自我监测应用程序在支持癌症农村患者运动肿瘤项目后保持体力活动方面的有效性:聚类随机对照试验。

IF 3.3 Q2 ONCOLOGY
JMIR Cancer Pub Date : 2023-09-07 DOI:10.2196/47187
Manuel Ester, Chad W Wagoner, Julianna Dreger, Guanmin Chen, Meghan H McDonough, Margaret L McNeely, S Nicole Culos-Reed
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:尽管体育活动(PA)对癌症患者有好处,但大多数人仍然不够活跃。运动肿瘤学干预可以提高PA水平。由于持续的心理和环境PA障碍,个体在干预后难以维持PA水平。健康技术(eHealth)可以解决一些PA障碍,并在肿瘤学中提供有效、可扩展的PA干预,但其对改变PA水平的有效性仍然参差不齐。使用eHealth支持农村癌症患者的PA维持,鉴于PA水平较低和健康结果较差,这些患者可能需要更大的PA支持,这一研究仍然不足。方法:将这项2臂、整群随机对照试验纳入癌症提高生活质量运动(EXCEL)的有效性实施研究。在同意后,参与者被EXCEL类聚类1:1随机分配到干预(24周基于应用程序的PA自我监测)或等待名单控制(24周后访问应用程序)。两组都完成了为期12周的基于网络的运动肿瘤学项目,然后是为期12周自我指导的PA维护期。使用卡方检验和双尾t检验比较基线人口统计学、电子健康素养和患者报告的结果。在整个干预过程中测量应用程序的使用情况。在基线、12周和24周收集主要结果自我报告的中度至剧烈PA(MVPA)分钟和次要结果客观MVPA分钟和步骤以及应用程序可用性评级。通过线性混合模型评估干预对自我报告MVPA维持的影响,并对次要结果进行描述性探讨。结果:在359名符合条件的EXCEL参与者中,205人(57.1%)同意,199人(55.4%;干预:106/199,53.3%;对照:93/199,46.7%)开始研究,183人(51%;干预:100/183,54.6%;对照:83/183,45.4%)和141人(39.3%;干预:69/141,48.9%;对照:72/141,51.1%)分别完成了12周和24周的测量。平均年龄57.3岁(标准差11.5)。大多数参与者是女性(174/199,87.4%)、白人(163/199,81.9%)和被诊断为癌症(108/199,54.3%)。干预组和等待名单对照组的中位基线自我报告每周MVPA分钟数分别为60.0(IQR 0-180)和40.0(IQR0-135)(P=.74)。中位应用程序使用持续时间为10.3(IQR 1.3-23.9)周,每周有9.6(IQR 4.4-17.8)个自我监测条目。两组在12周时每周MVPA分钟数均显著增加(结论:基于应用程序的自我监测干预并没有改善MVPA的维持,但可能有助于在MVPA维持期间增加步数。需要做更多的工作来充分发挥电子健康在运动肿瘤学中的潜力。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04790578;https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04790578.International注册报告标识符(irrid):RR2-10.1016/j.ct.2021.106474。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Effectiveness of a Self-Monitoring App in Supporting Physical Activity Maintenance Among Rural Canadians With Cancer After an Exercise Oncology Program: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

Effectiveness of a Self-Monitoring App in Supporting Physical Activity Maintenance Among Rural Canadians With Cancer After an Exercise Oncology Program: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

Effectiveness of a Self-Monitoring App in Supporting Physical Activity Maintenance Among Rural Canadians With Cancer After an Exercise Oncology Program: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

Effectiveness of a Self-Monitoring App in Supporting Physical Activity Maintenance Among Rural Canadians With Cancer After an Exercise Oncology Program: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.

Background: Despite the benefits of physical activity (PA) for individuals with cancer, most remain insufficiently active. Exercise oncology interventions can improve PA levels. Individuals struggle to maintain PA levels after interventions because of persistent psychological and environmental PA barriers. Health technology (eHealth) may address some PA barriers and deliver effective, scalable PA interventions in oncology, yet its effectiveness for changing PA levels remains mixed. Using eHealth to support PA maintenance among rural populations with cancer, who may need greater PA support given lower PA levels and worse health outcomes, remains under-studied.

Objective: This study examined the effectiveness of an app-based self-monitoring intervention in supporting PA maintenance among rural populations with cancer after a supervised web-based exercise oncology program.

Methods: This 2-arm, cluster randomized controlled trial was embedded within the Exercise for Cancer to Enhance Living Well (EXCEL) effectiveness-implementation study. Upon consent, participants were randomized 1:1 by EXCEL class clusters to the intervention (24 weeks of app-based PA self-monitoring) or waitlist control (app access after 24 weeks). Both groups completed a 12-week supervised web-based exercise oncology program followed by a 12-week self-directed PA maintenance period. Baseline demographics, eHealth literacy, and patient-reported outcomes were compared using chi-square and 2-tailed t tests. App use was measured throughout the intervention. The primary outcome-self-reported moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) minutes-and secondary outcomes-objective MVPA minutes and steps and app usability ratings-were collected at baseline, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Intervention effects on self-report MVPA maintenance were assessed via linear mixed modeling, with secondary outcomes explored descriptively.

Results: Of the 359 eligible EXCEL participants, 205 (57.1%) consented, 199 (55.4%; intervention: 106/199, 53.3%; control: 93/199, 46.7%) started the study, and 183 (51%; intervention: 100/183, 54.6%; control: 83/183, 45.4%) and 141 (39.3%; intervention: 69/141, 48.9%; control: 72/141, 51.1%) completed 12- and 24-week measures, respectively. Mean age was 57.3 (SD 11.5) years. Most participants were female (174/199, 87.4%), White (163/199, 81.9%), and diagnosed with breast cancer (108/199, 54.3%). Median baseline self-report weekly MVPA minutes were 60.0 (IQR 0-180) and 40.0 (IQR 0-135) for the intervention and waitlist control groups, respectively (P=.74). Median app use duration was 10.3 (IQR 1.3-23.9) weeks, with 9.6 (IQR 4.4-17.8) self-monitoring entries/week. Both groups increased their weekly MVPA minutes significantly at 12 weeks (P<.001) and maintained the increases at 24 weeks (P<.001), relative to baseline, with no between-group differences (P=.87). The intervention group had significantly higher step counts for 7 of the 12 weeks during the PA maintenance period (P=.048 to <.001).

Conclusions: The app-based self-monitoring intervention did not improve MVPA maintenance but may have contributed to increased step counts during the PA maintenance period. More work is needed to realize the full potential of eHealth in exercise oncology.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04790578; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04790578.

International registered report identifier (irrid): RR2-10.1016/j.cct.2021.106474.

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来源期刊
JMIR Cancer
JMIR Cancer ONCOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
12 weeks
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