| Literature DB >> 30464612 |
Emily Finne1, Melanie Glausch2, Anne-Kathrin Exner1, Odile Sauzet1,3, Friederike Stölzel2, Nadja Seidel2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to investigate how physical activity (PA) can be effectively promoted in cancer survivors. The effect of PA-promoting interventions in general, behavior change techniques (BCTs), and further variables as moderators in particular are evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: behavior change; exercise; intervention methods; lifestyle; moderator effects; tumor
Year: 2018 PMID: 30464612 PMCID: PMC6215922 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S170064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of literature search for PA interventions in cancer survivors.
Abbreviations: CG, Control group; PA, physical activity; PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Characteristics of participants and PA interventions
| Reference | Cancer type | Sample size (n) | Control group | Age (mean years) | Gender (women) | Time since diagnosis (mean years) | Intervention
| Theory | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Components | Setting | Duration (weeks) | Types of PA | Intervention provided by | ||||||||
| Bantum et al, 2014 | Diverse | 352 | WL | 51.0 | 82.1% | 1.8 | Six sessions, web-based educational material | Home-based | 6 | MVPA | Trained peer facilitators | — |
| Basen-Engquist et al, 2006 | Breast | 60 | SC | 55.1 | 100% | 3.2 | 21 Group sessions, educational material | Facility-based | 24 | MVPA | — | SCT, TTM |
| Bennett et al, 2007 | Breast, others | 56 | SC | 57.8 | 89.3% | 3.5 | Four counseling sessions (three phone sessions) | Home-based | 24 | Moderate intensity | Exercise specialist | MI |
| Bloom et al, 2008 | Breast | 404 | WL | — | 100% | — | Three workshops | Facility-based | 12 | Stretching, walking, others | Medical oncologist, others | Social support |
| Carmack Taylor et al, 2004, 2006 | Prostate | 134 | SC | 69.2 | 0% | — | 21 Group sessions, educational material | Facility-based | 24 | Moderate intensity | Group facilitator | SCT, TTM |
| Culos-Reed et al, 2010 | Prostate | 100 | WL | 67.4 | 0% | — | 16 Group sessions, tailored exercise program | Combined | 16 | Walking, light resistance training | Exercise specialist | ToPB |
| Demark-Wahnefried et al, 2003 and 2007; Ottenbacher et al, 2012 | Breast, prostate | 543 | SC | 57.0 | 56.4% | — | Tailored educational material (two workbooks), eight newsletters | Home-based | 40 | MVPA | Mail-based material | SCT, TTM |
| Hatchett et al, 2013 | Breast | 85 | WL | — | 100% | — | Eight emails, access to e-counselor | Home-based | 12 | MVPA | Exercise specialist | SCT |
| Hébert et al, 2012 | Prostate | 54 | WL | 70.4 | 0% | — | One individual session, 13 group sessions, progress phone calls | Combined | 24 | MVPA | — | — |
| Ibfelt et al, 2011; Høybye et al, 2008 | Breast, prostate, colorectal | 507 | SC | 61.0 | 35.3% | 1.2 | Retreat with lectures, patient group work, training, access to counselor | Facility-based | 1 | — | Medical doctor, others | — |
| Irwin et al, 2008 | Breast | 75 | SC | 55.8 | 100% | 3.5 | Three supervised group training sessions and two home-based training sessions per week, educational material | Combined | 24 | Walking, others | Medical doctor, others | — |
| James et al, 2011 and 2015 | Diverse | 133 | WL | 57.2 | 77.4% | 3.5 | Six group sessions, home-based training program, educational material | Combined | 8 | Resistance training, MVPA | Exercise specialist, others | SCT |
| Kim et al, 2011 | Breast | 45 | — | 45.6 | 100% | 1.1 | 12 Tailored phone sessions, educational material | Home-based | 12 | Moderate intensity | Nurses | TTM |
