| Literature DB >> 28779220 |
Anna L Roberts1, Abigail Fisher2, Lee Smith3, Malgorzata Heinrich4, Henry W W Potts5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The number of cancer survivors has risen substantially due to improvements in early diagnosis and treatment. Health behaviours such as physical activity (PA) and diet can reduce recurrence and mortality, and alleviate negative consequences of cancer and treatments. Digital behaviour change interventions (DBCIs) have the potential to reach large numbers of cancer survivors.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour change; Cancer survivors; Diet; Digital interventions; Physical activity; Sedentary behaviour
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28779220 PMCID: PMC5671545 DOI: 10.1007/s11764-017-0632-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Surviv ISSN: 1932-2259 Impact factor: 4.442
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram illustrating article selection strategy
Characteristics of included studies
| Author, year | Country | Study design | Sample size | Retention rate at follow-up | Women (%) | Age in years, mean (SD) | Cancer type(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bantum, 2014 [ | USA | RCT | 303 | 86.1% (303/352) | 82 | 49.3 (11) | Any type of cancer, completed treatment >4 weeks prior to study |
| Berg, 2014 [ | USA | Pre-post | 19 | 79.2% (19/24) | 71 | 23.4 (3.9) | Adult (18–34 years) survivors of childhood cancers (any type) |
| Forbes, 2015 [ | Canada | RCT | 87 | 91.6% (87/95) | 56 | 65.1 (8.5) | Breast, prostate and colorectal cancer survivors (96% currently disease free; 75% completed treatment) |
| Hatchett, 2013 [ | USA | RCT | 74 | 87.1% (74/95) | 100 | No data | Breast cancer survivors, completed treatment |
| Hoffman, 2014 [ | USA | Pre-post | 7 | 100% (7/7) | 71 | 64.6 (6.5) | NSCLC survivors (immediately before + after surgery/during treatment) |
| Hong, 2015 [ | USA | Pre-post | 26 | 86.7% (26/30) | 69 | 69 (median) | Any type of cancer survivor, either undergoing or completed treatment |
| Kanera, 2016 [ | Netherlands | RCT | 394a | 89.2% (462/518)a | 80 | 56.0 (11.4) | Any type of cancer, completed treatment >4 and <56 weeks prior to study, no recurrence |
| Kuijpers, 2016 [ | Netherlands | Pre-post | 73 | 79.3% (73/92) | 100 | 49.5 (11.4) | Breast cancer survivors, either undergoing or completed treatment 3–12 months prior to study |
| Lee, 2014 [ | South Korea | RCT | 57 | 96.6% (57/59) | 100 | 43.2 (5.1) | Breast cancer survivors, completed treatment <1 year prior to study |
| McCarroll, 2015 [ | USA | Pre-post | 35 | 70.0% (35/50) | 100 | 58.4 (10.3) | Overweight/obese breast and/or endometrial cancer survivors with desire to lose weight, diagnosis <3 years prior to study |
| Puszkiewicz, 2016 [ | UK | Pre-post | 11 | 100% (11/11) | 82 | 45 (9.4) | Breast, prostate or colorectal cancer survivors, completed treatment |
| Quintiliani, 2016 [ | USA | Pre-post | 10 | 100% (10/10) | 100 | 58.6 (6.1) | Breast cancer survivors, >2 years since diagnosis and >6 months since end of treatment |
| Rabin, 2012 [ | USA | RCT | 17 | 94.4% (17/18) | 56 | 32.2 (5.6) | Young adult (18–39) cancer survivors, completed treatment <10 years prior to study |
| Short, 2016 [ | Australia | Pre-postb | 156b | 31.7%c (156/492) | 100 | 55.0 (9.7) | Breast cancer survivors, completed treatment |
| Valle, 2013 [ | USA | RCT | 66 | 76.7% (36/86) | 91 | 31.7 (5.1) | Young adult (21–39) cancer survivors, diagnosed >18 years of age, >1 year since diagnosis, completed treatment |
aKanera et al. presented physical activity data for 394 participants (sample size used in meta-analysis); however, retention for other measures at follow-up was 462
bShort et al. (2016) is treated as a pre-post study due to the lack of control group across the three intervention arms
cShort et al.’s paper presents results for 3-month follow-up (immediately post-intervention) because retention rate at 6 months was very low (10.8% (53/492)). Sample size/retention rate presented here is for the 3-month follow-up
Intervention types and outcomes for included studies
