| Literature DB >> 21070639 |
Katja I Braam1, Elisabeth M van Dijk, Margreet A Veening, Marc B Bierings, Johannes H M Merks, Martha A Grootenhuis, Mai J M Chinapaw, Gerben Sinnema, Tim Takken, Jaap Huisman, Gertjan J L Kaspers, Eline van Dulmen-den Broeder.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Childhood cancer and its treatment have considerable impact on a child's physical and mental wellbeing. Especially long-term administration of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy impairs physical fitness both during and after therapy, when children often present with muscle weakness and/or low cardiorespiratory fitness. Physical exercise can improve these two elements of physical fitness, but the positive effects of physical exercise might be further increased when a child's wellbeing is simultaneously enhanced by psychosocial training. Feeling better may increase the willingness and motivation to engage in sports activities. Therefore, this multi-centre study evaluates the short and long-term changes in physical fitness of a child with a childhood malignancy, using a combined physical exercise and psychosocial intervention program, implemented during or shortly after treatment. Also examined is whether positive effects on physical fitness reduce inactivity-related adverse health problems, improve quality of life, and are cost-effective.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21070639 PMCID: PMC2996394 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Flowchart of the Quality of Life in Motion (QLIM) study.
Figure 2Details of the Quality of Life in Motion (QLIM) physical intervention. HFmax, maximum heart rate. # FT, Field Tests: Modified Shuttle Walk Test; Steep Ramp Test; 10 × 5 meter sprint test; 30 second repetition maximum for sit-ups, push-ups, head and leg raises; 60-second repetition maximum for squats.
Details of the Quality of Life in Motion (QLIM) psychosocial intervention.
| Psychosocial training modules | |
|---|---|
| Session 1 (1 h) | In the |
| Session 2 (1 h) | The |
| Session 3 (1 h) | In the |
| Session 4 (1 h) | The |
| Session 5 (1 h) | The |
| Session 6 (1 h) | The |
| Parent session 1 (1 h) | The first parent session focuses on the principles of the program to increase parental support, in order to improve compliance and endurance. |
| Parent session 2 (1 h) | The second and last parent session focuses on evaluation of the total program. Parents and therapists describe the achieved goals and the changes observed during the program. |
Details of the primary outcome measures and the measurement tools used.
| Primary outcome measures | Measurements |
|---|---|
| Cardiorespiratory fitness | Lode Corival bicycle ergometry with paediatric options; LODE BV, Groningen, the Netherlands. |
| Muscle strength | CITEC hand-held dynamometer; C.I.T. Technics BV, Haren, the Netherlands |
| Fatigue | PedsQL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale Acute Version (self-report and parent-proxy report) [ |
| Body composition | Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA) scan (Hologic QDR 4500); Hologic Bedford, USA. |
| Daily physical activity levels | Physical activity accelerometer: Actical 2.1; Respironics, Mini Mitter, Oregon USA |
| Depression | Children's Depression Inventory (CDI) [ |
| Quality of life | PedsQL 4.0 Generic Score Scale (self-report and parent-proxy report) [ |
| Self-perception | Self-Perception Profile for Children (CBSK) [ |
| Behavioural problems | Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) [ |
| Cost data | Monthly cost diary |
| Compliance | Self-report Attendance checklist for training sessions |
| Satisfaction with the intervention | Questionnaire 11-items |
| Clinical data | Medical record |
| Moderating variables | Questionnaire addressing pre-illness lifestyle, current attitudes towards and beliefs about exercise, physical activity patterns. |