Inhospital exercise benefits in childhood cancer: A prospective cohort study.
Javier S MoralesElena Santana-SosaAlejandro Santos-LozanoAntonio Baño-RodrigoPedro L ValenzuelaCecilia Rincón-CastanedoDavid Fernández-MorenoMarta González VicentMarta Pérez-SomarribaLuis MaderoAlvaro LassalettaCarmen Fiuza-LucesAlejandro LuciaPublished in: Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports (2019)
Childhood cancer patients are at risk of developing important adverse effects, mortality and disease relapse after treatments, which has a substantial economic impact on healthcare systems. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of supervised inhospital exercise on clinical endpoints during childhood cancer treatment. 169 children with a new diagnosis of cancer were divided into an exercise intervention (n = 68, 11 ± 4 years) or a control group (n = 101, 11 ± 3 years). The cohort was followed up from the start of treatment for up to five years. Supervised inhospital exercise intervention was performed during the neoadjuvant (for solid tumors) or intensive chemotherapy treatment period (for leukemias). The median duration of the intervention was 22 (interquartile range, 14-28) weeks. We assessed survival, risk of disease relapse or metastasis, and days of hospitalization (primary outcomes), and cardiovascular function, anthropometry and blood variables (secondary outcomes). No exercise-related adverse events were noted. The exercise group had significantly less days of hospitalization than the control group (P = .031), resulting in a lower (~-17%) mean total economic cost of hospitalization in the former. Moreover, echocardiography-determined left ventricular function (ejection fraction and fractional shortening) was significantly impaired in the control group after treatment compared with baseline, whereas it was maintained in the exercise group (P = .024 and .021 for the between-group differences, respectively). In conclusion, supervised inhospital exercise intervention is safe and plays a cardioprotective role, at least in the short term, in children with cancer, also reducing hospitalization time, and therefore alleviating the economic burden.
Keyphrases
- high intensity
- childhood cancer
- randomized controlled trial
- physical activity
- healthcare
- left ventricular
- resistance training
- young adults
- machine learning
- ejection fraction
- papillary thyroid
- aortic stenosis
- computed tomography
- cardiovascular disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- atrial fibrillation
- coronary artery disease
- pulmonary hypertension
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- weight loss
- cardiovascular events
- lymph node metastasis
- locally advanced
- acute myocardial infarction
- early life
- free survival
- skeletal muscle
- social media
- mitral valve
- squamous cell
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- preterm birth