INTRODUCTION:Supervised exercise may have positive effects on motivation and continued exercise in cancer survivors, but few randomized controlled trials have examined this issue. Here, we report the motivational outcomes and longer-term exercise behavior from the Healthy Exercise for Lymphoma Patients trial. METHODS:Lymphoma patients were randomly assigned to 12 wk of supervised aerobic exercise (SUP, n = 60) or usual care (UC, n = 62). Motivational outcomes from the theory of planned behavior were assessed at baseline, after intervention, and at 6-month follow-up using standardized measures. Exercise behavior was self-reported at baseline and 6-month follow-up using the Godin Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire. RESULTS: Data were available from 95% of participants after intervention and 90% at 6-month follow-up. SUP attended a median of 92% of the supervised exercise sessions. After intervention, SUP was superior to UC for intention (+0.41 (+0.09 to +0.72), P = 0.012) and perceived behavioral control (+0.36 (+0.01 to +0.72), P = 0.047) and borderline superior for self-efficacy (+0.35 (-0.02 to +0.72), P = 0.060). At 6-month follow-up, SUP reported significantly more exercise minutes compared with UC (+133 (+38 to +227), P = 0.006), and a higher percentage of SUP participants were meeting public health exercise guidelines (+25.6% (+8.2% to +43.0%), P = 0.004). Path analysis showed that perceived behavioral control partially mediated the effects of supervised exercise (group assignment) on exercise behavior at 6-month follow-up (meeting exercise guidelines). CONCLUSIONS:Supervised exercise has motivational effects in lymphoma patients and improves longer-term exercise behavior. Strategies to further enhance the motivational value of supervised exercise are warranted.
RCT Entities:
INTRODUCTION: Supervised exercise may have positive effects on motivation and continued exercise in cancer survivors, but few randomized controlled trials have examined this issue. Here, we report the motivational outcomes and longer-term exercise behavior from the Healthy Exercise for LymphomaPatients trial. METHODS:Lymphomapatients were randomly assigned to 12 wk of supervised aerobic exercise (SUP, n = 60) or usual care (UC, n = 62). Motivational outcomes from the theory of planned behavior were assessed at baseline, after intervention, and at 6-month follow-up using standardized measures. Exercise behavior was self-reported at baseline and 6-month follow-up using the Godin Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire. RESULTS: Data were available from 95% of participants after intervention and 90% at 6-month follow-up. SUP attended a median of 92% of the supervised exercise sessions. After intervention, SUP was superior to UC for intention (+0.41 (+0.09 to +0.72), P = 0.012) and perceived behavioral control (+0.36 (+0.01 to +0.72), P = 0.047) and borderline superior for self-efficacy (+0.35 (-0.02 to +0.72), P = 0.060). At 6-month follow-up, SUP reported significantly more exercise minutes compared with UC (+133 (+38 to +227), P = 0.006), and a higher percentage of SUP participants were meeting public health exercise guidelines (+25.6% (+8.2% to +43.0%), P = 0.004). Path analysis showed that perceived behavioral control partially mediated the effects of supervised exercise (group assignment) on exercise behavior at 6-month follow-up (meeting exercise guidelines). CONCLUSIONS: Supervised exercise has motivational effects in lymphomapatients and improves longer-term exercise behavior. Strategies to further enhance the motivational value of supervised exercise are warranted.
Authors: Linda Trinh; Kristian Larsen; Guy E Faulkner; Ronald C Plotnikoff; Ryan E Rhodes; Scott North; Kerry S Courneya Journal: J Cancer Surviv Date: 2015-06-06 Impact factor: 4.442
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