The effect of a 12-week home-based walking program on reducing fatigue in women with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy: A randomized controlled study.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to examine the short-term and long-term effects of a tailored, home-based brisk walking program on reducing fatigue in breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Results Summary
The walking program reduced fatigue in the exercise group compared to the control group, with the effect lasting beyond the intervention period. Fatigue levels fluctuated with functional performance, sleep disturbance, and depression.
Population
Women diagnosed with stages I-III breast cancer experiencing insomnia, fatigue, pain, or depressive symptoms after their first cycle of chemotherapy.
Effective Dosage
12-week home-based brisk walking program (specific frequency/intensity not detailed).
Duration
12 weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
exercise | decrease | fatigue | cancer patients who have completed treatment | - | well known to be reduced | #1 |
exercise | no change | fatigue | patients under treatment | - | effect on reducing fatigue has been inconsistent | #2 |
individually tailored, home-based brisk walking program | decrease | fatigue | breast cancer patients under chemotherapy | - | examined short-term and long-term effects on reducing fatigue | #3 |
12-week home-based walking program | decrease | fatigue | exercise group | - | had less fatigue than the attention-control group | #4 |
12-week home-based walking program | decrease | fatigue | exercise group | - | group difference was maintained for the whole study period | #5 |
exercise before diagnosis | decrease | fatigue | women who had spent more time exercising before diagnosis | - | had less fatigue than those who had exercised less often | #6 |
tailored, home-based brisk walking program | decrease | fatigue | breast cancer patients under chemotherapy | - | effectively reduced fatigue | #7 |
tailored, home-based brisk walking program | decrease | fatigue | breast cancer patients under chemotherapy | - | effect lasted after completing treatment | #8 |
BACKGROUND: Fatigue is the most common symptom experienced by cancer patients during treatment and can last long after completing treatment. Fatigue in cancer patients who have completed treatment is well known to be reduced by exercise, but the effect of exercise on reducing fatigue in patients under treatment has been inconsistent. OBJECTIVES: The purposes of this study were to examine short-term and long-term effects of an individually tailored, home-based brisk walking program on reducing fatigue in breast cancer patients under chemotherapy. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS: For this randomized controlled trial, women were recruited from a medical center in northern Taiwan if they were diagnosed with stages I-III breast cancer and experienced insomnia, fatigue, pain, or depressive symptoms after their first cycle of chemotherapy. Consenting participants (N = 159) were randomly assigned to either an exercise (12-week home-based walking program) group (n = 81) or an attention-control group (n = 78). METHODS: The 12-week, home-based brisk walking program started on the first day of the third chemotherapy cycle. Fatigue was measured by the Brief Fatigue Inventory. Covariates, i.e., functional performance, sleep disturbance, anxiety, depression, and exercise-related variables, were also measured. Data were collected at baseline, two times during the exercise intervention, and five times after the exercise intervention (eight times in total). The effects of time-varying and time-invariant predictors on fatigue were analyzed by multilevel modeling. RESULTS: Fatigue levels increased over time for both groups, even after completing treatment. At the end of the 12-week exercise program, the exercise group had less fatigue than the attention-control group, and this group difference was maintained for the whole study period. At the end of exercise program, women who had spent more time exercising before diagnosis had less fatigue than those who had exercised less often. In addition, patients' fatigue levels at various time points fluctuated along with their functional performance, sleep disturbance, and depression. CONCLUSIONS: Our tailored, home-based brisk walking program effectively reduced fatigue in breast cancer patients under chemotherapy, and this effect lasted after completing treatment.