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Dive into the research topics where Patricia Hopkins-Price is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia Hopkins-Price.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2009

A randomized trial to increase physical activity in breast cancer survivors

Laura Q. Rogers; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Sandy Vicari; Richard Pamenter; Kerry S. Courneya; Stephen Markwell; Steven Verhulst; Karen Hoelzer; Catherine Naritoku; Linda Jones; Gary L. Dunnington; Victor Lanzotti; James Wynstra; Lisa Shah; Billie Edson; Ashleigh Graff; Michelle Lowy

PURPOSE Interventions to increase physical activity among breast cancer survivors are needed to improve health and quality of life and possibly to reduce the risk of disease recurrence and early mortality. Therefore, we report the feasibility and preliminary outcomes of a pilot randomized trial designed to increase physical activity in sedentary breast cancer survivors receiving hormone therapy. METHODS Forty-one sedentary women on estrogen receptor modulators or aromatase inhibitors for stage I, II, or IIIA breast cancer were randomly assigned to receive a 12-wk multidisciplinary physical activity behavior change intervention or usual care. RESULTS Recruitment was 34%, intervention adherence was 99%, and complete follow-up data were obtained on 93%. Most participants (93%) were white with mean age of 53 +/- 9 yr. Differences favoring the intervention group were noted for accelerometer physical activity counts (mean difference = 72,103; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 25,383-119,000; effect size (d) = 1.02; P = 0.004), aerobic fitness (mean difference = 2.9; 95% CI = -0.1 to 5.8; d = 0.64; P = 0.058), back/leg muscle strength (mean difference = 12.3; 95% CI = 0.4-15.9; d = 0.81; P = 0.017), waist-to-hip ratio (mean difference = -0.05; 95% CI = -0.01 to -0.08; d = -0.77; P = 0.018), and social well-being (mean difference = 2.0; 95% CI = 0.3-3.8; d = 0.76; P = 0.03). However, the intervention group also reported a greater increase in joint stiffness (mean difference = 1.1; 95% CI = 0.1-2.2; d = 0.70; P = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS A behavior change intervention for breast cancer survivors based on the social cognitive theory is feasible and results in potentially meaningful improvements in physical activity and selected health outcomes. Confirmation in a larger study is warranted.


Cancer Nursing | 2004

Exploring social cognitive theory constructs for promoting exercise among breast cancer patients

Laura Q. Rogers; Courtney Matevey; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Prabodh Shah; Gary L. Dunnington; Kerry S. Courneya

Physical activity during breast cancer treatment can significantly reduce treatment-related fatigue and improve quality of life. Unfortunately, the majority of women with breast cancer either do not exercise at all or exercise below recommended levels. Little is known about how to enhance physical activity among breast cancer patients. The social cognitive theory, a useful framework for the design of physical activity interventions, has not been studied among breast cancer patients. Our study purpose was to explore physical activity knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors among breast cancer patients during adjuvant therapy utilizing social cognitive theory constructs in preparation for a larger, survey study and future intervention research. Twelve breast cancer patients attended 1 of 3 focus group sessions. Focus group questions were based on the social cognitive theory constructs of self-efficacy, environment, behavioral capability, expectations, expectancies, self-control and performance, observational learning, and reinforcement. The focus group participants generally felt confident in their ability to exercise during treatment if fatigue, time management, and social networking were addressed. The majority of participants had not been given information related to exercise by their physicians during treatment. The participants felt that exercise was more beneficial than harmful during treatment, with the 2 most important benefits identified as reduced fatigue and the potential for improved survival. The use of reinforcements by participants was minimal. The participants consistently expressed the desire for education and guidance by knowledgeable staff during an exercise program. Walking was the most acceptable exercise modality. Social cognitive theory may be a useful framework for future study of exercise behavior among breast cancer patients and measurement of constructs related to this theory should be included in such studies. Future exercise intervention studies should consider the unique barriers and program preferences of breast cancer patients while focusing on self-efficacy, outcome expectations/ expectancies, observational learning, and reinforcements.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2009

