AI Article Synopsis

  • Cancer treatments can negatively impact physical health and quality of life, with exercise emerging as a potential remedy that requires more research.
  • The ABCSG C07-EXERCISE study looked at a year-long exercise program for colorectal cancer patients post-chemotherapy and tracked their quality of life using standardized questionnaires.
  • Results showed significant improvements in social functioning and moderate gains in other areas like pain and financial impact, suggesting structured exercise could enhance quality of life for cancer survivors, but more extensive studies are needed to confirm these findings.

Article Abstract

Cancer and its treatment strategies can have adverse effects on physical functioning and quality of life. Treatment strategies for better quality of life are still an unresolved issue. Physical activity is a promising treatment strategy that still has to be fully investigated. The ABCSG C07-EXERCISE study evaluated the feasibility of a 1-year exercise training after adjuvant chemotherapy in colorectal cancer patients. The present report presents the patient-reported outcomes during the exercise training. Fourteen patients of one center filled out the European Organization for the Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ C30) questionnaire at 5 time points after initiating a 1-year exercise training. At baseline, patients scored social functioning, emotional functioning, financial impact, insomnia, and diarrhea much worse than the German general population. After 1 year of a structured exercise training, a large improvement was reported for social functioning; moderate improvements were reported for pain, diarrhea, financial impact, and taste; and a small change for physical and emotional functioning as well as for global quality of life. The present study observed improvements of social, physical, and emotional functioning as well as global quality of life after 1 year of a structured exercise training in patients with locally advanced colorectal cancer after receiving adjuvant chemotherapy. To enhance compliance, sufficient support and different sport facilities should be offered. The positive effect of exercise on patient-reported outcomes, disease-free survival, and overall survival in cancer survivors have to be further investigated in further randomized clinical trials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7401055PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1534735420938458DOI Listing

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