AI Article Synopsis

  • Neoadjuvant therapy is now a standard for treating stage II/III HER2 positive and triple negative breast cancer, as well as high-risk luminal B breast cancer, but can lead to significant side effects impacting quality of life.
  • Early supportive care, termed 'prehabilitation', may alleviate these side effects and enhance patient outcomes, driven by patient and healthcare professional feedback for a more integrated care approach.
  • This study outlines a feasibility trial for a multimodal prehabilitation program aiming to improve various health metrics and experiences for women undergoing neoadjuvant therapy.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Neoadjuvant therapy has become a standard treatment for patients with stage II/III HER2 positive and triple negative breast cancer, and in well-selected patients with locally advanced and borderline resectable high risk, luminal B breast cancer. Side effects of neoadjuvant therapy, such as fatigue, cardiotoxicity, neurotoxicity, anxiety, insomnia, vasomotor symptoms, gastrointestinal disturbance as well as a raft of immune-related adverse events, may impact treatment tolerance, long-term outcomes, and quality of life. Providing early supportive care prior to surgery (typically termed 'prehabilitation') may mitigate these side effects and improve quality of life.During our codesign of the intervention, consumers and healthcare professionals expressed desire for a programme that 'packaged' care, was easy to access, and was embedded in their care pathway. We hypothesise that a multimodal supportive care programme including exercise and complementary therapies, underpinned by behavioural change theory will improve self-efficacy, quality of life, readiness for surgery and any additional treatment for women with breast cancer. We seek to explore cardiometabolic, residual cancer burden and surgical outcomes, along with chemotherapy completion (relative dose intensity). This article describes the protocol for a feasibility study of a multimodal prehabilitation programme.

Methods And Analysis: This is a prospective, mixed-method, feasibility study of a multi-modal programme in a hospital setting for 20-30 women with breast cancer receiving neoadjuvant therapy. Primary outcomes are recruitment rate, retention rate, adherence and acceptability. Secondary outcomes include patient reported outcome measures (PROMs), surgical outcomes, length of stay, satisfaction with surgery, chemotherapy completion rates, changes in metabolic markers and adverse events. Interviews and focus groups to understand the experience with prehabilitation and different factors that may affect feasibility of the intervention . The output of this study will be a codesigned, evidence-informed intervention assessed for feasibility and acceptability by women with breast cancer and the healthcare professionals that care for them.

Ethics And Dissemination: The study received ethics approval from the St Vincents Hospital HREC (HREC/2021/ETH12198). Trial results will be communicated to participants, healthcare professionals, and the public via publication and conferences.

Trial Registration Number: ACTRN12622000584730.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10961545PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080239DOI Listing

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