| Literature DB >> 26614625 |
Lee Smith1, Orla McCourt1, Malgorzata Henrich1, Bruce Paton2, Kwee Yong3, Jane Wardle1, Abigail Fisher1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Multiple myeloma is the second most common haematological cancer. A growing body of literature is emerging that investigates the role physical activity plays in all stages of multiple myeloma (prevention and survivorship) and to date no attempt has been made to collate and understand this literature. Therefore, this scoping review aims to (1) outline what is already known about physical activity in all stages of multiple myeloma (2) map the literature on physical activity and multiple myeloma and (3) identify future directions for research.Entities:
Keywords: ONCOLOGY
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26614625 PMCID: PMC4663409 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Search terms
| PubMed | "multiple myeloma"[MeSH Terms] OR (“multiple"[All Fields] AND “myeloma"[All Fields]) OR “multiple myeloma"[All Fields]) AND (“motor activity"[MeSH Terms] OR (“motor"[All Fields] AND “activity"[All Fields]) OR “motor activity"[All Fields] |
| Web of Science | Myeloma and physical activity or exercise or walking |
| MEDLINE | Multiple myeloma and physical activity or exercise or walking |
| SportsDiscuss | Multiple myeloma and physical activity or exercise or walking |
Figure 1Flow chart of citations. MGUS, Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance.
Description of studies on physical activity and the prevention of multiple myeloma
| Author | Year of publication | Study design | Sample | Study aim | Length of follow-up | Covariate adjustment | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khan | 2006 | Prospective cohort | 109 698 Japanese adults aged 40–79 years | Assess the association of MM with physical activity in a Japanese cohort | 15 years | Age and sex | For both sexes, walking ≤30 min/day significantly increased age and sex adjusted MM risk (HR=2.0; 95% CI 1.2 to 3.4) |
| Hofmann | 2013 | Prospective cohort | 305 618 US adults aged 50–71 years | To investigate the risk of MM in relation to physical activity at different ages in the National Institutes of Health-AARP Diet and Health Study | 11 years | Age, sex, race and BMI | Risk of MM was not associated with physical activity level at any age |
| Birmann | 2007 | Prospective Cohort | 121 700 US registered nurses aged 30–55 years and 51 529 US male health professionals aged 40–75 years | To examine the role of energy balance in MM aetiology in two large prospective cohorts with biennially updated exposure data | 22 years and 16 years | Age and BMI | Physical activity was not significantly related to MM risk. Although an inverse association was suggested in women |
BMI, body mass index.
Description of qualitative and cross-section studies on physical activity and multiple myeloma survivorship
| Author | Year of publication | Study design | Study aim | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Craike | 2013 | Qualitative semistructure telephone interview | To gain an in-depth understanding of the physical activity experiences and perceived benefits and barriers to physical activity for patients with MM |
Barriers to physical activity predominately related to the symptoms of MM and side effects of therapy, including pain, fatigue and fear of infection Low self-motivation was also a barrier Women participated in a more diverse range of physical activities than men and there were gender differences in preferred type of physical activity Women were more likely to report psychological and social benefits; whereas men reported physical activity as a way to keep busy and self-motivation was a barrier |
| Coon | 2004 | Qualitative—face to face interviews of intervention participants in RCT | The aim of this study was to understand how participants decide when to start, interrupt, stop or resume an exercise programme or adjust the intensity. And to understand what helped or hindered the participants’ ability to do exercises |
Intrinsic factors that facilitated exercise adherence included a belief that exercise would be beneficial, a personal moral/ethical philosophy with regard to honouring a commitment and/or taking responsibility for one's health, and personal strategies such as keeping a routine and setting goals Extrinsic facilitators included having a good support system and receiving prophylactic epoetin alfa |
| Coon | 2004 | Qualitative interviews—naturalistic (constructionists) of participants taking part in an exercise programme | To ascertain how patients with MM appraised the experience of participating in a home-based exercise intervention as part of a RCT of prophylactic epoetin alfa with or without exercise |
Patients with MM can safely carry out a home-based exercise programme aimed at reducing cancer-related fatigue Commitment to keeping their promise to exercise helped participants to continue their exercise programme during times when they were not feeling well Encouragement from family and healthcare professionals facilitates adherence to an exercise programme Many participants avoided taking time off from exercise because they had experienced dramatic declines in their strength and stamina after interruptions to their exercise programme However, most patients needed to reduce the exercise intensity or take time off from exercise immediately following chemotherapy |
| Craike | 2013 | Cross-sectional survey, including retrospective recall | To examine, for people treated for MM, (1) differences between prediagnosis and postdiagnosis levels of physical activity, (2) perceived barriers and likelihood of attending a physical activity programme and (3) factors that influence whether or not respondents are meeting physical activity guidelines |
Significantly more people were meeting physical activity guidelines prediagnosis (38.9%) than currently (20.1%) The strongest perceived barrier was fatigue (37.8%), followed by injuries (34.2%), pain (28.1%), other health conditions (21.1%) and age-related decline in physical ability (18.5%). Lack of knowledge about physical activities that are safe (19.7%), lack of confidence in physical ability (17.1%) and fear or injury (16.2%) were also reported Perceived barriers relating to interpersonal factors were least likely to be reported as barriers to participation, including nausea (7.9%), cost of exercise (9.2%), no one to exercise with (10.1%), and lack of time (10.1%) When asked how likely they would attend an exercise programme designed for people with MM, 41.1% reported they would be very likely or extremely likely to attend and 41.1% said they would not at all likely or slightly likely to attend Only prediagnosis levels of physical activity significantly predicted current levels of physical activity. Overall, people who participated in sufficient levels of physical activity prior to their diagnosis were 4.79 times more likely to meet physical activity guidelines compared to people who did not meet guidelines prior to diagnosis |
| Jones | 2004 | Cross-sectional survey, including retrospective recall | To examine the association between exercise and quality of life in multiple myeloma cancer survivors |
Descriptive analyses indicated that 6.8% and 20.4% of survivors met national exercise guidelines during active and off-treatment periods, respectively Exercise during active treatment and off-treatment were positively associated with overall quality of life |
RCT, randomised controlled trial.
