Effect of a 1-year physical activity intervention on quality of life, fatigue, and distress in adult childhood cancer survivors-A randomized controlled trial (SURfit).

Deng, Wei H; Zürcher, Simeon J; Schindera, Christina; Jung, Ruedi; Hebestreit, Helge; Bänteli, Iris; Bologna, Katja; von der Weid, Nicolas X; Kriemler, Susi; Rueegg, Corina S (2024). Effect of a 1-year physical activity intervention on quality of life, fatigue, and distress in adult childhood cancer survivors-A randomized controlled trial (SURfit). Cancer, 130(10), pp. 1869-1883. Wiley 10.1002/cncr.35207

[img]
Preview
Text
Deng_Cancer_2024.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works (CC-BY-NC-ND).

Download (536kB) | Preview

INTRODUCTION

Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) are at risk of experiencing lower quality-of-life, fatigue, and depression. Few randomized controlled trials have studied the effect of physical activity (PA) on these in adult long-term CCS. This study investigated the effect of a 1-year individualized PA intervention on health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL), fatigue, and distress symptoms in adult CCS.

METHODS

The SURfit trial randomized 151 CCS ≥16 years old, <16 at diagnosis and ≥5 years since diagnosis, identified through the Swiss Childhood Cancer Registry. Intervention participants received personalized PA counselling to increase intense PA by ≥2.5 h/week for 1 year. Controls maintained usual PA levels. The authors assessed physical- and mental-HRQOL, fatigue, and distress symptoms at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months. T-scores were calculated using representative normative populations (mean = 50, standard deviation = 10). Generalized linear mixed-effects models with intention-to-treat (ITT, primary), and three per-protocol allocations were used.

RESULTS

At 12 months, ITT (-3.56 larger decrease, 95% confidence interval -5.69 to -1.43, p = .001) and two per-protocol analyses found significantly lower fatigue. Physical-HRQOL improved significantly in two per-protocol analyses at 12 months. No other effects were found.

CONCLUSION

SURfit showed that increased intense PA over 1 year improved fatigue in adult CCS. Survivors should be recommended PA to reduce the burden of late-effects.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > University Psychiatric Services > University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (ISPM)

UniBE Contributor:

Zürcher, Simeon, Schindera, Christina

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology > 360 Social problems & social services

ISSN:

1097-0142

Publisher:

Wiley

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

06 Feb 2024 08:04

Last Modified:

02 May 2024 13:37

Publisher DOI:

10.1002/cncr.35207

PubMed ID:

38315522

Uncontrolled Keywords:

childhood cancer survivors late effects mental health physical activity randomized controlled trial

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/192616

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/192616

Actions (login required)

Edit item Edit item
Provide Feedback