| Literature DB >> 35267495 |
William Zardo1, Emanuele Villa1, Eleonora Corti1, Tommaso Moriggi1, Giorgia Radaelli1, Alessandra Ferri2, Mauro Marzorati3, Cristiano Eirale4, Paola Vago5, Andrea Biondi1, Momcilo Jankovic1, Adriana Balduzzi1, Francesca Lanfranconi1.
Abstract
During cancer treatments in childhood hematological malignancies, reduced exercise tolerance is one of the main hardships. Precision-based training programs help children, adolescents, and young adults and their families to resume regular physical activity, exercise, and sports once they return to their communities after the intensive phases spent in hospital. This study was aimed at verifying whether an intermittent recovery test, the Yo-Yo AD, could provide a simple and valid way to evaluate an individual's capacity to perform repeated intense exercise and to follow up on the impact of tailored exercise in children, adolescents, and young adults with hematological malignancies. The Yo-Yo AD involved the repetition of several shuttles to muscle exhaustion, at pre-established speeds (walking and slow running). The heart rate (HR) and oxygen saturation (SaO2) were monitored during the test. The total distance and the walking/running ability, measured as the slope of the HR vs. distance correlation, were investigated before (T0) and after 11 weeks (T1) of precision exercise intervention. The Yo-Yo AD was also performed by healthy children (CTRL). Ninety-seven patients (10.58 ± 4.5 years, 46% female) were enrolled. The Yo-Yo AD showed the positive impact of the exercise intervention by increasing the distance covered by the individuals (T0 = 946.6 ± 438.2 vs. T1 = 1352.3 ± 600.6 m, p < 0.001) with a more efficient walking/running ability (T0 = 2.17 ± 0.84 vs. T1 = 1.73 ± 0.89 slope, p < 0.0164). CTRLs performed better (1754.0 ± 444.0 m, p = 0.010). They were equally skillful (1.71 ± 0.27 slope) when compared to the patients after they received the precision-based intervention. No adverse events occurred during the Yo-Yo AD and it proved to be an accurate way of correctly depicting the changes in performance in childhood hematological malignancies.Entities:
Keywords: Yo-Yo test; hematology; hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; leukemia; lymphoma; pediatric; performance; precision-based exercise
Year: 2022 PMID: 35267495 PMCID: PMC8909675 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14051187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Precision exercise training protocols according to the clinical phenotyping of children, adolescents, and young adults with cancer (see also Table 2 for the characteristics considered to identify the intensity of cancer treatment). Type, frequency, pattern, and progression are common to all protocols. The intensity, time, and volume of exercise is different for most intensive, very intensive, and moderately intensive cancer treatment.
| Type | Cardiorespiratory | Resistance | Neuromotor | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elaborated meaning | Regular, purposeful exercise that involves major muscle groups and is continuous and rhythmic in nature (e.g., walking on an elastic trampoline) | Major muscle groups with a variety of exercise equipment and/or body weight (e.g., leg extension machine). Different muscle groups are used every day | Exercise involving balance, agility, coordination, and gait, proprioceptive training, and multifaceted activities (e.g., balance on proprioceptive surfaces) | A series of flexibility exercises for each of the major muscle-tendon units |
| Frequency | ≥3 day × week−1 | ≥3 day × week−1 | ≥3 day × week−1 | ≥3 day × week−1 |
| Pattern | One continuous session of supervised exercise per day with active recoveries for each 2 min of activity | Rest intervals of 1 min between each set of repetitions | / | At the end of each training session. One repetition |
| Progression | Increased exercise volume each 4 weeks | Increased exercise volume each 4 weeks | / | / |
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| Intensity | Light–moderate, 40–60% of HRR | Light, 40–50% of the 1 RM | Indeterminable | Stretch to the point of feeling tightness or slight discomfort |
| Time | 30 min × week−1 | 30 min × week−1 | 15 min × week−1 | 15 min × week−1 |
| Volume/repetitions | ≥120 MET min × week−1 | 8–12 repetitions, 2–3 sets | / | 30 s |
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| Intensity | Moderate–vigorous, 60–80% of HRR | Moderate–hard, 60–70% of the 1 RM | Indeterminable | Stretch to the point of feeling tightness or slight discomfort |
| Time | 60 min × week−1 | 60 min × week−1 | 30 min × week−1 | 30 min × week−1 |
| Volume/repetitions | ≥240 MET min × week−1 | 8–12 repetitions, 3–4 sets | / | 30 s |
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| Intensity | Vigorous, 70–90% of HRR | Hard, 70–80% of the 1 RM | Indeterminable | Stretch to the point of feeling tightness or slight discomfort |
| Time | 60–70 min × week−1 | 60–70 min × week−1 | 30–35 min × week−1 | 30–35 min × week−1 |
| Volume/repetitions | ≥240 MET min × week−1 | 8–12 repetitions, 3–4 sets | / | 30 s |
HRR: Heart-rate reserve (HR at rest and maximum measured during an exhaustion test); MET: metabolic equivalent; 1 RM: one-repetition maximum.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the Yo-Yo AD test execution. One exercise scientist monitored the safety and correct execution of the test. The vital parameters, such as heart rate and oxygen saturation, were recorded during the test. An acoustic sound signaled the start of the shuttles and recovery phases.