Physical Activity and Health Outcomes Three Months After Completing a Physical Activity Behavior Change Intervention: Persistent and Delayed Effects

Laura Q. Rogers; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Sandy Vicari; Stephen Markwell; Richard Pamenter; Kerry S. Courneya; Karen Hoelzer; Catherine Naritoku; Billie Edson; Linda Jones; Gary L. Dunnington; Steven Verhulst

Purpose: We previously reported the effectiveness of a 12-week physical activity behavior change intervention for breast cancer survivors postintervention with this report, aiming to determine delayed and/or persistent effects 3 months after intervention completion. Methods: Forty-one sedentary women with stage I, II, or IIIA breast cancer currently receiving hormonal therapy were randomly assigned to receive the 12-week Better Exercise Adherence after Treatment for Cancer intervention or usual care. Assessments occurred at baseline, postintervention, and 3 months postintervention. Results: Weekly minutes of greater than or equal to moderate intensity physical activity measured by accelerometer showed a significant group by time interaction (F = 3.51; P = 0.035; between group difference in the mean change from baseline to 3 months postintervention, 100.1 minute, P = 0.012). Significant group by time interactions also showed sustained improvements from baseline to 3 months postintervention in strength (F = 3.82; P = 0.027; between group difference, 11.2 kg; P = 0.026), waist-to-hip ratio (F = 3.36; P = 0.041; between group difference, −0.04; P = 0.094), and social well-being (F = 4.22; P = 0.023; between group difference, 3.9; P = 0.039). A delayed reduction in lower extremity dysfunction 3 months postintervention was noted (F = 3.24; P = 0.045; between group difference in the mean change from postintervention to 3 months follow-up; P = −7.6; P = 0.015). No group by time effect was noted for fitness, body mass index, percent fat, bone density, total quality of life (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General), fatigue, endocrine symptoms, cognitive function, or sleep. Conclusions: The intervention resulted in sustained improvements in physical activity, strength, central adiposity, and social well-being with lower extremity function benefits appearing 3 months after intervention completion. Testing translation in a multisite study is warranted. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2009;18(5):1410–8)


Integrative Cancer Therapies | 2013

Effects of a Physical Activity Behavior Change Intervention on Inflammation and Related Health Outcomes in Breast Cancer Survivors Pilot Randomized Trial

Laura Q. Rogers; Amanda Fogleman; Rita A Trammell; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Sandy Vicari; Krishna Rao; Billie Edson; Steven J. Verhulst; Kerry S. Courneya; Karen Hoelzer

Background. The goal of this pilot study was to determine the magnitude and direction of intervention effect sizes for inflammatory-related serum markers and relevant health outcomes among breast cancer survivors (BCSs) receiving a physical activity behavior change intervention compared with usual care. Methods. This randomized controlled trial enrolled 28 stage I, II, or IIIA BCSs who were post–primary treatment and not regular exercisers. Participants were assigned to either a 3-month physical activity behavior change intervention group (ING) or usual care group (UCG). Intervention included supervised aerobic (150 weekly minutes, moderate-intensity) and resistance (2 sessions per week) exercise that gradually shifted to home-based exercise. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and 3 months. Results. Cardiorespiratory fitness significantly improved in the ING versus the UCG (between-group difference = 3.8 mL/kg/min; d = 1.1; P = .015). Self-reported sleep latency was significantly reduced in the ING versus the UCG (between group difference = −0.5; d = −1.2; P = .02) as was serum leptin (between-group difference = −9.0 ng/mL; d = −1.0; P = .031). Small to medium nonsignificant negative effect sizes were noted for interleukin (IL)-10 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α and ratios of IL-6 to IL-10, IL-8 to IL-10, and TNF-α to IL-10, whereas nonsignificant positive effect sizes were noted for IL-6 and high-molecular-weight adiponectin. Conclusions. Physical activity behavior change interventions in BCSs can achieve large effect size changes for several health outcomes. Although effect sizes for inflammatory markers were often small and not significant, changes were in the hypothesized direction for all except IL-6 and IL-10.


Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2012

Better exercise adherence after treatment for cancer (BEAT Cancer) study: Rationale, design, and methods

Laura Q. Rogers; Edward McAuley; Philip M. Anton; Kerry S. Courneya; Sandra Vicari; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Steven J. Verhulst; Robert S. Mocharnuk; Karen Hoelzer

Most breast cancer survivors do not engage in regular physical activity. Our physical activity behavior change intervention for breast cancer survivors significantly improved physical activity and health outcomes post-intervention during a pilot, feasibility study. Testing in additional sites with a larger sample and longer follow-up is warranted to confirm program effectiveness short and longer term. Importantly, the pilot intervention resulted in changes in physical activity and social cognitive theory constructs, enhancing our potential for testing mechanisms mediating physical activity behavior change. Here, we report the rationale, design, and methods for a two-site, randomized controlled trial comparing the effects of the BEAT Cancer physical activity behavior change intervention to usual care on short and longer term physical activity adherence among breast cancer survivors. Secondary aims include examining social cognitive theory mechanisms of physical activity behavior change and health benefits of the intervention. Study recruitment goal is 256 breast cancer survivors with a history of ductal carcinoma in situ or Stage I, II, or IIIA disease who have completed primary cancer treatment. Outcome measures are obtained at baseline, 3 months (i.e., immediately post-intervention), 6 months, and 12 months and include physical activity, psychosocial factors, fatigue, sleep quality, lower extremity joint dysfunction, cardiorespiratory fitness, muscle strength, and waist-to-hip ratio. Confirming behavior change effectiveness, health effects, and underlying mechanisms of physical activity behavior change interventions will facilitate translation to community settings for improving the health and well-being of breast cancer survivors.


Journal of Asthma | 2006

Association of Excess Weight and Degree of Airway Responsiveness in Asthmatics and Non-Asthmatics

Akshay Sood; Steven J. Verhulst; Adarsh Varma; Lanie E. Eagleton; Joseph Q. Henkle; Patricia Hopkins-Price

It is unclear whether obesity is associated with increasing degree of airway responsiveness in asthmatics. In this study, methacholine challenge test results of 1,725 subjects with respiratory symptoms were reviewed. Obesity was associated with asthma with an odds ratio of 1.72 (95% C.I. 1.36, 2.17). Although there was a significant difference in the degree of airway responsiveness between various body mass index categories of non-asthmatics (p = 0.01), no significant difference was noted among asthmatics (p = 0.93). A weakly significant interaction between asthma status and body mass index on the degree of airway responsiveness was noted (p = 0.08).


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2013

Pilot, randomized trial of resistance exercise during radiation therapy for head and neck cancer

Laura Q. Rogers; Philip M. Anton; Amanda Fogleman; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Steven Verhulst; Krishna Rao; James Malone; Randy Robbs; Kerry S. Courneya; Parashar J. Nanavati; Sara Mansfield; K. Thomas Robbins

The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of a randomized trial of resistance exercise in patients with head and neck cancer receiving radiation.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2014

Biobehavioral Factors Mediate Exercise Effects on Fatigue in Breast Cancer Survivors

Laura Q. Rogers; Sandra Vicari; Rita A Trammell; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Amanda Fogleman; Allison Spenner; Krishna Rao; Kerry S. Courneya; Karen Hoelzer; Randall S. Robbs; Steven Verhulst

