Journal of cachexia, sarcopenia and muscle | 2021

Effects and tolerability of exercise therapy modality on cardiorespiratory fitness in lung cancer: a randomized controlled trial.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nPoor cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a cardinal feature of post-treatment primary lung cancer. The most effective exercise therapy regimen to improve CRF has not been determined.\n\n\nMETHODS\nIn this parallel-group factorial randomized controlled trial, lung cancer survivors with poor CRF (below age-sex sedentary values) were randomly allocated to receive 48 consecutive supervised sessions thrice weekly of (i) aerobic training (AT)-cycle ergometry at 55% to >95% of peak oxygen consumption (VO2 peak); (ii) resistance training (RT)-lower and upper extremity exercises at 50-85% of maximal strength; (iii) combination training (CT)-AT plus RT; or (iv) stretching attention control (AC) for 16\xa0weeks. The primary endpoint was change in CRF (VO2 peak, mL\xa0O2 ·kg-1 ·min-1 ). Secondary endpoints were body composition, muscle strength, patient-reported outcomes, tolerability (relative dose intensity of exercise), and safety. Analysis of covariance determined change in primary and secondary endpoints from baseline to post-intervention (Week 17) with adjustment for baseline values of the endpoint and other relevant clinical covariates.\n\n\nRESULTS\nNinety patients (65\xa0±\xa09\xa0years; 66% female) were randomized (AT, n\xa0=\xa024; RT, n\xa0=\xa023; CT, n\xa0=\xa020; and AC, n\xa0=\xa023) of the planned n\xa0=\xa0160. No serious adverse events were observed. For the overall cohort, the lost-to-follow-up rate was 10%. Mean attendance was ≥75% in all groups. In intention-to-treat analysis, VO2 peak increased 1.1\xa0mL\xa0O2 ·kg-1 ·min-1 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.0, 2.2, P\xa0=\xa00.04] and 1.4\xa0mL\xa0O2 ·kg-1 ·min-1 (95% CI: 0.2, 2.5, P\xa0=\xa00.02) in AT and CT, respectively, compared with AC. There was no difference in VO2 peak change between RT and AC (-0.1\xa0mL\xa0O2 ·kg-1 ·min-1 , 95% CI: -1.2, 1.0, P\xa0=\xa00.88). Favourable improvements in maximal strength and body composition were observed in RT and CT groups compared with AT and AC groups (Ps\xa0<\xa00.05). No between-group changes were observed for any patient-reported outcomes. Relative dose intensity of exercise was lower in RT and CT compared with AT (Ps\xa0<\xa00.05).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nIn the context of a smaller than planned sample size, AT and CT significantly improved VO2 peak in lung cancer survivors; however, the tolerability-to-benefit ratio was superior for AT and hence may be the preferred modality to target impaired CRF in post-treatment lung cancer survivors.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1002/jcsm.12828
Language English
Journal Journal of cachexia, sarcopenia and muscle

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