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Children and adolescents receiving cancer treatment often experience fatigue, reduced physical activity, and decreased quality of life. Although exercise has been shown to reduce these problems, maintaining regular and safe physical activity during cancer treatment can be difficult due to treatment side effects, safety concerns, and limited access to supervised programs.
This study aims to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of a wearable technology-supported exercise program on fatigue and health-related quality of life in pediatric cancer patients aged 13 to 18 years. Participants will be randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a control group. The intervention group will participate in an 8-week structured exercise program delivered through a mobile application, including video-guided exercise sessions performed three times per week and monitored continuously using a wearable activity tracker. The control group will receive standard care and will wear the activity tracker for passive monitoring only.
Fatigue and quality of life will be assessed at baseline, mid-intervention, and after completion of the program. Physical activity, heart rate, sleep patterns, and adherence to the exercise program will be objectively monitored using wearable devices. The findings from this study are expected to provide evidence on whether a digitally delivered, wearable-supported exercise program is a feasible and beneficial approach to improving well-being in children and adolescents undergoing cancer treatment.
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Detailed Description
This study is a single-center, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of a wearable technology-supported structured exercise program on fatigue and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in pediatric cancer patients aged 13-18 years who are receiving active cancer treatment.
Eligible participants will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either an intervention group or a control group using stratified randomization based on age, sex, and cancer diagnosis. Allocation concealment will be ensured through a secure electronic randomization system. Treating pediatric oncologists will remain blinded to group allocation.
Study Intervention
Participants in the intervention group will take part in an 8-week structured exercise program delivered through a mobile application. The program consists of video-guided exercise sessions performed three times per week, with each session lasting approximately 40 minutes. The exercise protocol includes warm-up, aerobic, strengthening, coordination, and cool-down components and is designed to be low to moderate intensity, adaptable to individual clinical conditions, and safely performed either in seated or standing positions. Exercise content was developed by a multidisciplinary team and incorporates engagement strategies such as animated guidance and gamification elements to support adherence.
Participants in the control group will receive standard care without a structured exercise intervention. Both groups will wear a commercially available wearable activity tracker throughout the study period to allow objective monitoring of physical activity and physiological parameters. In the control group, the device will be used for passive monitoring only.
Monitoring and Assessments
Fatigue and health-related quality of life will be assessed at baseline (week 0), mid-intervention (week 4), and post-intervention (week 8) using validated, age-appropriate instruments administered through the mobile platform. Objective physical activity data, including daily step counts, active minutes, heart rate, sleep duration and patterns, and device wear time, will be continuously collected via wearable devices and securely integrated into the study database.
Functional exercise capacity will be assessed using the 6-minute walk test at the same three time points. Engagement and adherence to the intervention will be evaluated using app-based metrics such as exercise session completion, frequency of use, and participation consistency.
Safety and Feasibility
Participants will be monitored throughout the study for adverse events related to exercise participation. A pediatric hematology-oncology physician and specialist nurse will oversee clinical safety. Feasibility outcomes will include recruitment rate, retention rate, adherence to exercise sessions, and completeness of wearable-derived data.
Data Analysis
Analyses will be conducted according to the intention-to-treat principle. Changes in fatigue and HRQoL over time and between groups will be examined using appropriate repeated-measures statistical methods based on data distribution. Secondary analyses will explore changes in physical activity, sleep parameters, and engagement metrics. Effect sizes will be calculated to inform the design of future multicenter trials.
Study Purpose
This trial aims to generate preliminary evidence on the clinical applicability of integrating wearable technology-supported exercise into pediatric oncology care. The findings are intended to inform larger-scale studies and contribute to the development of scalable, evidence-based digital exercise interventions for children and adolescents undergoing cancer treatment.
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Yagmur Berktas, phd candidate; rejin kebudi, professor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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