AI Article Synopsis

  • Physical activities, including yoga, have positive psychosocial effects during and after cancer treatment, particularly for women with breast cancer.
  • Recent meta-analysis comparing yoga with other exercise forms found yoga may have a slight edge in improving quality of life immediately post-intervention, though not significantly over time.
  • The study suggests yoga is likely as effective as other forms of exercise for enhancing quality of life, but highlights a need for better-funded and larger-scale yoga trials.

Article Abstract

Physical activities during and after cancer treatment have favorable psychosocial effects. Increasingly, yoga has become a popular approach to improving the quality of life (QoL) of women with breast cancer. However, the extant synthetic evidence on yoga has not used other exercise comparison conditions. This meta-analysis aimed to systematically assess yoga-specific effects relative to any other physical exercise intervention (eg, aerobics) for women with breast cancer. QoL was the primary outcome of interest. Eight randomized controlled trials with 545 participants were included. The sample-weighted synthesis at immediate postintervention revealed marginally statistically and modest practically significant differences suggesting yoga's potentially greater effectiveness: d = 0.14, P = .10. However, at longer term follow-up, no statistically or practically significant between-group difference was observed. This meta-analysis preliminarily demonstrated that yoga is probably as effective as other exercise modalities in improving the QoL of women with breast cancer. Both interventions were associated with clinically significant improvements in QoL. Nearly all of the yoga intervention programs, however, were very poorly resourced. Larger and better controlled trials of well-endowed yoga programs are needed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6388460PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2515690X19828325DOI Listing

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