| Lahart et al, 2016 | Breast | 80 | SC | 53.6 | 100% | 0.7 | One individual session, three phone sessions, educational material | Home-based | 24 | MVPA | Researcher | MI |
| Ligibel et al, 2012 | Breast, colorectal | 121 | SC | 54.3 | 92.6% | — | Ten phone sessions, educational material | Home-based | 16 | Moderate intensity | Behavioral counselor | SCT |
| Livingston et al, 2011 and 2015 | Prostate | 147 | SC | 65.6 | 0% | 0.5 | One individual session, 24 supervised training sessions, unsupervised training | Combined | 12 | MVPA, resistance training, others | Exercise specialist | SCT |
| Matthews et al, 2007 | Breast | 36 | SC | 54.1 | 100% | 0.8 | One counseling visit, five phone sessions | Home-based | 12 | Walking | Health counselor | SCT |
| Morey et al., 2009; Demark-Wahnefried et al, 2012; Snyder et al, 2009 | Breast, prostate, colorectal | 641 | WL | 73.1 | 54.5% | — | Tailored educational material (workbook), newsletters, 15 phone sessions, eight automated phone prompts | Home-based | 48 | Resistance training, mvpa | Health counselor | SCT, TTM |
| Park et al, 2015 | Breast, colorectal | 162 | SC | 51.8 | 87.2% | 1.9 | Exercise recommendation or exercise recommendation plus educational material, and pedometer | Home-based | 4 | Moderate intensity | Exercise specialist | — |
| Pinto et al, 2005 and 2008 | Breast | 86 | SC (+ phone calls) | 53.1 | 100% | 1.8 | One individual session, 15 phone sessions, mailed educational material, and feedback | Combined | 12 | Moderate intensity (eg, biking) | Researcher | SCT, TTM |
| Pinto et al, 2013 | Breast | 192 | SC (+ phone calls) | 60.0 | 100% | 3.0 | One individual session, 11 phone sessions, mailed educational material, and feedback | Combined | 12 | Moderate intensity aerobic (eg, biking) | Researcher | SCT, TTM |
| Pinto et al, 2013 | Colorectal | 46 | SC (+ phone calls) | 57.6 | 56.5% | 3.0 | One individual session, 15 phone sessions, mailed educational material, and feedback | Home-based | 12 | Moderate intensity aerobic (eg, biking) | Researcher | SCT, TTM |
| Rabin et al, 2016 | Diverse | 35 | WL | 33.6 | 82.9% | 2.5 | One individual session, 15 phone sessions, access to monitored online peer forum | Home-based | 12 | Moderate intensity aerobic | Researcher | SCT, TTM |
| Rau et al, 2009 | Diverse | 118 | SC (+ phone calls) | 56.4 | 38.5% | — | Three phone sessions | Home-based | 24 | MVPA | — | TTM, MI |
| Reif et al, 2010 and 2013 | Breast, others | 261 | SC | 57.7 | 71.7% | — | Eight group sessions, educational material | Combined | 24 | — | Nurse, others | Self-management |
| Rogers et al, 2012 and 2015 | Breast | 222 | SC | 54.4 | 100% | 4.5 | Six discussion group sessions, 12 supervised exercise sessions, home-based training, three counseling sessions | Combined | 12 | Moderate-intensity (eg, walking) | Exercise specialist, others | SCT |
| Sheppard et al, 2016 | Breast | 31 | SC | 54.7 | 100% | 1.7 | Six group sessions with supervised training and education, 12 phone sessions | Facility-based | 12 | Moderate intensity (walking) | Exercise specialist, others | TPB, SCT, MI |
| Short et al, 2012, 2013, and 2015 | Breast | 330 | SC | 55.0 | 100% | 3.4 | Three tailored newsletters or targeted PA guidebook | Home-based | 12 | Moderate intensity (aerobic, resistance training) | Mail-based | SCT, TPB |
| Vallance et al, 2007 and 2008 | Breast | 377 | SC | 58.0 | 100% | 3.3 | PA recommendation plus PA guidebook or plus pedometer and step calendar or plus both | Home-based | 12 | MVPA | Print-based | TPB |
| von Gruenigen et al, 2012 | Uterine | 75 | SC | 58.0 | 100% | 1.8 | 16 group sessions, three counseling visits, PA guidebook, newsletters, phone sessions, emails | Combined | 48 | Moderate intensity (eg, walking) | Physician, others | SCT |
Notes:
Time since treatment.
