| Literature DB >> 22121378 |
Tseng-Tien Huang1, Kirsten K Ness.
Abstract
The purpose of this review is to summarize literature that describes the impact of exercise on health and physical function among children during and after treatment for cancer. Relevant studies were identified by entering the following search terms into Pubmed: aerobic training; resistance training; stretching; pediatric; children; AND cancer. Reference lists in retrieved manuscripts were also reviewed to identify additional trials. We include fifteen intervention trials published between 1993 and 2011 that included children younger than age 21 years with cancer diagnoses. Nine included children with an acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) diagnosis, and six children with mixed cancer diagnoses. Generally, interventions tested were either in-hospital supervised exercise training or home based programs designed to promote physical activity. Early evidence from small studies indicates that the effects of exercise include increased cardiopulmonary fitness, improved muscle strength and flexibility, reduced fatigue and improved physical function. Generalizations to the entire childhood cancer and childhood cancer survivor populations are difficult as most of the work has been done in children during treatment for and among survivors of ALL. Additional randomized studies are needed to confirm these benefits in larger populations of children with ALL, and in populations with cancer diagnoses other than ALL.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22121378 PMCID: PMC3205744 DOI: 10.1155/2011/461512
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Description of non-randomized exercise trials in children with cancer.
| First author | Design | Demographics | Exercise intervention (type of training, frequency, and duration) | *Main outcomes |
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| Sharkey, 1993 [ | Pretest/posttest trial |
| Intervention: aerobic training with home exercise twice per week (week 1-2 started with 15 minutes of warm-up, 15 minutes of exercise at 60% of HRmax and 15 minutes of cool-down, week 3–6 30 minutes of exercise at 70–80% HRmax, and week 7–12 30 minutes of aerobic exercise at 70–80% HRmax plus home exercise once per week). | Body fat (−), spirometry (−), peak heart rate (−), peak oxygen uptake (−), anaerobic threshold (−), peak cardiac index (−), peak stroke volume index (−), or vascular resistance (−). Exercise time (+13%). |
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| Ladha, 2006 [ | Nonrandomized safety assessment with both a cancer and a healthy | Cancer group: | Intervention: one session (5 minutes of warm-up, 20 minutes of moderate- to high-intensity exercise, and 5 minutes of cool-down) of intermittent run-walk on a treadmill at 70% to 85% of VO2 peak. | An acute bout of exercise did not elicit any significant negative effects on neutrophil count. |
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| San Juan, 2007 [ | Pretest/posttest trial |
| Intervention: three weekly sessions (90–120 minutes) of supervised resistance training (bench press, shoulder press, leg extension, leg curl, leg press, abdominal crunch, lower-back extension, arm curl, elbow extension, seated row, and lateral pull-down; 8–15 repetitions) and aerobic exercise (started with 10 minutes of exercises at 50% of age-predicted HRmax and progressed to 30 minutes of continuous exercise at ≥70% HRmax by the end of the program). | VO2 peak (+), VT (+), functional mobility (+) (TUDs, 3- and 10-meter TUG) and strength tests (+) (seated bench press, seated row, and seated leg press) from before training to after training. Only increased strength remained significant after detraining. |
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| Keats and Culos-Reed, 2008 [ | Pretest/posttest trial. |
| Intervention: physical activity and educational intervention (30 minutes of educational session, 45 minutes of aerobic training, and 15 minutes of core strength and flexibility training in the first 8 weeks; a variety of noncompetitive physical activities in the final 8 weeks) | Upper body strength (+), flexibility (+), total PA (+), QOL (+), and general fatigue (+). Participants failed to maintain their postintervention PA levels at both 3- and 12-month follow-up time points. |
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| San Juan, 2008 [ | Pretest/posttest trial. |
| Intervention: three weekly sessions (90–120 minutes) of supervised resistance training (bench press, shoulder press, leg extension, leg curl, leg press, abdominal crunch, lower-back extension, arm curl, elbow extension, seated row, and lateral pull-down; 11 repetitions) and aerobic exercise (started with 10 minutes of exercises at 50% of age-predicted HRmax and progressed to 30 minutes of continuous exercise at ≥70% HRmax by the end of the program) | Muscle strength (+), VO2 peak (+), functional mobility (+) (TUDs, 3- and 10-meter TUG) and self-reported health status (+). |
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| Takken, 2009 [ | Pretest/posttest trial. |
| Intervention: two weekly sessions (45 minutes) of supervised resistance training (sit-ups, push-ups, head and leg raises; 30-second repetition maximum and squats 60-second repetition maximum), aerobic exercise (66–77% of HRmax in first 4 weeks, 77–90% HRmax in the following 4 weeks, and ≥90% HRmax in the last 4 weeks) and a home-based exercise program (strength, flexibility, and aerobic fitness). | Seventy percent of trainers were satisfied with the program. BMI (−), muscle strength (−), exercise capacity (−), functional mobility (−), or fatigue levels (−). |
