| Literature DB >> 35459108 |
Janina Bujan Rivera1, Rea Kühl1, Ulrike Zech2, Anne Hendricks2, Thomas Luft3, Peter Dreger3, Birgit Friedmann-Bette4, Theresa-Maria Betz5, Joachim Wiskemann6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) remains a major complication and limitation to successful allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Treatment of GvHD is challenging due to its heterogeneous nature of presentation, with steroids remaining the established first-line treatment. Long-term doses of systemic corticosteroids have many well-known side-effects including muscle atrophy. Despite the fact that reports in non-cancer clinical populations treated with glucocorticoids demonstrated that resistance training can reverse atrophy and weakness, no RCT has evaluated the potential of resistance training on preventing the disease- and treatment-induced loss of skeletal muscle mass and function in GvHD patients yet. In this context, ensuring adequate nutrition is important as protein deprivation may accelerate the wasting process. As GvHD patients are commonly found to be malnourished, nutritional medical care should be considered when investigating the effect of exercise in GvHD patients. Therefore, the aim of the present "Impact of Resistance Exercise and Nutritional Endorsement on physical performance in patients with GvHD" - Study (IRENE-G) is to evaluate the effects of resistance exercise in combination with nutritional endorsement on physical, nutritional and patient-reported outcomes in GvHD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Allogeneic stem cell transplantation; Cancer; Exercise; Glucocorticoids; Graft-versus-host disease; Malnutrition; Muscle atrophy; Nutritional endorsement; Physical performance; Resistance training
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35459108 PMCID: PMC9024288 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-022-09497-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.638
Fig. 1Study flow
Study outcomes, instruments and assessment points
| Outcomes | Instrument | t0 | t1 | t2 | t3 | t4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical performance | Short Physical Performance Battery | x | x | x | x | x |
| Muscle strength | Hand-grip test, Hand-held Dynamometer | x | x | x | x | x |
| Muscle volume | Ultrasound | x | x | x | ||
| Submaximal endurance capacity | 6 minutes walk test | x | x | x | x | x |
| Nutritional status | NRS 2002, hand- grip test, serum albumin, total protein levels | x | x | x | x | x |
| Quality of life | EORTC QLQ-C30/ HDC-29 | x | x | x | x | x |
| Fatigue | EORTC QLQ-FA 12 | x | x | x | x | x |
| GvHD Symptom burden | Modified 7-day Lee cGvHD Symptom Scale | x | x | x | x | x |
| Performance status | Karnofsky Performance Scale | x | x | x | x | x |
| Socio-demographic factors | Sex, age, marital status, family and living situation, education, employment status and smoking behavior | x | x | x | ||
| Physical activity (history) | Physical activity pre-diagnosis and during the intervention | x | x | x | x | x |
| Amnestic variables, medical history | Date of diagnosis, subtype of disease, remission status, conditioning regime, history of therapy, date of allo HSCT transplantation, HLA compatibility and comorbidities will be recorded from medical records | x | ||||
| Anthropometric data | Weight, height | Weekly | ||||
| Concomitant medication | Medical log | At each medical outpatient visit | ||||
| GvHD course | Physician rating | At each medical outpatient visit | ||||
| Adverse events | Medical records, reports of the exercise therapists and/or patient | Surveillance throughout the study | ||||
| Adherence to the exercise intervention | Self-reported and objective measures (e.g. attendance, exercise log, target intensity) of the intervention arm only | Surveillance throughout the study | ||||
Fig. 2Flow algorithm optimized nutritional medical care according to Virizuela et al. [102]