Theory mentioned as basis of intervention.
For several intervention groups.
Abbreviations: MI, Motivational Interviewing; MVPA, moderate to vigorous physical activity; PA, physical activity; SC, standard care; SCT, Social Cognitive Theory; TPB, Theory of Planned Behavior; TTM, Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change; WL, wait-list control group; —, not reported.
Figure 2Quality assessment results presented as percentages across all included studies (k=30).
Figure 3Forest plot of included studies.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; COM, combination of PM and PED; IG, intervention group; MET, metabolic equivalent; MVPA, moderate to vigorous physical activity; PA, physical activity; PED, step pedometer; PM, print materials; RE model, random-effects model.
Figure 4Prediction of effect sizes by number of BCTs.
Notes: Solid line: predicted effect size of mixed-effects model; dashed lines: 95% confidence bounds; dotted line: reference line for null effect; bubbles: individual study effect sizes with size relative to inverse variance weight; red: subjective PA outcome; black: objective PA outcome.
Abbreviations: BCTs, Behavior Change Techniques; PA, physical activity.
Results of simple meta-regression analyses with BCTs and further study characteristics as predictors of 45 effect sizes from physical activity interventions
| Moderator | k | β | 95% CI | Percentage reduction in heterogeneity (I2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 Goal setting | 37 | −0.050 | (−0.160, 0.059) | 0.00% |
| 1.2 Problem solving | 35 | 0.015 | (−0.065, 0.095) | 0.00% |
| 1.3 Goal setting outcome | 6 | 0.082 | (−0.207, 0.372) | 0.17% |
| 1.4 Action planning | 24 | −0.034 | (−0.147, 0.079) | 0.00% |
| 1.5 Review behavior goal(s) | 14 | 0.090 | (−0.098, 0.278) | 0.61% |
| 1.6 Discrepancy between current behavior and goal | 6 | −0.084 | (−0.174, 0.007) | 1.17% |
| 2.2 Feedback on behavior | 16 | 0.042 | (−0.087, 0.171) | 0.31% |
| 2.3 Self-monitoring of behavior | 34 | 0.085 | (−0.013, 0.182) | 5.15% |
| 3.1 Social support (unspecified) | 37 | 0.011 | (−0.089, 0.110) | 0.18% |
| 3.2 Social support (practical) | 5 | −0.018 | (−0.170, 0.134) | 0.20% |
| 4.1 Instruction on how to perform the behavior | 34 | −0.029 | (−0.137, 0.079) | 0.00% |
| 5.1 Information about health consequences | 11 | −0.093 | (−0.183, −0.002) | 1.92% |
| 5.3 Information about social and environmental consequences | 22 | −0.092 | (−0.199, 0.015) | 1.16% |
| 5.6 Information about emotional consequences | 7 | −0.097 | (−0.184, −0.010) | 0.92% |
| 6.1 Demonstration of the behavior | 19 | −0.004 | (−0.120, 0.111) | 0.02% |
| 6.2 Social comparison | 9 | −0.143 | (−0.203, −0.083) | 1.83% |
| 7.1 Prompts/cues | 9 | 0.170 | (0.003, 0.336) | 1.75% |
| 7.3 Reduce prompts/cues | 11 | 0.224 | (0.045, 0.404) | 7.92% |
| 8.1 Behavioral practice/rehearsal | 32 | −0.105 | (−0.236, 0.026) | 1.46% |
| 8.7 Graded tasks | 20 | 0.203 | (0.057, 0.348) | 4.33% |
| 9.1 Credible source | 6 | −0.014 | (−0.092, 0.065) | 0.01% |
| 9.2 Pros and cons | 6 | −0.002 | (−0.403, 0.399) | 0.12% |
| 10.3 Nonspecific reward | 10 | 0.322 | (0.140, 0.504) | 11.41% |
| 10.4 Social reward | 12 | 0.274 | (0.098, 0.450) | 5.92% |
| 10.9 Self-reward | 6 | 0.325 | (−0.231, 0.881) | 2.06% |
| 12.3 Avoidance/reducing exposure to cues for the behavior | 6 | 0.220 | (−0.107, 0.546) | 1.95% |
| 12.5 Adding objects to the environment | 28 | 0.077 | (−0.039, 0.193) | 1.87% |
| Overall number of BCTs uniquely applied in IG | 45 | 0.005 | (−0.007, 0.017) | 1.29% |
| Number of BCTs applied from the group of those significantly associated with larger treatment effects | 45 | 0.066 | (0.032, 0.101) | 8.59% |
| Number of BCTs applied from the group of those significantly associated with smaller treatment effects | 45 | −0.042 | (−0.064, −0.021) | 1.87% |
Notes:
Only results for BCTs involved in k≥5 effects sizes (or used in ≥5 IGs) are reported;
compared to the model without moderator;
BCTs 7.1, 7.3, 8.7, 10.3, 10.4;
BCTs 5.3, 5.6, 6.2.