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| Blaauwbroek, 2009 [ | Pretest/posttest trial. |
| Intervention: enhanced physical activity (such as walking, cycling, housekeeping, and gardening) counseling. The counselor encouraged the survivors to change their lifestyle and enhance daily physical activity to meet published exercise guidelines (i.e., at least 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous exercise/week) and phoned the survivors at three weeks, six weeks, and nice weeks to check goals. Feedback from a pedometer. | Significant improvements in fatigue and daily steps after intervention. There was a low correlation (0.12) between increase in daily steps and the decrease in fatigue. |
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| Speyer, 2010 [ | Cross-over, single study design. |
| Intervention: three weekly sessions (30 minutes) of adapted physical activity (ball games, circus arts, throwing games, shooting games, racket sports, video games, and body building). | QOL scores in physical and psychological dimensions were higher for the children who practiced than for those who did not practice adapted physical activity during hospitalization. |
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| Chamorro-Vina, 2010 [ | Nonrandomized controlled trial. | Intervention group: | Intervention: Five weekly sessions (~50 minutes) of supervised resistance training (arm curl, elbow extension, bench press, log extension, half squat, abdominal crunch, supine bridge, and rowing; 12–15 repetitions) (stretching exercise involving all major muscle groups) and aerobic exercise (10–40 minutes of cycle ergometry at 50% to 70% of HRmax). | Fitness levels (+) (half squat) or body mass (+). Exercise intervention during inpatient stay for HCT did not affect immune cell recovery in young children with high-risk cancer. |
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| Yeh, 2011 [ | Nonrandomized controlled trial. | Intervention group: | Intervention: three weekly sessions (30 minutes) of individualized home-based aerobic exercise program (exercise intensity: 40%–60% of HRR) | General fatigue (+). |
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| Gohar, 2011 [ | Pretest/posttest trial. |
| Intervention: individualized home-based exercise program (stretching exercise: ankle dorsiflexion; 5 days/week, strengthening exercise: lower- and upper-extremity exercise; 10 repetitions 5 days/week, and aerobic exercise: walking, bike riding, and dancing 10–30 minutes; 5 days/week). | Gross motor function (+) and QOL measures (+) throughout the study (at diagnosis, induction, consolidation, interim maintenance, and delayed intensification). However, QOL scores decreased from interim maintenance to delayed intensification. The parents reported being satisfied with the PT program. |
*(+) to indicate a significant effect; (−) to indicate no significant effect/change.
ALL: acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AML: acute myeloid leukemia; BMD: bone mineral density; BMI: body mass index; CNS: central nervous system; HRR: heart rate reserve; HCT: hematopoietic stem cell transplant; PA: physical activity; PT: physical therapy; QOL: quality of life; VO2 peak: peak aerobic fitness; HRmax: maximum of heart rate; TUDs: time up and down stair test; TUG: timed up and go test; VT: ventilatory threshold.
Description of the randomized exercise trials in children with cancer.
| First author | Demographics | Exercise intervention (type of training, frequency, and duration) | *Main outcomes |
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| Marchese, 2004 [ | Intervention group: | Intervention: five sessions (20 to 60 minutes immediately after initial testing, and 2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks later) of PT (stretching and strengthening exercises, supervised) and an individualized home-based exercise program (bilateral ankle dorsiflexion stretching for 30 sec 5 days per week, bilateral lower extremity strengthening 3 sets, 3 days per week, and aerobic exercises). | Hemoglobin level (−), ankle dorsiflexion strength (−), TUDs (−), 9-minute walk-run (−), and QOL (−). Ankle dorsiflexion range of motion (active) and knee extension strength increased in intervention group from before to after test. |
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| Hinds, 2007 [ | Intervention group: | Intervention: enhanced physical activity (pedaling a stationary bike-style exerciser, 30 minutes, twice daily during brief hospitalization). | Sleep efficiency (+). |
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| Moyer-Mileur, 2009 [ | Intervention group: | Intervention: an individualized exercise program (three 15–20-minute sessions of moderate-to-vigorous activity per week) and nutritional education. | Nutrient intake (−), height (−), weight (−), or BMI (−) between intervention and control groups. No intervention effect for upper body strength (push-up completed) or flexibility (sit and reach distance). |
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| Hartman, 2009 [ | Intervention group: | Intervention: preventive PT program (weekly strengthening and stretching exercise and short-burst high-intensity exercise in BMD twice per week). | Percentage of body fat (−) or less body mass (−). BMD decreased significantly in both groups between the start and end of treatment. |
*(+) to indicate a significant effect; (−) to indicate no significant effect/change.
ALL: acute lymphoblastic leukemia; BMD: bone mineral density; BMI: body mass index; PA: physical activity; PT: physical therapy; QOL: quality of life; TUDs: time up and down stair test.