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Efficacy of exercise interventions for women during and after gynaecological cancer treatment – a systematic scoping review

Authors :
Grace Laura Rose
Elizabeth Mary Stewart
Briana Kristine Clifford
Tom George Bailey
Alexandra Jane Rush
Claudia Rose Abbott
Sandra Christine Hayes
Andreas Obermair
Alexandra Leigh McCarthy
Source :
Supportive Care in Cancer. 31
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Purpose To systematically synthesise evidence of exercise intervention efficacy for physical/psychosocial outcomes that matter to women during/following treatment for gynaecological cancer. Methods Five databases were searched (PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsychInfo, Scopus). Exercise-only intervention studies that included women during/ following treatment for any gynaecological cancer, with/ without control comparison, on any physical or psychosocial outcome(s), were included and qualitatively appraised using the Revised Cochrane Risk of Bias tool and a modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Results Seven randomised controlled trials (RCTs), three single-arm pre-post studies, and one prospective cohort study satisfied were included (11 studies). Most studies were completed following treatment (91%), included combined (aerobic and resistance; 36%) and aerobic (36%) training, were fully/mostly (63%) unsupervised, and had a moderate-to-high risk of bias. Overall, 33 outcomes (64% objectively-measured) were assessed. Improvements were observed in aerobic capacity (V̇O2 Peak +1.6 mL/kg/min, 6-minute walk distance +20-27 m), lower- (30-second sit-to-stand +2-4 repetitions) and upper-limb strength (30-second arm curl +5 repetitions; 1RM grip strength/chest press +2.4-3.1 kg), and agility (timed up-and-go -0.6 seconds). However, changes in quality of life, anthropometry/body composition, balance and flexibility were inconsistent. There was no evidence to support worsening of outcomes. Conclusion Preliminary research into the role of exercise post-gynaecological cancer suggests an improvement in exercise capacity, muscular strength, and agility which, in the absence of exercise, typically decline following gynaecological cancer. Future exercise trials involving larger and more diverse gynaecological cancer samples will improve understanding of the potential and magnitude of effect of guideline-recommended exercise on outcomes that matter to patients.

Subjects

Subjects :
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
14337339 and 09414355
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Supportive Care in Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b0e19f6f4308cfc96dbf4d873be1c85a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-023-07790-8