Timing of cardio-oncological rehabilitation and cardiorespiratory fitness in patients receiving cardiotoxic chemotherapy: a longitudinal observational study.

Schneider, Caroline; Dierks, Annika; Rabaglio, Manuela Elena; Campbell, Kristin L; Wilhelm, Matthias; Eser, Prisca (2024). Timing of cardio-oncological rehabilitation and cardiorespiratory fitness in patients receiving cardiotoxic chemotherapy: a longitudinal observational study. Swiss medical weekly, 154(6) SMW supporting association 10.57187/s.3588

[img]
Preview
Text
smw-2024-3588.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons: Attribution (CC-BY).

Download (2MB) | Preview

AIMS

Anthracycline-based chemotherapy has well-known cardiotoxic effects, butmay also cause skeletal muscle myopathy and negatively affect cardiorespiratory fitness and quality of life. The effectiveness of exercise training in improving cardiorespiratory fitness and quality of life during chemotherapy is highly variable. We set out to determine how the effect of exercise training on cardiorespiratory fitness (primary outcome) and quality of life (secondary outcome) in cancer patients is affected by the type of therapy they receive (cardiotoxic therapy with or without anthracyclines; non-cardiotoxic therapy) and the timing of the exercise training (during or after therapy).

METHODS

Consecutive patients with cancer who participated in an exercise-based cardio-oncology rehabilitation programme at a university hospital in Switzerland between January 2014 and February 2022 were eligible. Patients were grouped based on chemotherapy (anthracycline vs non-anthracycline) and timing of exercise training (during vs after chemotherapy). Peak oxygen uptake (VO2) was assessed with cardiopulmonary exercise testing (n = 200), and quality of life with the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies questionnaire (n = 77). Robust linear models were performed for change in peak VO2 including type and timing of cardiotoxic therapies, age, training impulse and baseline peak VO2; change in quality of life was analysed with cumulative linked models.

RESULTS

In all patients with valid VO2 (n = 164), median change in peak VO2 from before to after exercise training was 2.3 ml/kg/min (range: -10.1-15.9). The highest median change in peak VO2 was 4.1 ml/kg/min (interquartile range [IQR]: 0.7-7.7) in patients who completed exercise training during non-anthracycline cardiotoxic or non-cardiotoxic therapies, followed by 2.8 ml/kg/min (IQR: 1.2-5.3) and 2.3 ml/kg/min (IQR: 0.1-4.6) in patients who completed exercise training after anthracycline and after non-anthracycline cardiotoxic or non-cardiotoxic therapies, respectively. In patients who completed exercise training during anthracycline therapy, peak VO2 decreased by a median of -2.1 ml/kg/min (IQR: -4.7-2.0). In the robust linear model, there was a significant interaction between type and timing of cancer treatment for anthracycline therapy, with greater increases in peak VO2 when exercise training was performed after anthracycline therapy. For quality of life, higher baseline scores were negatively associated with changes in quality of life.

CONCLUSION

In our cohort, the increase in cardiorespiratory fitness was diminished when exercise training was performed concurrently with anthracyclines. For patients with cardiotoxic treatments other than anthracyclines, cardiorespiratory fitness and quality of life was not associated with timing of exercise training.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Haematology, Oncology, Infectious Diseases, Laboratory Medicine and Hospital Pharmacy (DOLS) > Clinic of Medical Oncology

Graduate School:

Graduate School for Health Sciences (GHS)

UniBE Contributor:

Rabaglio, Manuela Elena, Wilhelm, Matthias

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1424-3997

Publisher:

SMW supporting association

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

18 Jun 2024 10:33

Last Modified:

26 Aug 2024 14:46

Publisher DOI:

10.57187/s.3588

PubMed ID:

38885132

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/197899

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/197899

Actions (login required)

Edit item Edit item
Provide Feedback