1. A 10-hour time-restricted eating intervention to address cancer-related fatigue among cancer survivors
- Author
-
Nikesha Gilmore, Luke J. Peppone, Amber S. Kleckner, Po-Ju Lin, Jennifer E Reschke, Brian James Altman, Marielle Jensen-Battaglia, Elizabeth Belcher, Karen M. Mustian, Richard F. Dunne, Ian R. Kleckner, and Fergal J. Fleming
- Subjects
Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Cancer treatment ,Internal medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Circadian rhythm ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cancer-related fatigue - Abstract
12109 Background: Cancer-related fatigue is a common, debilitating condition that can persist for months or years after cancer treatment. Time-restricted eating has been shown to improve circadian rhythm and strengthen rest and activity patterns, and therefore could help reduce persistent fatigue. Herein, we evaluated the feasibility of recruiting cancer survivors to a two-week, single-arm, time-restricted eating intervention with a 10-h eating window, assessed safety of the intervention, monitored adherence, and obtained initial estimates of within-group change in patient-reported fatigue. Methods: We recruited adults 4-60 months post-cancer treatment who had a fatigue level ≥3 on a scale from 0-10 and who did not already consume food within a 10-h window. Participants were asked to consume all food and beverages within a self-selected 10-h eating window for 14 days; water was allowed at all times. Participants completed a daily diary indicating when they began and stopped eating each day. To assess fatigue, participants completed the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-F) and the Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) at pre- and post-intervention. We report mean±standard deviation and used a t-test to assess differences in pre- vs. post-intervention scores. Results: A total of 21 participants consented (20 breast cancer, 1 prostate cancer; 20 female; age 57.7±11.4 years; 1.6±1.1 years post-primary treatment). The study was feasible: 19/21 (90.5%) completed pre- and post-intervention assessments and daily diaries. It was also safe: there were two mild adverse events—one unlikely (insomnia) and one possibly related to the intervention (acute headache) and no severe adverse events. Most of the participants adhered to the intervention; 14/19 (73.7%) ate all of their food within a 10-h window at least 80% of the days, and 16/19 (84.2%) reported an average eating window ≤10 h. Fatigue scores improved a clinically meaningful degree for FACIT-F total score, FACIT-F fatigue subscale, and the BFI total score from pre- to post-intervention per established cutoffs (Table). Conclusions: Cancer survivors were willing and able to adhere to a two-week time-restricted eating intervention, and the intervention was safe. Also, fatigue was reduced with moderate to large effect sizes after two weeks of time-restricted eating. Based on our results, a follow-up randomized controlled trial to investigate time-restricted eating to alleviate cancer-related fatigue among cancer survivors is indicated. Funding: NIH/NCI UG1CA189961, T32CA102618. Clinical trial information: NCT04243512. [Table: see text]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF