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Blood flow restriction Exercise in the perioperative setting to Prevent loss of muscle mass in patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer: study protocol for the PREV-Ex randomized controlled trial.

Trials
January 1, 1970
Poorna Anandavadivelan et al. (10 authors)
Journal ArticleClinical Trial ProtocolHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate whether blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T) could prevent or slow skeletal muscle mass loss and improve functional capacity and mental health in patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer.

Results Summary

The study is ongoing (PREV-Ex trial), but the abstract outlines the planned evaluation of BFR-T's effects on muscle thickness, cross-sectional area, biomarkers, patient-reported outcomes, physical fitness, and clinical outcomes. Expected benefits include improved prognosis and independence for patients.

Population

Patients diagnosed with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer.

Effective Dosage

Low-load BFR-T (specific load not detailed) with protein supplementation.

Duration

6–10 weeks (combined pre- and postoperative period).

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (14)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T)
increase
muscle recovery
patients diagnosed with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
may allow for a faster recovery of muscle
#1
blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T)
decrease
mechanical muscle stress
patients diagnosed with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
avoidance of high levels of mechanical muscle stress
#2
blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T)
decrease
skeletal muscle mass
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
can prevent or slow down the loss
#3
blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T)
increase
functional capacity
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
enhance
#4
blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T)
increase
mental health
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
enhance
#5
home-based low-load BFR-T during a combined pre- and postoperative period
neutral
-
patients
6-10 weeks
will be given
#6
Protein supplementation
increase
protein intake
both groups
-
will be given
#7
new strategies
decrease
skeletal muscle mass
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
counteract the deterioration
#8
new strategies
decrease
muscle function
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
counteract the deterioration
#9
new strategies
decrease
strength
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
counteract the deterioration
#10
new strategies
decrease
physical function
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
counteract the deterioration
#11
expected findings
increase
prognosis
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
could improve
#12
expected findings
increase
independence
patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer
-
help patients stay independent for longer
#13
expected findings
decrease
treatment-related costs
-
-
possibly reduce
#14
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients diagnosed with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer often suffer from a progressive loss of muscle mass. Given the considerable functional impairments in these patients, high musculoskeletal weight loads may not be well tolerated by all individuals. The use of blood-flow restricted resistance training (BFR-T) which only requires low training loads may allow for a faster recovery of muscle due to avoidance of high levels of mechanical muscle stress associated with high-load resistance exercise. This study aims to investigate whether BFR-T can prevent or slow down the loss of skeletal muscle mass and enhance the functional capacity and mental health of patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer. METHODS: The PREV-Ex exercise trial is a multicenter two-armed randomized controlled trial. Patients will be randomized to an exercise program consisting of home-based low-load BFR-T during a combined pre- and postoperative period for a total of 6-10 weeks (prehabilitation and rehabilitation), or to a control group. Protein supplementation will be given to both groups to ensure adequate protein intake. The primary outcomes, skeletal muscle thickness and muscle cross-sectional area, will be assessed by ultrasound. Secondary outcomes include the following: (i) muscle catabolism-related and inflammatory bio-markers (molecular characteristics will be assessed from a vastus lateralis biopsy and blood samples will be obtained from a sub-sample of patients); (ii) patient-reported outcome measures (self-reported fatigue, health-related quality of life, and nutritional status will be assessed through validated questionnaires); (iii) physical fitness/performance/activity (validated tests will be used to evaluate physical function, cardiorespiratory fitness and maximal isometric muscle strength. Physical activity and sedentary behavior (assessed using an activity monitor); (iv) clinical outcomes: hospitalization rates and blood status will be recorded from the patients' medical records; (v) explorative outcomes of patients' experience of the exercise program which will be evaluated using focus group/individual interviews. DISCUSSION: It is worthwhile to investigate new strategies that have the potential to counteract the deterioration of skeletal muscle mass, muscle function, strength, and physical function, all of which have debilitating consequences for patients with pancreatic, biliary tract, and liver cancer. The expected findings could improve prognosis, help patients stay independent for longer, and possibly reduce treatment-related costs. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05044065. Registered on September 14, 2021.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansResistance TrainingPancreatic NeoplasmsBiliary Tract NeoplasmsMuscle, SkeletalLiver NeoplasmsRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicMulticenter Studies as TopicRegional Blood FlowTreatment OutcomeQuality of LifeMuscle StrengthTime FactorsPreoperative ExerciseMuscular AtrophySarcopenia
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations1
Citations/Year1.0
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.48
Normalized Score0.67
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