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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07388147
NA

Exercise Therapy for Multiple Myeloma Patients

Sponsor: University Hospital Heidelberg

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Physical exercise is an important supportive therapy for cancer patients, as it improves quality of life in general and might mitigate the side effects of drug treatment. For patients with multiple myeloma in particular, significantly less evidence on the effectiveness of exercise therapy is available due to the fact that this disease is associated with severe bone degradation which might affect bone stability. Advances in oncologic drug treatment have improved overall survival in multiple myeloma significantly. Therefore, there is an increased interest for recommendations on physical activity in this patient group. Due to uncertainties regarding safety and feasibility of exercise therapy in multiple myeloma, both patients and therapists often remain hesitant. Therefore, an orthopaedic outpatient clinic has been established at the Myeloma Center of Heidelberg University Hospital. Here, patients receive consultation on bone stability and individualized physical exercise plans. Based on the expertise gained at the orthopaedic outpatient clinic, the aim of this study is to establish and evaluate structural measures for improved rehabilitation in multiple myeloma and to integrate them into routine clinical care.

Official title: Structural Measures for Multiple Myeloma Patients to Improve Rehabilitation by Exercise Therapy

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 75 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

71

Start Date

2026-03-01

Completion Date

2029-03-31

Last Updated

2026-02-04

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Orthopedic consultation and rehabilitation by excercise therapy

All patients will receive a continuous orthopaedic consultation on bone stability and recommendations for exercise therapy during the different phases of systemic myeloma therapy. Thereby, structural measures to improve rehabilitation in multiple myeloma will be established and evaluated with the intention of integrating them into routine clinical care.

Locations (1)

Heidelberg University Hospital - GMMG Study Group

Heidelberg, Germany