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Effects of Moderate and High-intensity Exercise During Chemotherapy on Muscle Cells in Women With Breast Cancer (PhysCan)

N

Norwegian School of Sport Sciences

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer Female

Treatments

Other: Low- to moderate intensity strength and endurance training
Other: High intensity strength and endurance training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05218876
PhysCan muskel

Details and patient eligibility

About

(Neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer has deleterious effects on muscle tissue resulting in reduced skeletal muscle mass, muscle function, and cardiorespiratory fitness. Various exercise regimens during cancer treatment have been shown to counteract some of these side effects. However, no study has compared the effect of high intensity training vs. low-to moderate intensity training on muscle tissue cellular outcomes and function in breast cancer patients during chemotherapy. The present study aims to compare the effects of high vs. low-to moderate intensity training on its ability to counteract deleterious effects of chemotherapy on skeletal muscle in women diagnosed with breast cancer. Eighty newly diagnosed women with breast cancer planned to start (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy will be randomized to either a group performing a combination of strength and endurance training with high intensity or a group performing training with low to moderate intensity. Muscle biopsies from m. vastus lateralis for assessment of muscular cellular outcomes will be collected and muscle function and cardiorespiratory fitness will be measured before the first cycle of chemotherapy (or, when not possible, one week after) (T0), halfway through chemotherapy (T1), and after completion of chemotherapy (T2). It is estimated that approximately 50% will be willing to take muscle biopsies. The study will give important information about the effects of different training intensities for breast cancer patients during treatment and will contribute with knowledge about how to refine exercise programs that are effective and compatible with multidisciplinary management of breast cancer.

Full description

The aim of this study is to investigate the effects high and low-to-moderate exercise intensity on muscle cellular outcomes, muscle function, and cardiorespiratory fitness in breast cancer patients undergoing (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy. We further aim to investigate if treatment including taxane treatment have larger negative effect on muscle than taxane-free treatment.

Our hypotheses are:

  • Both high-intensity and low to moderate intensity strength and endurance training during (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy will reduce negative treatment effects on muscle fiber size, mitochondrial function, cellular stress, and thus reduce the negative effect on cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle function. High-intensity training will be superior to low to moderate-intensity training in counteracting the negative treatments effects.
  • Both high-intensity and low to moderate intensity strength and endurance training during (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy will increase muscle and blood levels of potential anti-tumor myokines.
  • Treatment including taxane administration will have larger negative effect on muscle fiber size, mitochondrial function, cellular stress, and thus cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle function than taxane free treatment regardless of training intensity.

This study is a two-group randomized controlled trial. The participants will be randomly allocated into two training groups; one group performing the combination of strength and endurance training with high intensity and the other group performing the training with low to moderate intensity during (neo-) adjuvant treatment for breast cancer. Power calculations indicate that 20 participants are sufficient in each group for our primary outcome muscle fiber cross-sectional area. As we estimate that approximately 50% of the participants will be willing to take muscle biopsies a total of 80 participants will be recruited leading to a total of 40 participants with muscle biopsies.

Before the training period (T0) muscle biopsies, questionnaires and blood samples will be taken before the first chemotherapy cure. The first 2-4 weeks after cure 1 will be used as a familiarization period for tests and exercises, and to complete the remaining T0 tests. Testing will include measurements of physical capacity, body composition, and physical activity levels. All measurements are repeated halfway into the treatment (T1) and after the completion of treatment (T2). Training will start between cures 2 and 3 and will last throughout the treatment period, approximately 6 months.

The strength training consists of two supervised sessions per week and includes the following exercises: seated leg-press, chest-press, seated leg-curl, seated-row, leg-extension, and standing overhead-press using dumbbells. The low-to-moderate intensity group will perform 12 repetitions for 3 sets at 50% of 6RM load in the first weekly session and 20 repetitions for 3 sets at 50% of 10RM load in the second weekly session. The high intensity group will perform 6 repetitions for 3 sets at 6RM load in the first weekly session and 10 repetitions for 3 sets at 10RM load in the second weekly session.

The endurance exercise is home-based and followed up by a coach. The low-to-moderate intensity group do continuous-based exercise (running, cycling, walking uphill or any other endurance-based activity) in bouts of at least 10 min at an exercise intensity of 40-50% of the heart rate reserve. The exercise frequency is recommended to be 2-4 times a week with the main aim to reach 150 min of moderate intensity endurance exercise per week. The high intensity group conduct high-intensity interval exercise. The sessions will consist of two-minute exercise intervals (running, cycling, walking uphill or any other endurance-based activity) at an exercise intensity of 80-90% of the heart rate reserve (at the end of the 3rd session) with two minutes of rest between intervals. During the first week after familiarization, each session will consist of 6 intervals. Thereafter, one bout will be added every fourth week until 10 bouts per session are reached as the maximum, corresponding to 75 min of high intensity per week.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • diagnosed with stage I-III breast cancer
  • 18 years old
  • can understand and communicate in the Norwegian language
  • scheduled to undergo (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy with a combination of taxanes and anthracyclines or only one of the treatments

Exclusion criteria

  • unable to perform basic activities of daily living
  • cognitive disorders or severe emotional instability
  • other disabling comorbidities that might hamper physical training (e.g. severe heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, orthopedic conditions, and neurological disorders)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Low- to moderate intensity strength and endurance training
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will perform a combination of strength and endurance training with low-to moderate-intensity during (neo-) adjuvant treatment with chemotherapy, approximately 6 months. All strength training will be supervised while the endurance training is home-based and followed up by a coach.
Treatment:
Other: Low- to moderate intensity strength and endurance training
High intensity strength and endurance training
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will perform a combination of strength and endurance training with high intensity during (neo-) adjuvant treatment with chemotherapy, approximately 6 months. All strength training will be supervised while the endurance training is home-based and followed up by a coach.
Treatment:
Other: High intensity strength and endurance training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Olav Vikmoen, PhD; Truls Raastad, Professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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