The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of two exercise programs: 1) one program will be at low intensity; 2) the other program will be at moderate intensity. One hundred forty two women who are breast cancer survivors will be recruited. Participants will be educated on a home exercise program to be performed at either low or moderate intensity, according to group assignment. Evaluations to participants will consist of function and quality of life.
Improvements in early diagnosis and treatment for breast cancer in women have resulted in increased survivorship. An unintended consequence of increased survival, however, is that more women are living with the negative sequelae associated with cancer treatment, including decreased physical function. Exercise has been beneficial in arresting these sequelae, but adherence to exercise guidelines continues to be a challenge. As most breast cancer survivors are middle-aged and older, an alternative to enhance exercise engagement and adherence might be providing a low intensity exercise program. The overall purpose of this study is to assess the impact of a low intensity versus moderate intensity endurance exercise program on physical functioning on breast cancer survivors. It is hypothesized that participants of the low intensity exercise program will demonstrate similar physical functioning as participants in the moderate intensity exercise program. The Theory of Planned Behavior will serve as framework for the intervention. A convenience sample of 142 women, residents of Puerto Rico, age 50 or older, with a diagnosis of breast cancer, stage 0 thru III, who have received surgical treatment for breast cancer, with or without adjuvant therapy, will be randomly assigned to a low intensity or moderate intensity endurance intervention. Both interventions will be home-based, have a duration of 6 months, and be provided by physical therapists. An evaluator blinded to group assignment will assess participants at baseline and at completion of the intervention. Primary outcome measures will consist of physical functioning, and health-related quality of life.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
142
This arm includes a low-intensity intervention and will have a duration of six months. Participants will be provided with a heart rate monitor to train at the intensity according to group assignment. Progression for both programs in the endurance component will be slower and more gradual for deconditioned participants, and may require multiple shorter periods (5-10 minutes) with rest intervals.
This arm includes a moderate-intensity intervention and will have a duration of six months. Participants will be provided with a heart rate monitor to train at the intensity according to group assignment. Progression for both programs in the endurance component will be slower and more gradual for deconditioned participants, and may require multiple shorter periods (5-10 minutes) with rest intervals.
Puerto Rico Clinical and Translational Research Consortium
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Change in Cardiovascular fitness: Six-minute walk test
Will be used to assess physical function in cancer survivors. It has been validated to assess exercise tolerance (American Thoracic Society, 2002) and has been recommended as a test suitable for fitness, as it is highly correlated with oxygen uptake. An increase in walking distance indicates an improvement in performance. Data will be collected on distance walked (meters), number of rests, and duration of rest during the 6 minutes. Rating of perceived exertion will be monitored. Heart rate and oxygen saturation will be examined using a pulse oximeter.
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Quality of Life
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Item Bank v.1.0/1.1 General Health. The Spanish version (Salud general) will be used. It contains two subdomains: Global Physical Health and Global Mental Health. The final score can be converted to a score for the EUROQoL.
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Functioning
PROMIS Item Bank v. 1.2 Physical Function. The Spanish version (Capacidad de Funcionamiento Físico - Cuestionario Abreviado 20) will be used. It consists of 20 items, measuring upper extremity function, as well as gross motor function such as walking and stairs use.
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Depression
Inventario -II de depresión de Beck (BDI-II). The Spanish version has proper psychometric properties for assessment of depression (internal consistency, obtaining a Cronbach alfa of 0.89 and has reported known-group validity; Vega-Dienstmaier, 2014).
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Body Image
Body Appreciation Scale-2 (BAS-2; Tylka \& Wood-Barcalow, 2014), Spanish version will be used to measure body appreciation, an aspect that encompasses positive self-evaluation of body image. It has 13 items with responses ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (always). The Spanish BAS showed adequate internal consistency (Cronbach's α = .91) and construct validity (correlations with BMI, influence of the body shape model, perceived stress, coping strategies, self-esteem and variables from the Eating Disorders Inventory-2). Test-retest reliability ranged from .88 to .90.
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Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Physical Activity
Accelerometers will be used to evaluate the amount of time spent in low to moderate and moderate to vigorous physical activity. Accelerometry has been found to be a valid measure of physical activity, as compared to oxygen uptake and calorimetry (Hendelman et al., 2000; Kuffel, et al., 2011) and has been used nationally by the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (NHANES) study to document, more precisely than self-reported measures, the intensity and time of physical activity (Hawkins et al., 2009). The procedures established by NHANES (CDC, 2005) will be followed.
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Change in Time spend in Habitual Physical Activities
International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ, 2002, self-administered, long Spanish version). The IPAQ assesses multiple domains of activity such as leisure, occupation, household, and transport, among others (Craig et al., 2003). This questionnaire has proved to be reliable (Roman-Viñas et al., 2010), and has been validated with accelerometer, pedometer, physical activity log, and maximal oxygen uptake (van Poppel et al., 2010).
Time frame: At month 1 prior to intervention (pre-test); at 6-month (post-test); 6-month follow up.
Adherence
Exercise logs. Participants will be asked to record week number and type and duration of exercise. Logs will be collected at the 6-month evaluation session.
Time frame: At 6-month follow up.