Chris G. Scott
University of Ottawa
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Featured researches published by Chris G. Scott.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003
Roanne Segal; Robert D. Reid; Kerry S. Courneya; Shawn Malone; Matthew B. Parliament; Chris G. Scott; Peter Venner; H. Arthur Quinney; Lee W. Jones; Monika E. Slovinec D’Angelo; George A. Wells
PURPOSE Androgen deprivation therapy is a common treatment in men with prostate cancer that may cause fatigue, functional decline, increased body fatness, and loss of lean body tissue. These physical changes can negatively affect health-related quality of life. Resistance exercise may help to counter some of these side effects by reducing fatigue, elevating mood, building muscle mass, and reducing body fat. METHODS In a two-site study, 155 men with prostate cancer who were scheduled to receive androgen deprivation therapy for at least 3 months after recruitment were randomly assigned to an intervention group that participated in a resistance exercise program three times per week for 12 weeks (82 men) or to a waiting list control group (73 men). The primary outcomes were fatigue and disease-specific quality of life as assessed by self-reported questionnaires after 12 weeks. Secondary outcomes were muscular fitness and body composition. RESULTS Men assigned to resistance exercise had less interference from fatigue on activities of daily living (P =.002) and higher quality of life (P =.001) than men in the control group. Men in the intervention group demonstrated higher levels of upper body (P =.009) and lower body (P <.001) muscular fitness than men in the control group. The 12-week resistance exercise intervention did not improve body composition as measured by changes in body weight, body mass index, waist circumference, or subcutaneous skinfolds. CONCLUSION Resistance exercise reduces fatigue and improves quality of life and muscular fitness in men with prostate cancer receiving androgen deprivation therapy. This form of exercise can be an important component of supportive care for these patients.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009
Roanne Segal; Robert D. Reid; Kerry S. Courneya; Ronald J. Sigal; Glen P. Kenny; Denis G. Prud'Homme; Shawn Malone; George A. Wells; Chris G. Scott; Monika E. Slovinec D'Angelo
PURPOSE Radiotherapy for prostate cancer (PCa) may cause unfavorable changes in fatigue, quality of life (QOL), and physical fitness. We report results from the Prostate Cancer Radiotherapy and Exercise Versus Normal Treatment study examining the effects of 24 weeks of resistance or aerobic training versus usual care on fatigue, QOL, physical fitness, body composition, prostate-specific antigen, testosterone, hemoglobin, and lipid levels in men with PCa receiving radiotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 2003 and 2006, we conducted a randomized controlled trial in Ottawa, Canada, where 121 PCa patients initiating radiotherapy with or without androgen deprivation therapy were randomly assigned to usual care (n = 41), resistance (n = 40), or aerobic exercise (n = 40) for 24 weeks. Our primary end point was fatigue assessed by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Fatigue scale. RESULTS The follow-up assessment rate for our primary end point of fatigue was 92.6%. Median adherence to prescribed exercise was 85.5%. Mixed-model repeated measures analyses indicated both resistance (P =.010) and aerobic exercise (P = .004) mitigated fatigue over the short term. Resistance exercise also produced longer-term improvements (P = .002). Compared with usual care, resistance training improved QOL (P = .015), aerobic fitness (P = .041), upper- (P < .001) and lower-body (P < .001) strength, and triglycerides (P = .036), while preventing an increase in body fat (P = .049). Aerobic training also improved fitness (P = .052). One serious adverse event occurred in the group that performed aerobic exercise. CONCLUSION In the short term, both resistance and aerobic exercise mitigated fatigue in men with PCa receiving radiotherapy. Resistance exercise generated longer-term improvements and additional benefits for QOL, strength, triglycerides, and body fat.
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2004
Kerry S. Courneya; Roanne Segal; Robert D. Reid; Lee W. Jones; Shawn Malone; Peter Venner; Matthew Parliament; Chris G. Scott; H. Arthur Quinney; George A. Wells
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2002
François Haman; François Péronnet; Glen P. Kenny; Denis Massicotte; Carole Lavoie; Chris G. Scott; Jean-Michel Weber
Supportive Care in Cancer | 2012
Angela S. Alberga; Roanne Segal; Robert D. Reid; Chris G. Scott; Ronald J. Sigal; Farah Khandwala; James Jaffey; George A. Wells; Glen P. Kenny
Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 2004
Chris G. Scott; Michel B. Ducharme; François Haman; Glen P. Kenny
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2007
François Haman; Chris G. Scott; Glen P. Kenny
Archive | 2015
Chris G. Scott; Jean-Michel Weber François Haman; Denis Massicotte; Denis P. Blondin; Anali Maneshi; Marie-Andrée Imbeault; François Haman; Tony Chao; Clark R. Andersen; Fernando Cesani; Hal K. Hawkins; Martin E. Lidell; Manish Saraf; Sébastien M. Labbé; Nicholas M. Hurren; Maria Chondronikola; Elena Volpi; Craig Porter; Palam Annamalai
Archive | 2015
François Haman; Chris G. Scott; Glen P. Kenny; Denis P. Blondin; François Péronnet
Archive | 2015
Jean-Michel Weber; François Haman; Mark Rakobowchuk; Michel B. Ducharme; Chris G. Scott; Glen P. Kenny; Denis P. Blondin; Anali Maneshi; Marie-Andrée Imbeault