Détail du document
Identifiant

doi:10.1007/s00520-023-07894-1...

Auteur
Brown, Malcolm Murphy, Marie H. McAneney, Helen McBride, Ken Crawford, Ffiona Cole, Aidan O’Sullivan, Joe M. Jain, Suneil Prue, Gillian
Langue
en
Editeur

Springer

Catégorie

Medicine & Public Health

Année

2023

Date de référencement

05/07/2023

Mots clés
exercise feasibility metastatic prostate cancer functional fitness health-related quality of life outcomes treatment prostate cancer improved throughout functional adjuvant training feasibility mcrpc home-based exercise
Métrique

Résumé

Background Exercise is an effective adjuvant therapy that can alleviate treatment-related toxicities for men with prostate cancer (PC).

However, the feasibility of delivering exercise training to men with advanced disease and the wider impact on clinical outcomes remain unknown.

The purpose of the EXACT trial was to determine the feasibility and effects of home-based exercise training in men with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).

Methods Patients with mCRPC receiving ADT + an androgen receptor pathway inhibitor (ARPI) were prescribed 12 weeks of home-based, remotely monitored, moderate intensity, aerobic and resistance exercise.

Feasibility was assessed using recruitment, retention and adherence rates.

Safety and adverse events were monitored throughout, with functional and patient-reported outcomes captured at baseline, post-intervention and at 3-month follow-up.

Results From the 117 screened, 49 were deemed eligible and approached, with 30 patients providing informed consent (61% recruitment rate).

Of those who consented, 28 patients completed baseline assessments, with 24 patients completing the intervention and 22 completing follow-up (retention rates: 86% and 79% respectively).

Task completion was excellent throughout, with no intervention-related adverse events recorded.

Self-reported adherence to the overall intervention was 82%.

Exercise training decreased mean body mass (−1.5%), improved functional fitness (> 10%) and improved several patient-reported outcomes including clinically meaningful changes in fatigue ( p = 0.042), FACT-G ( p = 0.054) and FACT-P ( p = 0.083), all with moderate effect sizes.

Conclusion Home-based exercise training, with weekly remote monitoring, was feasible and safe for men with mCRPC being treated with an ARPI.

Given that treatment-related toxicities accumulate throughout the course of treatment, and as a result, negatively impact functional fitness and health-related quality of life (HRQoL), it was positive that exercise training improved or prevented a decline in these clinically important variables and could better equip patients for future treatment.

Collectively, these preliminary feasibility findings support the need for a definitive, larger RCT, which downstream may lead to the inclusion of home-based exercise training as part of adjuvant care for mCRPC.

Brown, Malcolm,Murphy, Marie H.,McAneney, Helen,McBride, Ken,Crawford, Ffiona,Cole, Aidan,O’Sullivan, Joe M.,Jain, Suneil,Prue, Gillian, 2023, Feasibility of home-based exercise training during adjuvant treatment for metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer patients treated with an androgen receptor pathway inhibitor (EXACT), Springer

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