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The Activity Intervention for Chemobrain (TACTIC)

Vanderbilt University Medical Center logo

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Cognitive Impairment
Chemotherapy
Cancer

Treatments

Behavioral: Exercise
Behavioral: Usual Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cognitive dysfunction following chemotherapy is an adverse treatment effect that impacts the quality of life for many cancer survivors receiving this adjuvant therapy. A strong body of evidence now indicates that that the initiation of a regular exercise program, at levels that are readily achievable by most adults (3-5 d/wk, 30-45 min/session), can improve cognitive function. Importantly, the domains of cognitive function that are enhanced by exercise participation are the same domains that are negatively affected by chemotherapy. Accordingly, we propose a 2 year research program that seeks to develop and test a safe, simple, and effective exercise intervention to optimize cognitive function following chemotherapy. To begin this research, we will: 1) conduct a randomized exercise intervention trial among cancer survivors that report persistent cognitive problems following chemotherapy (n=60), 2) explore possible mediators and moderators of the intervention on cognition in order to begin to understand how the intervention may work and for whom it may be most effective, and 3), conduct a cross-sectional study comparing cancer survivors enrolled in the trial (n=60) and matched controls (n=40) to evaluate the cognitive status among survivors in the intervention. We hypothesize that six-months of regular exercise will enhance cognitive function among cancer survivors, and that cancer survivors reporting cognitive dysfunction will have lower objectively measured cognitive performance than adults who have not received chemotherapy. To our knowledge this study would be the first to examine the influence of regular exercise participation on cognitive function among cancer survivors that experienced cognitive difficulties following chemotherapy.

Full description

A substantial number of cancer survivors who receive chemotherapy report mild to moderate cognitive impairment following treatment. These impairments have been reported across a range of cancer types and chemotherapy agents. Adjuvant treatment has been reported to affect multiple cognitive domains, but three domains appear to be most strongly affected (i.e., executive functioning, declarative memory, motor function). Exercise participation, at levels that are readily achievable by most adults (3-5 d/wk, 30-45 min/d), preserves and enhances cognitive function. Importantly, domains that are enhanced by exercise overlap substantially with the domains adversely affected by chemotherapy. Accordingly, we propose a 2 year research program that seeks to develop and test a safe, simple, and effective exercise intervention to optimize cognitive function following chemotherapy. To begin this research, we will: 1) conduct a randomized exercise intervention trial among cancer survivors that report persistent cognitive problems following chemotherapy (exercise, n=30 vs. standard of care, n=30); 2) explore possible mediators and moderators of the intervention effect on cognition; and 3), conduct a cross-sectional study comparing cancer survivors enrolled in the trial (n=60) and matched controls (n=40) to evaluate the cognitive status among survivors in the intervention. We will employ a proven home-based exercise intervention and state of the art cognitive testing of relevant cognitive domains (e.g., Randt Memory Test, Trail Making B, Stroop task, T ask switching, Response compatibility) that we have used in preliminary studies. We hypothesize that six-months of regular exercise will enhance cognitive function among cancer survivors, and that cancer survivors reporting cognitive dysfunction will have lower objectively measured cognitive performance than adults who have not received chemotherapy. To our knowledge this study would be the first to examine the influence of regular exercise participation on cognitive function among cancer survivors that experienced cognitive difficulties following chemotherapy. Completion of this project will provide our research team with the necessary experience and intervention effectiveness information that will be used to conduct future more definitive trials.

Enrollment

64 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Non-metastatic cancer and received at least 4 cycles of chemotherapy, and report the onset of persistent cognitive difficulties following treatment Age 18+ yrs

Exclusion criteria

  1. Have no prior diagnosis of cancer of the central nervous system,
  2. Not have engaged in regular exercise in the past year (i.e., 5+ days/wk, 20+ min/d, 3+ months),
  3. No cardiovascular disease or orthopedic problems that could be worsened by exercise as reported on the Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire
  4. No major systemic diseases (e.g., liver, kidney or adrenal diseases).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

64 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise
Treatment:
Behavioral: Exercise
2
Active Comparator group
Description:
Usual Care
Treatment:
Behavioral: Usual Care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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