| Author, year | Intervention type | Study duration | Description of intervention | Behaviour change techniques (BCTs) | Approaches to measurement of engagement/adherence | Control group treatment | Outcomes measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bantum, 2014 [ | Online workshop (website) | 6 months | 6-week online course providing information, skill building, weekly action plans, social networking and peer support, exercise logs, relaxation exercises | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Mean (SD) online sessions attended was 5.3 (1.28) | Waitlist control | PA, diet, fatigue, depression, insomnia |
| Berg, 2014 [ | Emails + associated website | 12 weeks | Biweekly emails to deliver module content and website provides graphical depictions of participant-reported health behaviours and health information. | 2.2 Feedback on behaviour | Completion of self-monitoring (‘check-in assessment’) over the 12-module period (6 weeks) fell from 91.7 to 66.7% | N/A | PA, SE, alcohol consumption, smoking |
| Forbes, 2015 [ | Online workshop (website) | 10 weeks | 9-week workshop to deliver content (e.g. dispelling PA myths, exercising safely, planning/making SMART goals). Website used to log/monitor PA and email feedback. | 2.2 Feedback on behaviour | Percentage of completed modules fell from 50% (week 1) to 10% (week 9) | Waitlist control | PA, QoL (cancer-specific), QoL (generic), fatigue |
| Hatchett, 2013 [ | Email + access to e-counsellor | 12 weeks | Emails designed to increase PA by influencing SCT variables. E-counsellor offered tailored PA advice and encouraged participant engagement with intervention. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Not measured/reported | Waitlist control | PA, SE, self-regulation, OE value, exercise role identity |
| Hoffman, 2014 [ | Nintendo Wii Fit Plus | 16 weeks | Virtual walking environment with gradual increase in target walking time. Three Wii Fit Plus balance exercises per day were also recommended. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Mean (SD) adherence rate to intervention at end of study was 87.6% (12.2%) | N/A | PA, fatigue, SE |
| Hong, 2015 [ | Mobile-enabled website | 8–12 weeks | Website used for goal setting, activity tracking, personalised feedback and progress reviews, social networking, tips on healthy living and links to reliable health information | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Website use: | N/A | PA, QoL (generic) |
| Kanera, 2016 [ | Online workshop (website) | 6 months | Automated system to evaluate baseline assessment and select personalised intervention components using ‘if-then’ algorithms. Users are recommended modules based on assessments but have access to all 8 modules. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Specific modules were recommended to participants based on current behaviours from 8 modules in total. Participants followed mean (SD) 2.23 (1.58) modules. 25% participants followed PA module, and 62% followed diet module. | Waitlist control | PA, diet, smoking |
| Kuijpers, 2016 [ | Online portal (website) | 4 months | Offers personalised education materials, overview of appointments, access to EMR. Tailored PA support based on clinical characteristics, PA levels and motivation. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Website logins ranged from 0 to 62, and duration of use ranged from 2 to 38 min. Participants on treatment (M = 10.9 logins) used the website more often than off-treatment (M = 5.6 logins) participants but those who were off treatment had a longer mean duration (15.2 min) of log in compared to those on treatment (11.3 min) | N/A | PA, QoL (generic), SE |
| Lee, 2014 [ | Website + text messaging | 12 weeks | Website used for assessment, education, tailored information provision and action planning (goal setting, scheduling, monitoring and automatic feedback). Daily automatic feedback provided on recommended and actual behaviours | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Not measured/reported | 50-page booklet on exercise/diet | PA, diet, QoL (cancer-specific), fatigue, anxiety, depression, SE |
| McCarroll, 2015 [ | Mobile app | 4 weeks | Participants log nutrition/PA through app which provided real-time personalised feedback. Limited carbohydrate intake to <70 g/day and increase fibre intake to 30 g/day. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Not measured/reported | N/A | PA, diet, QoL (cancer-specific), SE, weight, waist circumference, BMI |
