乳腺癌肿瘤学治疗中的预康复和支持性护理:前瞻性--B

Dr Shelley Kay, Dr Suzanne Grant, A/Prof Judith Lacey, Dr Sanjeev Kumar, Ms Kim Kerin-Ayres, Dr Justine Stehn, Dr Maria Gonzalez, S. Templeton, Gillian Heller, S. Wahlroos, A. Malalasekera, Cindy Mak, C. Seet-Lee, Ainsley Bell, Susannah Graham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

新辅助治疗已成为 II/III 期 HER2 阳性和三阴性乳腺癌患者以及部分局部晚期和边缘可切除的高风险管腔 B 型乳腺癌患者的标准治疗方法(1)。疲劳、心脏毒性、神经毒性、焦虑、失眠、血管运动症状、胃肠功能紊乱等副作用以及一系列与免疫相关的不良反应,都会影响治疗耐受性、长期疗效和生活质量。治疗后,许多妇女的体脂增加、瘦肉减少,并出现代谢综合征 (2) 和加速心脏衰老 (3)。所有这些都是可以改变的运动目标。本研究的目的是通过对消费者和医疗保健专业人员的定性研究,确定早期多模式支持性护理计划能否减轻这些副作用,并改善化疗完成情况、心脏代谢、残余癌症负担(pCR)和手术效果。 这是一项前瞻性、混合方法的可行性研究,共招募了 23 名接受乳腺癌新辅助治疗的妇女,结合了定性和定量数据的收集与分析。监督下的运动干预设计包括有氧间歇训练、阻力训练和平衡训练,每周两次,每次训练根据症状负担进行调整,并计算出相对的训练剂量强度。此外,还提供了一个可选的家用训练计划。在基线、一线和二线治疗结束后以及手术后 6 个月收集身体成分、上下肢力量和心脏代谢结果测量数据。 全部数据将于 2024 年 3 月完成并提交。完全病理反应率很高(18/22)。目前,已有 13 名参与者完成了手术后 6 个月的评估,初步分析表明,在治疗期间和治疗后,肌肉力量和肌肉质量均有所增强。该计划被认为是可接受的、可行的,参加人数和满意度都很高。额外的家庭计划的接受度较低。运动生理学家感兴趣的是参与者对集群训练的反应、感觉消耗率对训练和力量测试负荷的反映程度、心率和血压反应以及治疗毒性,包括免疫疗法诱发肝炎的病例。许多参与者在化疗结束后比化疗前更强壮,并表示运动给了他们一种控制感。 在新辅助化疗期间进行运动,并辅以其他支持疗法来控制症状,可改善身体和社会心理功能。该计划可行且可接受,满意度高。肌肉质量可以通过有监督的运动训练来维持,并在术后6个月内保持不变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
PREHABILITATION AND SUPPORTIVE CARE IN ONCOLOGY TREATMENT OF BREAST CANCER: PROACTIVE-B
Neoadjuvant therapy has become standard treatment for patients with Stage II/III HER2 positive and triple negative breast cancer and in selected patients with locally advanced and borderline resectable high risk, luminal B breast cancer (1). Side effects such as fatigue, cardiotoxicity, neurotoxicity, anxiety, insomnia, vasomotor symptoms, gastrointestinal disturbance as well as a raft of immune-related adverse events, impact treatment tolerance, long term outcomes and quality of life. Post-treatment, many women increase body fat and decrease lean mass and develop metabolic syndrome (2) and accelerated cardiac aging (3). All of these are modifiable targets of exercise. The aim of this study was to determine if an early multi-modal supportive care program, designed through a qualitative study from consumers and healthcare professionals, can mitigate these side effects and improve chemotherapy completion, cardiometabolic, residual cancer burden (pCR) and surgical outcomes. This was a prospective, mixed-method, feasibility study that recruited 23 women receiving neoadjuvant therapy for breast cancer, combining qualitative and quantitative data collection and analysis. The supervised exercise intervention was designed to include aerobic interval, resistance and balance training twice/week, adapted for symptom burden in each session with relative training dose intensity calculated. An optional home program as also provided with therabands. Body composition, upper and lower body strength and cardiometabolic outcome measures were collected at baseline, end of first and second line of treatment and then 6 months post-surgery. Full data will be completed in March 2024 to be presented. There was a high rate of complete pathological response (18/22). Currently, 13 participants have completed 6 month post-surgery assessments and preliminary analyses indicate increases in strength and maintenance of muscle mass during and after treatment. The program was found to be acceptable and feasible with high attendance and satisfaction ratings. The additional home program had poor uptake. Of interest to exercise physiologists was participant responses to cluster set training, how poorly rate of perceived exertion reflected training and strength testing loads, heart rate and blood pressure responses and treatment toxicities including cases of immunotherapy induced hepatitis. Many participants were stronger at the end of chemotherapy than before and reported that exercise gave them a sense of control. Adapting exercise during neoadjuvant chemotherapy with additional supportive therapies for symptom management, improved physical and psychosocial functioning. The program was feasible and acceptable, with high satisfaction reported. Muscle mass can be maintained with supervised exercise training and maintained and 6 months after surgery.
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