Merete Celano Wittenkamp, Jan Christensen, Anders Vinther, Carsten Bogh Juhl
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: To summarize the evidence of the immediate and long-term effect of exercise interventions in patients with either primary or secondary lower limb lymphedema (LLL) on health-related quality of life (HR-QOL), physical function, self-reported symptoms, lower limb volume, and adverse events.
Design: Systematic review following the guidelines from the Cochrane Handbook of Systematic Reviews of Interventions.
Data sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), and clinicaltrials.gov.
Eligibility criteria: Prospective exercise trials investigating exercise interventions as a single- or multicomponent programme in patients with LLL including assessment of at least one of the following outcomes: HR-QOL, self-reported LLL symptoms (heaviness, tension, and pain), physical function, or lower limb volume. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs), single-group studies, and cross-over trials were eligible. Trials with participants at risk of LLL or a diagnosis of filariasis or lipedema were excluded.
Results: Twelve studies were included: three RCTs, five single-group studies, and four cross-over trials with a total of three hundred and sixty-seven participants. In patients with LLL, irrespective of severity, exercise seemed to have small but positive effects on HR-QOL, physical function, pain, and lower limb volume. Quality assessment showed high risk of bias. Large heterogeneity in participants, interventions, and outcome measures hinders performing of meta-analyses.
Interpretation: Based on a small number of studies with large clinical heterogeneity, poor methodological quality, hence low level of certainty of evidence, it was not possible to provide evidence-based recommendations on exercise for patients with LLL.
期刊介绍:
Acta Oncologica is a journal for the clinical oncologist and accepts articles within all fields of clinical cancer research. Articles on tumour pathology, experimental oncology, radiobiology, cancer epidemiology and medical radio physics are also welcome, especially if they have a clinical aim or interest. Scientific articles on cancer nursing and psychological or social aspects of cancer are also welcomed. Extensive material may be published as Supplements, for which special conditions apply.