| Literature DB >> 34127735 |
Sophie Reale1, Rebecca R Turner1, Eileen Sutton2, Liz Steed3, Stephanie J C Taylor3, Dylan Morrissey4, Patrick Doherty5, Diana M Greenfield6, Michelle Collinson7, Jenny Hewison8, Janet Brown9, Saïd Ibeggazene1, Malcolm Mason10, Derek J Rosario11, Liam Bourke12.
Abstract
Lifestyle interventions involving exercise training offset the adverse effects of androgen deprivation therapy in men with prostate cancer. Yet provision of integrated exercise pathways in cancer care is sparse. This study assessed the feasibility and acceptability of an embedded supervised exercise training intervention into standard prostate cancer care in a single-arm, multicentre prospective cohort study. Feasibility included recruitment, retention, adherence, fidelity and safety. Acceptability of behaviourally informed healthcare and exercise professional training was assessed qualitatively. Despite the imposition of lockdown for the COVID-19 pandemic, referral rates into and adherence to, the intervention was high. Of the 45 men eligible for participation, 79% (n = 36) received the intervention and 47% (n = 21) completed the intervention before a government mandated national lockdown was enforced in the United Kingdom. Patients completed a mean of 27 min of aerobic exercise per session (SD = 3.48), at 77% heart rate maximum (92% of target dose), and 3 sets of 10 reps of 3 resistance exercises twice weekly for 12 weeks, without serious adverse event. The intervention was delivered by 26 healthcare professionals and 16 exercise trainers with moderate to high fidelity, and the intervention was deemed highly acceptable to patients. The impact of societal changes due to the pandemic on the delivery of this face-to-face intervention remain uncertain but positive impacts of embedding exercise provision into prostate cancer care warrant long-term investigation.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34127735 PMCID: PMC8203669 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-91876-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Overview of the study procedure.
Baseline characteristics of men on ADT in the STAMINA trial.
| Baseline measures | |
|---|---|
| Age (mean ± SD) | 72 ± 9 years |
| BMI (mean ± SD) | 28.6 ± 4.2 kg m2 |
| Resting heart rate (mean ± SD) | 69 ± 12 beats per minute |
| Diastolic BP (mean ± SD) | 77.4 ± 10.1 mmHg |
| Systolic BP (mean ± SD) | 137.4 ± 13.4 mmHg |
| ADT duration (mean ± SD) | 7 ± 9 months |
| Ethnicity | 100% self-report as White British or English |
| Chair sit-to-stand test (mean ± SD) | 12 ± 4 reps |
| Self-report health status | Poor health (n = 0; 0%) Unhealthy (n = 1; 3%) Moderately healthy (n = 9; 25%) Relatively good health (n = 26; 72%) |
| Self-report functional capacity | Get in and out of an armchair (n = 36; 100%) Leave the house independently (n = 36; 100%) Climb three flights of stairs unaided (n = 33; 92%) Walk 100 yds (91 m) without stopping (n = 34; 94%) Walk 1 mile (1.6 kms) without stopping (n = 28; 78%) Jog 100 yds (91 m) without stopping (n = 21; 58%) Jog 1 mile (1.6 kms) without stopping (n = 5; 14%) |
| Registered disabled | Yes, n = 1 (3%) |
| Smoker | Yes, n = 3 (8%) |
| Drink alcohol | Never (n = 3; 8%) Occasionally (n = 27; 75%) Once a day (n = 5; 14%) More than once a day (n = 1; 3%) |
Figure 2STAMINA trial CONSORT diagram: Patient recruitment and retention.
Figure 3Average duration of aerobic exercise per session, in minutes for 20 participants. (Dashed line = 75% adherence or 22.5 min per session.)
Figure 4Percentage change in submaximal test duration between baseline and 12 weeks for 17 participants.
Fidelity of HCP and ET audio recorded consultations with men on ADT.
| HCP (n = 16) | ET (n = 16) | Total (n = 32) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delivery of target behavioursa | 77% | 88% | 81% |
| Quality of target behaviour deliverya | 76% | 84% | 80% |
| Delivery of behaviour change techniquesa | 62% | 77% | 73% |
| Quality of behaviour change technique deliverya | 44% | 70% | 65% |
| Total level of adherenceb | 74% (moderate) | 82% (high) | 78% (moderate) |
aDelivery, and quality of delivery of target behaviours and behaviour change techniques were scored a maximum of 2 points each (0 = poor delivery; 1 = limited delivery; 2 = good delivery). Scores were combined and converted to a percentage (high fidelity = 80–100%; moderate fidelity = 51–79%; low fidelity = 0–50%).
bScores for delivery of target behaviours, quality of target behaviour delivery, delivery of behaviour change techniques and quality of behaviour change technique delivery were combined and converted to a percentage to provide an overall fidelity score (high fidelity = 80–100%; moderate fidelity = 51–79%; low fidelity = 0–50%).