PURPOSE This study aimed to examine mediators of fatigue response to an exercise intervention for breast cancer survivors in a pilot randomized controlled trial. METHODS Postmenopausal breast cancer survivors (n = 46; ≤stage 2), off primary treatment, and reporting fatigue and/or sleep dysfunction were randomized to a 3-month exercise intervention (160 min·wk of moderate-intensity aerobic walking, twice weekly resistance training with resistance bands) or control group. Six discussion group sessions provided behavioral support to improve adherence. Fatigue, serum cytokines, accelerometer physical activity, cardiorespiratory fitness, sleep dysfunction, and psychosocial factors were assessed at baseline and 3 months. RESULTS The exercise intervention effect sizes for fatigue were as follows: fatigue intensity d = 0.30 (P = 0.34), interference d = -0.38 (P = 0.22), and general fatigue d = -0.49 (P = 0.13). Using the Freedman-Schatzkin difference-in-coefficients tests, increase in fatigue intensity was significantly mediated by interleukin 6 (IL-6) (82%), IL-10 (94%), IL-6/IL-10 (49%), and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α):IL-10 (78%) with reduced sleep dysfunction increasing the relationship between intervention and fatigue intensity rather than mediating intervention effects (-88%). Decrease in fatigue interference was mediated by sleep dysfunction (35%), whereas IL-10 and pro-anti-inflammatory cytokine ratios increased the relationship between intervention and interference (-25% to -40%). The reduction in general fatigue was significantly mediated by minutes of physical activity (76%), sleep dysfunction (45%), and physical activity enjoyment (40%), with IL-10 (-40%) and IL-6/IL-10 (-11%) increasing the intervention-fatigue relationship. In the intervention group, higher baseline fatigue, anxiety, depression, and perceived exercise barrier interference predicted a greater decline in fatigue interference and/or general fatigue during the intervention. CONCLUSIONS Biobehavioral factors mediated and enhanced intervention effects on fatigue, whereas psychosocial factors predicted fatigue response. Further study is warranted to confirm our results and to improve understanding of relationships that mediate and strengthen the intervention-fatigue association.


American Journal of Health Promotion | 2010

Characteristics of Smokers Calling a National Reactive Telephone Helpline

Akshay Sood; Jennifer Andoh; Naveen Rajoli; Patricia Hopkins-Price; Steven J. Verhulst

Purpose. Although reactive telephone helplines for quitting smoking are increasingly popular in the United States, the characteristics of callers using this resource have not been adequately studied. The objective of this study was to describe the characteristics of the current smokers calling a national reactive telephone helpline (i.e., study population). Design and Setting. In this cross-sectional study, information was obtained from eligible participants telephonically. Subjects. The study included 890 adult current smokers who were new callers to a national reactive helpline. Measures. The information collected included selected demographic and smoking-related characteristics. Analysis. The proportions of the above characteristics were analyzed. Results. There was a significant overrepresentation of blacks, non-Hispanics, women, and urban residents, as well as poorer, older, less educated, and heavier smokers in the study population (p < .01 for all comparisons). Conclusions. Reactive telephone helplines may be preferentially used by population segments who are disadvantaged or smoke heavily and thus are in greatest need for assistance. These helplines may therefore fill a much-needed niche in the marketplace of smoking cessation strategies.


Journal of Asthma | 2005

Obesity Is Associated with Bronchial Hyper-Responsiveness in Women

Akshay Sood; Beth K. Dawson; Wael Eid; Lanie E. Eagleton; Joseph Q. Henkle; Patricia Hopkins-Price

The studys objective was to compare the bronchial hyper-responsiveness (BHR) between those with normal and increased weight and evaluate if the association was sex-specific. In this cross-sectional review of methacholine challenge test results of 1,141 adults for evaluation of respiratory symptoms, logistic regression analysis was conducted to adjust for covariates. When compared to normal weight, overweight or obese women showed a higher prevalence of symptomatic BHR with odds ratios of 1.63 (95% C.I. 1.16–2.29). This association was not seen in men, with a significant sex-specific interaction. This study shows a sex-specific association between symptomatic BHR and overweight or obese status.

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Laura Q. Rogers

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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Steven J. Verhulst

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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Akshay Sood

University of New Mexico

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Sandra Vicari

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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Amanda Fogleman

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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Krishna Rao

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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Steven Verhulst

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Billie Edson

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Randall S. Robbs

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

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