Cardio-oncology | 2021

High intensity exercise during breast cancer chemotherapy - effects on long-term myocardial damage and physical capacity - data from the OptiTrain RCT

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background Adjuvant systemic breast cancer treatment improves disease specific outcomes, but also presents with cardiac toxicity. In this post-hoc exploratory analysis of the OptiTrain trial, the effects of exercise on cardiotoxicity were monitored by assessing fitness and biomarkers over the intervention and into survivorship. Methods; Women starting chemotherapy were randomized to 16-weeks of resistance and high-intensity interval training (RT-HIIT), moderate-intensity aerobic and high-intensity interval training (AT–HIIT), or usual care (UC). Outcome measures included plasma troponin-T (cTnT), Nt-pro-BNP and peak oxygen uptake (VO 2peak ), assessed at baseline, post-intervention, and at 1- and 2-years. Results For this per-protocol analysis, 88 women met criteria for inclusion. Plasma cTnT increased in all groups post-intervention. At the 1-year follow-up, Nt-pro-BNP was lower in the exercise groups compared to UC. At 2-years there was a drop in VO 2peak for patients with high cTnT and Nt-pro-BNP. Fewer patients in the RT-HIIT group fulfilled biomarker risk criteria compared to UC (OR 0.200; 95% CI\u2009=\u20090.055–0.734). Conclusions In this cohort, high-intensity exercise was associated with lower levels of NT-proBNP 1-year post-baseline, but not with cTnT directly after treatment completion. This may, together with the preserved VO 2peak in patients with low levels of biomarkers, indicate a long-term cardioprotective effect of exercise. Trial registration Clinicaltrials. govNCT02522260 , Registered 13th of august 2015 – Retrospectively Registered Graphical abstract

Volume 7
Pages None
DOI 10.1186/s40959-021-00091-1
Language English
Journal Cardio-oncology

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