Figure 2Children, adolescents, and young adults with hematological malignancies (CAYA-H) flow chart, from eligibility to precision exercise training program (PEx) participation. The flow shows the Yo-Yo AD test evaluations considered as data presented in our manuscript.
Clinical characteristics of children, adolescents, and young adults with hematological malignancies and intensity-of-treatment rating.
| Clinical Characteristics | Num, (%) | Treatment Protocols |
|---|---|---|
| Patients, total | 97 | |
| Aged 7 < x < 11 years | 58, (60%) | |
| Aged 11 ≤ x < 22 years | 39, (40%) | |
|
| 25, (26%) | |
| Relapsed Disease—Excluding Hodgkin Lymphoma, first relapse | 8, (8%) | IntReALL SR or Personalized treatment |
| HSCT—All diseases | 12, (13%) | Personalized treatment |
| AML | 5, (5%) | AML 2013/01 |
|
| 16, (17%) | |
| Relapse Protocols for Hodgkins | 3, (3%) | Personalized treatment |
| ALL (High Risk, Very High Risk, T-cell) | 10, (11%) | AIEOP BFM ALL 2009 |
| HL (Stages 3B or 4/High Risk) | 1, (1%) | EuroNet-PHL-C2 |
| NHL (Group C or Stage 4) | 2, (2%) | Euro LB-02/ NHL97 |
|
| 51, (53%) | |
| ALL (Low, Standard, or Intermediate Risk; precursor B cell) | 36, (37%) | AIEOP BFM ALL 2009 |
| HL (Low/Intermediate risk: all stages except IIIB, IVB) | 13, (14%) | EuroNet-PHL-C2 |
| NHL (Stages 1, 2, 3 and Groups A, B) | 2, (2%) | Euro LB-02/ NHL97 |
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| ||
|
| 5, (4%) | Personalized treatment |
ALL: acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AML: acute myeloid leukemia; HL: Hodgkin lymphoma; NHL: non-Hodgkin HSCT: hematopoietic stem-cell transplant; GvHD: graft versus host disease; ON: osteonecrosis.
Figure 3(A). Test-retest reliability of distances performed during the intermittent recovery Yo-Yo adapted test (Yo-Yo AD) of a sub-group of children, adolescents, and young adults with hematological malignancies. Almost all CTRL (93%) reached the plateau of the Yo-Yo AD, i.e., the maximum distance (2040 m in 28 min). CAYA-H did not reach the plateau at T0 and T1 in 84% and 66% of cases, respectively. (B). Sensitivity of the Yo-Yo AD measures, assessed by the receiver operating curve (ROC). A cut-off performance for medically fragile CAYA-H was settled at 740 m (sensitivity: 36.99%; specificity: 82.47%) and for high-performing CAYA-H at 1420 m (sensitivity: 82.61%; specificity: 43.30%.).
Correlations between Yo-Yo AD and other performances: 6-min walking test (6MWT), Timed Up and Down Stairs (TUDS), quadriceps strength (leg extension).
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| T0 | T1 | |
| Equation | Y = 4.046 × X − 1.147 | Y = 4.583 × X − 1.278 |
| <0.001 | <0.001 | |
| R square | 0.420 | 0.554 |
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| T0 | T1 | |
| Equation | Y = −162.8 × X + 2.210 | Y = −249.5 × X + 2.970 |
| <0.001 | <0.001 | |
| R square | 0.215 | 0.377 |
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| T0 | T1 | |
| Equation | Y = 18.31 × X + 381.3 | Y = 22.86 × X + 367.8 |
| <0.001 | <0.001 | |
| R square | 0.417 | 0.335 |
Figure 4Violin plots showing the distribution of the children, adolescents, and young adults with hematological malignancies (CAYA-H) according to the total distance performed during a Yo-Yo AD. A significant difference was observed between the average scores obtained at the two different time points (T0, basal value vs. T1, after 11 weeks of precision based exercise program). The statistical significance between CAYA-H (dotted line, matched-paired test) and groups of healthy pairs (CTRL) is represented (continuous lines, ANOVA).
Figure 5(A,B). Individual and averaged correlation between time and heart rate (HR) during the Yo-Yo AD execution at the basal evaluation (T0) and after 11 weeks of precision-based exercise program (T1). HR is expressed as a percentage of maximal heart rate calculated during the test session. Three patterns identified by different slopes represent satisfactory (triangles, dotted line), intermediate (squares, dashed line), and poor performances (circles, continuous line). See text for further explanation.