Metformin is a medication that is commonly used in the treatment of diabetes. Recently small studies in cancer patients without diabetes suggest that metformin may benefit in lowering insulin levels. In those studies of patients with cancer but not diabetes, glucose (or sugar) levels in the blood are generally no lowered. Insulin and insulin-like growth factors affect the growth of cancer cells. This randomized study will compare different interventions; exercise, exercise and metformin, metformin alone, or a control arm. The investigators are not directly testing how either exercise or metformin affects your disease. The investigators are testing how they affect insulin levels in your body as well as other blood markers. The investigators believe that these blood tests may either be related to cancer recurrences or be an early sign of cancer recurrences and they are testing how both exercise and metformin may change those markers.
Subjects will be randomized into one of four groups: exercise training, exercise training and metformin, metformin alone, or control arm. All subjects will have lifestyle measurements, interviews regarding activity level, diet questionnaires, and blood tests. Subjects randomized to exercise training will participate in two supervised exercise sessions per week with an exercise physiologist for 3 months. They will also be asked to exercise on their own for up to an additional 120 minutes each week. Subjects randomized to exercise training and metformin will participate in two supervised exercise sessions per week and will take metformin. Metformin will be taken once daily for the first two weeks and then twice daily for 3 months. Subjects randomized to metformin will take metformin once daily for the first two weeks and then twice daily. Subjects on the control arm will receive a packet of educational information on nutrition and physical activity developed by the National Cancer Institute and American Cancer Society. In addition to education information, they will be offered two supervised sessions with an exercise physiologist as well as a pedometer 3 months after enrollment in the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
139
Two supervised exercise sessions per week
Oral metformin QD for two weeks, then BID
educational information
Yale School of Medicine
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Change in Fasting Insulin Level
Determine whether supervised exercise training alone and metformin, either alone or in combination can decrease fasting insulin level from baseline to 3 months in patients who completed standard therapy for stage I-III colorectal or breast cancer. Fasting insulin levels in blood will be drawn at baseline, 3 months and 6 months. Negative least square means indicate a decrease at 3 month comparing to baseline value.
Time frame: 0 and 3 months (change between 0 and 3 months)
Changes in Other Insulin-Related Biomarkers
Markers related to insulin and insulin-like growth factors (including insulin-like growth factor 1 \[IGF-1\], IGF binding protein-1 \[IGFBP-1\], IGF binding protein-3 \[IGFBP-3\], leptin) will be measured by a blood draw at baseline, 3 months and 6 months. Negative least square means indicate a decrease at 3 month comparing to baseline value.
Time frame: 0 and 3 months (change between 0 and 3 months)
Change in Fasting Glucose Level
Determine whether supervised exercise training alone and metformin, either alone or in combination can decrease fasting Glucose level from baseline to 3 months in patients who completed standard therapy for stage I-III colorectal or breast cancer. Fasting Glucose levels in blood will be drawn at baseline, 3 months and 6 months. Negative least square means indicate a decrease at 3 month comparing to baseline value.
Time frame: 0 and 3 months (change between 0 and 3 months)
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