P≤0.10,
P≤0.05,
P≤0.01,
P≤0.001 (based on robust estimation). k, number of interventions where a specific BCT was present; b, estimated meta-regression coefficient for the comparison of effect size with BCT present vs absent; I2, percentage of residual heterogeneity, test for residual heterogeneity was significant (P<0.001) for all BCTs.
Abbreviations: BCT, Behavior Change Technique; CI, confidence interval; IG, intervention group.
Moderating effects of study and patient characteristics
| Moderator | k | β | 95% CI | Percentage reduction in heterogeneity (I2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (years) | 43 | −0.016 | (−0.034, 0.002) | 3.76% |
| Proportion of females | 45 | 0.001 | (−0.002, 0.004) | 1.40% |
| Type of cancer: test of moderator effect: F(2, 27)=0.017 | 0.25% | |||
| Breast | 25 | 0.272 | (0.114, 0.430) | |
| Other | 7 | 0.291 | (0.139, 0.443) | |
| Various | 13 | 0.277 | (0.151, 0.404) | |
| Duration of the intervention (months) | 45 | −0.012 | (−0.031, 0.007) | 0.62% |
| Theoretical foundation: | ||||
| SCT (used vs not used SCT) | 25 | 0.149 | (−0.030, 0.327) | 2.52% |
| TTM (used vs not) | 11 | −0.006 | (−0.212, 0.201) | 0.51% |
| TPB (used vs not) | 7 | −0.126 | (−0.184, 0.067) | 0.29% |
| Other theory (used vs not) | 7 | −0.151 | (−0.354, 0.053) | 2.19% |
| No theory mentioned (vs any theory) | 8 | 0.039 | (−0.050, 0.127) | 0.06% |
| Intervention setting: test of moderator effect: F(2, 27) =11.771 | 9.77% | |||
| At home | 27 | 0.261 | (0.135, 0.386) | |
| Facility | 4 | 0.039 | (−0.066, 0.143) | |
| Both combined | 14 | 0.386 | (0.281, 0.491) | |
| Methodological quality: test of moderator effect: F(2, 27) =0.211 | 1.18% | |||
| Strong | 15 | 0.303 | (0.178, 0.427) | |
| Moderate | 23 | 0.295 | (0.136, 0.454) | |
| Weak | 7 | 0.216 | (−0.030, 0.463) | |
| Control group (wait-list vs standard care) | 10 (vs 34) | 0.144 | (−0.103, 0.391) | 0.00% |
| Year of publication | 45 | 0.022 | (−0.004, 0.048) | 5.72% |
Notes:
Compared to the model without moderator.
P≤0.10,
P≤0.001 (based on robust estimation). k, number of interventions where a specific BCT was present; β, moderator effect: coefficient from meta-regression model; confidence intervals (CIs) based on robust estimation, I2, percentage of residual (unaccounted for) heterogeneity; test for residual heterogeneity was significant (P<0.001) for all moderators.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; SCT, Social Cognitive Theory; TPB, Theory of Planned Behavior; TTM, Transtheoretical Model.