Description of experimental studies on physical activity and multiple myeloma survivorship
| Author | Year of publication | Study design | Study aim | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coleman | 2012 | RCT with repeated measures
15-week intervention period Intervention consisted of stretching, strength and resistance, and aerobic exercise (frequency of exercise sessions and duration is not reported) | To compare usual care with a home-based individualised exercise programme (HBIEP) in patients receiving intensive treatment for MM and epoetin alfa therapy |
No statistically significant differences existed among the experimental and control groups for fatigue, sleep or performance (aerobic capacity) (p>0.05) Exercise combined with epoetin alfa helped alleviate anaemia |
| Coleman | 2008 | RCT
15-week intervention period Intervention consisted of stretching, strength and resistance, and aerobic exercise (frequency of exercise session and duration is not reported) | To determine the effect of epoetin therapy (short term vs long term) with and without a home-based individualised exercise programme that incorporated aerobic and strength resistance training for patients being treated with high-dose chemotherapy and autologous peripheral-blood stem cell transplantation for MM |
Recovery and treatment response were not significantly different between groups after transplantation The exercise group had significantly fewer red blood cell transfusions and fewer attempts at stem cell collection (p<0.025) Serious adverse events were similar in each group (p>0.05) |
| Coleman | 2003 | RCT
Intervention period, session frequency and duration is not reported Intervention consisted of stretching, strength and resistance, and aerobic exercise | To test the feasibility of home-based exercise therapy for patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy and autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation as treatment for MM |
Individuals assigned to exercise gained an average lean body weight of 0.40 kg per month The non-exercise group experienced and average decline in lean body weight of −0.44 kg/month (p<0.01) The study suggests that an exercise programme for patients receiving aggressive treatment for MM is feasible and may be effective in decreasing fatigue and mood disturbance while improving sleep |
| Groeneveldt | 2013 | Single arm pilot study
6-month intervention period Intervention consisted of taking part in stretching, strength and resistance, and aerobic exercise three times a week | To assess the feasibility (accrual rate, acceptability and adherence) and safety of an exercise programme for MM survivors |
The exercise programme was feasible and safe for patients with MM and there was high attendance and acceptability Benefits were evident in patients reported outcomes of QOL, fatigue and measured muscle strength (all p<0.01) |
RCT, randomised controlled trial; QOL, quality of life.
Description of studies on physical activity and smouldering multiple myeloma
| Author | Year of publication | Study design | Study aim | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boullosa | 2010 | Case Report | To document heart rate variability (HRV) during a 6-week period in a female SMM patient that was currently performing a high-intensity training programme |
The major finding was the reported similar HRV for a highly physically active young SMM patient to that of age-matched controls |
| Boullosa | 2013 | Case Report | To evaluate the influence of a supervised training programme on the changes in serum monoclonal protein level (ie, IgG), percentage of bone marrow plasma cells (BMPCs), fitness performance and cardiac autonomic control (ie, HR variability (HRV) and HR complexity (HRC) in a female diagnosed with SMM |
Exercise performance in all fitness components was improved while IgG levels and BMPCs decreased from 20% to 10%, respectively Time and frequency domain HRV parameters exhibited significant increases (18%–29%) with HRC remaining unchanged The current case report results indicated that a multimodal training programme designed for the development of various physical capacities improved exercise performance, haematological function and cardiac autonomic control that may improve long-term prognosis for SMM |