the intervention will present better functional performance, body composition, PA levels, and quality of life than the control group. Hypothesis 3: In the post-intervention period, women in the intervention group will maintain a more physically active lifestyle than women in the control group.
Official title: An Online Home-based Combined Exercise Intervention With Self-selected Intensity for Women With Breast Cancer: The Home-Combo Randomized Controlled Trial.
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
98
Start Date
2024-11-10
Completion Date
2025-10-10
Last Updated
2024-06-10
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Home-based combined exercise program with self-selected intensity
Before the beginning of the exercise program, participants will receive an education session on how to use Borg's Perceived Rate of Exertion Scale (RPE) to monitor their effort during aerobic and resistance training and tips on when they may increase the exercise intensity. During the training sessions, participants in the intervention group will be asked to choose their preferred load to execute each exercise in the resistance component, told to perform the aerobic exercises at their preferred speed, and informed that they can stop exercising whenever they need to rest. The exercise professional may suggest increasing loads in specific exercises, but these increases will not be imposed on the participants. Attendance to the sessions in the intervention and control groups will be registered. Additionally, women in this group will be encouraged to perform brisk walking at their preferred intensity and receive a pedometer to increase walking motivation.
Locations (1)
Universidade Lusófona, Centro de Lisboa
Lisbon, Portugal