Purpose The aim of this study was to determine if there were any differences in health-related outcomes and physical activity (PA) between the two OptiTrain exercise groups and usual care (UC), 2 years post-baseline. Methods The OptiTrain study was a three-arm randomised controlled trial comparing 16 weeks of concurrent aerobic high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and progressive resistance exercise (RT-HIIT) or concurrent HIIT and continuous moderate-intensity aerobic exercise (AT-HIIT) to UC in 206 patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy. Eligible participants were approached 2 years following baseline to assess cancer-related fatigue, quality of life, symptoms, muscle strength, cardiorespiratory fitness, body mass, PA, sedentary behaviour, and sick leave. Results The RT-HIIT group reported lower total cancer-related fatigue, (-1.37, 95% CI-2.70,-0.04, ES =-0.06) and cognitive cancer-related fatigue (-1.47, 95% CI-2.75,-0.18, ES =-0.28), and had higher lower limb muscle strength (12.09, 95% CI 3.77, 20.40, ES = 0.52) than UC at 2 years. The AT-HIIT group reported lower total symptoms (-0.23, 95% CI-0.42,-0.03, ES =-0.15), symptom burden (-0.30, 95% CI-0.60,-0.01, ES =-0.19), and body mass-2.15 (-3.71,-0.60, ES =-0.28) than UC at 2 years. Conclusion At 2 years, the exercise groups were generally experiencing positive differences in cancer-related fatigue (RTHIIT), symptoms (AT-HIIT), and muscle strength (RT-HIIT) to UC. The findings provide novel evidence that being involved in an exercise program during chemotherapy can have long-term benefits for women with breast cancer, but that strategies are needed to create better pathways to support patients to maintain physical activity levels. Trial registration Clinicaltrials. gov registration number: NCT02522260. Trial registered on 9 June 2015. https://clini caltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02 52226 0. Retrospectively registered.
CITATION STYLE
Bolam, K. A., Mijwel, S., Rundqvist, H., & Wengström, Y. (2019). Two-year follow-up of the OptiTrain randomised controlled exercise trial. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 175(3), 637–648. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-019-05204-0
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