A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study

Abstract Background To measure changes in four common chemotherapy related side-effects (low energy, stress, nausea and pain) immediately after a single exercise session within the first week after treatment. Methods Thirty-eight patients with chemotherapy-treated breast cancer, participating in a m...

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Main Authors: Anna Johnsson, Ingrid Demmelmaier, Katarina Sjövall, Philippe Wagner, Håkan Olsson, Åsa B. Tornberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-11-01
Series:BMC Cancer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-6310-0
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spelling doaj-3c2cd434a4d34e7c945c3d40b64d91382020-11-25T04:07:37ZengBMCBMC Cancer1471-24072019-11-011911910.1186/s12885-019-6310-0A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational studyAnna Johnsson0Ingrid Demmelmaier1Katarina Sjövall2Philippe Wagner3Håkan Olsson4Åsa B. Tornberg5Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund, Cancer Epidemiology and Oncology, Lund UniversityDepartment of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala UniversityDepartment of Oncology, Skane University HospitalDepartment of Clinical Sciences, Lund, Cancer Epidemiology, Lund UniversityDepartment of Clinical Sciences, Lund, Cancer Epidemiology and Oncology, Lund UniversityDepartment of Health Sciences, Lund UniversityAbstract Background To measure changes in four common chemotherapy related side-effects (low energy, stress, nausea and pain) immediately after a single exercise session within the first week after treatment. Methods Thirty-eight patients with chemotherapy-treated breast cancer, participating in a multi-centre randomised controlled study, the Physical Training and Cancer study (Phys-Can) were included in this sub-study. The Phys-Can intervention included endurance and resistance training. Before and after a single training session (endurance or resistance) within the first week of chemotherapy, energy and stress were measured with the Stress-Energy Questionnaire during Leisure Time, and nausea and pain were assessed using a Visual Analog Scale 0–10. Paired t-tests were performed to analyse the changes, and linear regression was used to analyse associations with potential predictors. Results Thirty-eight participants performed 26 endurance training sessions and 31 resistance training sessions in the first week after chemotherapy. Energy and nausea improved significantly after endurance training, and energy, stress and nausea improved significantly after resistance training. Energy increased (p = 0.03 and 0.001) and nausea decreased (p = 0.006 and 0.034) immediately after a single session of endurance or resistance training, and stress decreased (p = 0.014) after resistance exercise. Conclusions Both endurance and resistance training were followed by an immediate improvement of common chemotherapy-related side-effects in patients with breast cancer. Patients should be encouraged to exercise even if they suffer from fatigue or nausea during chemotherapy. Trial registration NCT02473003, June 16, 2015.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-6310-0Acute exerciseBreast cancerChemotherapySide-effects
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Johnsson
Ingrid Demmelmaier
Katarina Sjövall
Philippe Wagner
Håkan Olsson
Åsa B. Tornberg
spellingShingle Anna Johnsson
Ingrid Demmelmaier
Katarina Sjövall
Philippe Wagner
Håkan Olsson
Åsa B. Tornberg
A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
BMC Cancer
Acute exercise
Breast cancer
Chemotherapy
Side-effects
author_facet Anna Johnsson
Ingrid Demmelmaier
Katarina Sjövall
Philippe Wagner
Håkan Olsson
Åsa B. Tornberg
author_sort Anna Johnsson
title A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
title_short A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
title_full A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
title_fullStr A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
title_full_unstemmed A single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
title_sort single exercise session improves side-effects of chemotherapy in women with breast cancer: an observational study
publisher BMC
series BMC Cancer
issn 1471-2407
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Background To measure changes in four common chemotherapy related side-effects (low energy, stress, nausea and pain) immediately after a single exercise session within the first week after treatment. Methods Thirty-eight patients with chemotherapy-treated breast cancer, participating in a multi-centre randomised controlled study, the Physical Training and Cancer study (Phys-Can) were included in this sub-study. The Phys-Can intervention included endurance and resistance training. Before and after a single training session (endurance or resistance) within the first week of chemotherapy, energy and stress were measured with the Stress-Energy Questionnaire during Leisure Time, and nausea and pain were assessed using a Visual Analog Scale 0–10. Paired t-tests were performed to analyse the changes, and linear regression was used to analyse associations with potential predictors. Results Thirty-eight participants performed 26 endurance training sessions and 31 resistance training sessions in the first week after chemotherapy. Energy and nausea improved significantly after endurance training, and energy, stress and nausea improved significantly after resistance training. Energy increased (p = 0.03 and 0.001) and nausea decreased (p = 0.006 and 0.034) immediately after a single session of endurance or resistance training, and stress decreased (p = 0.014) after resistance exercise. Conclusions Both endurance and resistance training were followed by an immediate improvement of common chemotherapy-related side-effects in patients with breast cancer. Patients should be encouraged to exercise even if they suffer from fatigue or nausea during chemotherapy. Trial registration NCT02473003, June 16, 2015.
topic Acute exercise
Breast cancer
Chemotherapy
Side-effects
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-6310-0
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