| Puszkiewicz2016 [ | Mobile app | 6 weeks | Tailored PA programme using video demonstrations is recommended based on users’ preferred PA goals, duration, type and difficulty of PA. | 1.1 Goal setting | Participants used app mean (SD) of 2.07 (0.68) times per week. Mean (SD) session duration was 25.08 (8.22) minutes. Mean (SD) app use duration was 44.00 min (20.50) per week (range 24.50–91.00 min). | N/A | PA, QoL (cancer-specific and generic), fatigue, BMI, anxiety, depression, sleep quality |
| Quintiliani, 2016 [ | Text messaging + Fitbit + telephone counselling | 10 weeks | Text messages assess participants’ dietary intake, and Fitbit assesses weight and step count. Four technology-assisted telephone calls (based on PA, sleep and 2 nutrition-related topics) were guided by motivational interviewing | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Of 70 opportunities (7 days/week × 10 weeks), mean (SD) responses to text messages was 60 (13), recording a step measurement was 64 (7), recording a weight measurement was 45 (24) and recording a sleep measurement was 43 (19). All participants completed all 4 counselling calls. | N/A | PA, diet, fatigue, perceived stress, SE, weight |
| Rabin, 2012 [ | Website | 12 weeks | PA manual provided matched with participants’ ‘stage of change’ and responses to questionnaires on the website. Website also enabled participant to set PA goals and log PA | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Mean (SD) website login was 14.75 (8.46). Mean (SD) number of days participants logged PA was 11.38 (7.93), used goal setting feature was 5.25 (4.17), used stage-based manual was 3.13 (2.17), accessed PA-related information was 1.25 (1.28), accessed PA resources was 0.88 (1.13) and accessed PA tips was 0.50 (1.07). | Provided with 3 cancer + survivorship websites | PA, fatigue, POMS, |
| Short, 2016 [ | Online workshop (website) | 12 weeks | 3 online modules delivered with a combination of non-tailored information (PA guidelines, increasing motivation and preventing relapse) and tailored support (e.g. based on current PA, outcome expectations, health status, eliciting social support, overcoming barriers, action planning) | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Mean (SD) website usage duration was 61.1 min (80.1) (range 0–550 min). Mean (SD) website login was 5.18 (8.48) (range 1–45). All participants viewed at least one module. 85% in the weekly module group and 73% in the monthly module group viewed all 3 modules. 60% of the weekly module group completed 2 (of 3) modules compared to 46% of the monthly module group. 75% of participants completed at least one action plan. 91.7% in the monthly module group completed 2 action plans compared to 71.7% in weekly module group. | N/A | PA |
| Valle, 2013 [ | Facebook support group + website | 12 weeks | Weekly messages (sent via Facebook) and group administrator posted discussions within the group throughout intervention. Participants also had access to website for goal setting and PA diary and pedometers to measure steps. | 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour) | Intervention participants posted a total of 153 Facebook comments to group wall compared to 188 comments in control group. 49% of participants in both groups made >2 Facebook posts in the study period. Intervention participants set a mean of 4.2 goals, and submitted a mean of 21.9 PA entries and 13.1 steps entries. 71% tracked PA data at least once. Proportion of participants logging either PA or steps declined from 57.8% in week 1 to 24.4% in week 12. | Basic Facebook group membership | PA, QoL (cancer-specific), BMI |
aShort et al. (2016) is treated as a pre-post study due to the lack of a control group across the three intervention arms (single module, three weekly modules, three monthly modules)
PA physical activity, SE self-efficacy, SMART specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, timely, SCT social cognitive theory, OE outcome expectancy, QoL quality of life, EMR electronic medical record
Fig. 2Meta-analysis of DBCIs on MVPA
Fig. 3Risk of bias in included studies