| Literature DB >> 31618279 |
Jessica Gorzelitz1, Erin S Costanzo2, Ryan J Spencer3, Meredith Rumble2, Stephen L Rose3, Lisa Cadmus-Bertram1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Physical activity plays a key role in cancer survivorship. The purpose of this investigation was to (a) describe the post-surgical physical activity trajectories of endometrial (n = 65) and ovarian (n = 31) cancer patients and (b) identify clinical and demographic predictors of physical activity over time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31618279 PMCID: PMC6795433 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics for endometrial and ovarian cancer survivors with valid accelerometer data at one week after surgery.
| Overall | Endometrial | Ovarian | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) or n (%) | Mean (SD) or n (%) | Mean (SD) or n (%) | ||
| N | 96 | 65 (67%) | 31 (33%) | < .0001 |
| Age in years | 59.5 (10.3) | 60.3 (9.3) | 57.6 (12.1) | .19 |
| Stage I-II (vs. III-IV) | 63 (65.6%) | 53 (81.5%) | 10 (32.2%) | <0.0001 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 36.0 (10.6) | 39.3 (10.8) | 29.3 (6.0) | < .0001 |
| Healthy (BMI <24.9) | 15 (15.6%) | 6 (9.2%) | 9 (29.0%) | < .0001 |
| Overweight (25–29.9) | 13 (13.5%) | 6 (9.2%) | 7 (22.6%) | < .0001 |
| Obese I (30–34.9) | 18 (18.8%) | 9 (13.9%) | 9 (29.0%) | < .0001 |
| Obese II (35 +) | 50 (52.1%) | 44 (67.7%) | 6 (19.4%) | < .0001 |
| Married/partnered | 57 (59.4%) | 37 (56.9%) | 20 (64.5%) | .51 |
| Non-Hispanic White | 90 (93.8%) | 61 (93.8%) | 29 (93.6%) | .66 |
| Education | .29 | |||
| HS graduate or less | 19 (19.8%) | 10 (15.4%) | 9 (29.0%) | |
| Trade school/some college | 24 (25.0%) | 17 (26.2%) | 7 (22.6%) | |
| College graduate | 23 (24.0%) | 18 (27.6%) | 5 (16.1%) | |
| Post-graduate degree | 27 (28.1%) | 17 (26.2%) | 10 (32.3%) | |
| Missing | 3 (3.1%) | 3 (4.6%) | - | |
| Annual family income | .65 | |||
| ≤$25,000 | 19 (19.8%) | 12 (18.5%) | 7 (22.6%) | |
| $25,001 –$55,000 | 25 (26.0%) | 18 (27.7%) | 7 (22.6%) | |
| $55,001 –$85,000 | 24 (25.0%) | 15 (23.1%) | 9 (29.0%) | |
| >$85,000 | 22 (22.9%) | 17 (26.2%) | 5 (16.1%) | |
| Missing | 6 (6.3%) | 3 (4.6%) | 3 (9.7%) | |
| Received neoadjuvant chemotherapy | 9 (9.4%) | 1 (1.5%) | 8 (25.8%) | <0.0001 |
| Received adjuvant therapy | 57 (59.4%) | 30 (52.6%) | 27 (87.1%) | <0.0001 |
| Laparoscopy (vs. open surgery) | N/A | 43 (66.2%) | N/A | |
| Self-rated health | .80 | |||
| Excellent | 10 (10.4%) | 8 (12.3%) | 2 (6.5%) | |
| Very good | 30 (31.3%) | 21 (32.3%) | 9 (29.0%) | |
| Good | 30 (31.3%) | 18 (27.7%) | 12 (38.7%) | |
| Fair | 15 (15.5%) | 10 (15.4%) | 5 (16.1%) | |
| Poor | 2 (2.1%) | 1 (1.5%) | 1 (3.2%) | |
| Missing | 9 (9.4%) | 7 (10.8%) | 2 (6.5%) |
Fig 1Standardized daily minutes of activity stratified by intensity and primary disease site.
Asterisks denote statistical significance at the p < .05 level.
Cancer-specific unadjusted (top) and mixed effects (bottom) models for predictors of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity over four months.
| Time from surgery | 1.0 (0.3, 1.8) | 0.8 (-0.0, 1.6) |
| Age | -0.3 (-1.0, 0.5) | -0.3 (-0.7, 0.1) |
| BMI | -0.5 (-1.0, 0.1) | 0.0 (-0.8, 0.8) |
| Laproscopy vs. open surgery | 4.5 (-10.1, 19.2) | N/A |
| Neoadjuvant chemotherapy | N/A | -7 (-18, 3.8) |
| Self-rated health | -11.3 (-17.7, -4.8) | -5.3 (-10.8, 0.2) |
| Intercept | 43.7 (15.8, 71.6) | 22.0 (-7.0, 51.0) |
| Time from surgery | 0.9 (0.2, 1.6) | 0.8 (0.0, 1.7) |
| Age | -0.4 (1.0, 0.3) | -0.2 (-0.7, 0.3) |
| BMI | -0.3 (-0.9, 0.3) | 0.1 (-0.8, 0.8) |
| Laproscopy vs. open surgery | -0.1 (-12.6, 12.5) | N/A |
| Neoadjuvant chemotherapy | N/A | -5.2 (-18.4, 8.0) |
| Self-rated health | -7.3 (-13.2, -1.4) | -5.0 (-10.7, 0.7) |
* indicates statistical significance (p < .05)
a In univariate testing, surgery type was not associated with ovarian cancer or physical activity, therefore was not included in the final ovarian cancer model.
b Few women with endometrial cancer received neoadjuvant chemotherapy therefore it was only included in the ovarian cancer models.
c Self-rated health is scored from 1–5, with excellent health (response = 1) as the reference; therefore, poor health is the worst category and is scored as 5 which produces the negative beta estimate.
Mixed effects model for predictors of physical activity among endometrial and ovarian cancer survivors.
| Effect | Estimate (SE) | |
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 47.8 | .0004 |
| Time since surgery | 0.8 | .0015 |
| Age | -0.4 (0.2) | .10 |
| BMI | -0.4 (0.3) | .19 |
| Self-rated health | -9.6 | .0007 |
| Primary disease site | -14.0 (14.7) | .35 |
| Laparoscopic surgery | 5.2 (5.9) | .38 |
| Use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy | 31.4 (27.8) | .26 |
| Primary disease site × Self-rated health | 3.5 (4.8) | .47 |
| Primary disease site × Neoadjuvant chemotherapy | -33.6 (29.4) | .26 |
| Primary disease site × Laparoscopy | -2.4 (14.4) | .87 |
* indicates statistical significance (p < .05)
a Cancer-specific saturated models are not presented because they were not significantly different than those presented in Table 3
b Centered at the mean of 59.5 for ease of interpretation
c Self-rated health is scored from 1–5, with excellent health (response = 1) as the reference; therefore, poor health is the worst category and is scored as 5 which produces the negative beta estimate
d Endometrial cancer is reference, and ovarian cancer is indicator category = 1
e Indicator only present for endometrial cancer, laparotomy is the reference category with laparoscopy as the category = 1
f Indicator only present for ovarian cancer, use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy is category = 1