Neo-train: study protocol and feasibility results for a two-arm randomized controlled trial investigating the effect of supervised exercise during neoadjuvant chemotherapy on tumour response in patients with breast cancer
Neo-train: study protocol and feasibility results for a two-arm randomized controlled trial investigating the effect of supervised exercise during neoadjuvant chemotherapy on tumour response in patients with breast cancer
Background: prehabilitation with exercise interventions during neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) is effective in reducing physical and psychosocial chemotherapy-related adverse events in patients with cancer. In preclinical studies, data also support a growth inhibitory effect of aerobic exercise on the tumour microenvironment with possible improved chemotherapy delivery but evidence in human patients is limited. The aim of the study here described is to investigate if supervised exercise with high-intensity aerobic and resistance training during NACT can improve tumour reduction in patients with breast cancer.
Methods: this parallel two-armed randomized controlled trial is planned to include 120 women aged ≥ 18 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer starting standard NACT at a university hospital in Denmark (a total of 90 participants needed according to the power calculation and allowing 25% (n = 30) dropout). The participants will be randomized to usual care or supervised exercise consisting of high-intensity interval training on a stationary exercise bike and machine-based progressive resistance training offered three times a week for 24 weeks during NACT, and screening-based advice to seek counselling in case of moderate-severe psychological distress (Neo-Train program). The primary outcome is tumour size change (maximum diameter of the largest lesion in millimetre) measured by magnetic resonance imaging prior to surgery. Secondary outcomes include clinical/pathological, physical and patient-reported measures such as relative dose intensity of NACT, hospital admissions, body composition, physical fitness, muscle strength, health-related quality of life, general anxiety, depression, and biological measures such as intratumoural vascularity, tumour infiltrating lymphocytes, circulating tumour DNA and blood chemistry. Outcomes will be measured at baseline (one week before to 1–2 weeks after starting NACT), during NACT (approximately week 7, 13 and 19), pre-surgery (approximately week 21–29), at surgery (approximately week 21–30) and 3 months post-surgery (approximately 33–42 weeks from baseline).
Discussion: this study will provide novel and important data on the potential benefits of supervised aerobic and resistance exercise concomitant to NACT on tumour response and the tumour microenvironment in patients with breast cancer, with potential importance for survival and risk of recurrence. If effective, our study may help increase focus of exercise as an active part of the neoadjuvant treatment strategy.
Trial registration: the trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04623554) on November 10, 2020.
Breast neoplasms, High intensity interval training, Neoadjuvant therapy, Prehabilitation, Preoperative exercise, Treatment outcome
Kjeldsted, Eva
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Ammitzbøll, Gunn
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Jørgensen, Lars Bo
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Lodin, Alexey
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Bojesen, Rasmus Dahlin
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Ceballos, Silvia Gonzalez
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Rosthøj, Susanne
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Lænkholm, Anne-vibeke
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Skou, Søren T.
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Jack, Sandy
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Gehl, Julie
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Dalton, Susanne Oksbjerg
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19 August 2023
Kjeldsted, Eva
3000e1e9-b2f0-4b40-98aa-62a5674141db
Ammitzbøll, Gunn
2e4a8b44-30c7-4272-97e4-534a5bca5286
Jørgensen, Lars Bo
b246b4b7-35c7-4912-8df7-57acb96697b4
Lodin, Alexey
36e984e6-437f-4662-98ec-5edf98171483
Bojesen, Rasmus Dahlin
e4a287cf-6708-499f-809f-24f130de285c
Ceballos, Silvia Gonzalez
07a5f5a2-a782-4273-be6e-5cf1c8cbdc7f
Rosthøj, Susanne
fd438428-0e5c-46df-baab-199f98698125
Lænkholm, Anne-vibeke
63d95390-d90d-4266-883c-ba800a4241b0
Skou, Søren T.
4d6270f8-d980-4b80-a5ed-a2b7f06ca3d9
Jack, Sandy
a175e649-83e1-4a76-8f11-ab37ffd954ea
Gehl, Julie
6f4c7fd0-3b61-4a42-8423-27e092700202
Dalton, Susanne Oksbjerg
e72c388e-78c6-45c7-bd59-f17d563d16f7
Kjeldsted, Eva, Ammitzbøll, Gunn, Jørgensen, Lars Bo, Lodin, Alexey, Bojesen, Rasmus Dahlin, Ceballos, Silvia Gonzalez, Rosthøj, Susanne, Lænkholm, Anne-vibeke, Skou, Søren T., Jack, Sandy, Gehl, Julie and Dalton, Susanne Oksbjerg
(2023)
Neo-train: study protocol and feasibility results for a two-arm randomized controlled trial investigating the effect of supervised exercise during neoadjuvant chemotherapy on tumour response in patients with breast cancer.
BMC Cancer, 23 (1), [777].
(doi:10.1186/s12885-023-11284-5).
Abstract
Background: prehabilitation with exercise interventions during neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) is effective in reducing physical and psychosocial chemotherapy-related adverse events in patients with cancer. In preclinical studies, data also support a growth inhibitory effect of aerobic exercise on the tumour microenvironment with possible improved chemotherapy delivery but evidence in human patients is limited. The aim of the study here described is to investigate if supervised exercise with high-intensity aerobic and resistance training during NACT can improve tumour reduction in patients with breast cancer.
Methods: this parallel two-armed randomized controlled trial is planned to include 120 women aged ≥ 18 years with newly diagnosed breast cancer starting standard NACT at a university hospital in Denmark (a total of 90 participants needed according to the power calculation and allowing 25% (n = 30) dropout). The participants will be randomized to usual care or supervised exercise consisting of high-intensity interval training on a stationary exercise bike and machine-based progressive resistance training offered three times a week for 24 weeks during NACT, and screening-based advice to seek counselling in case of moderate-severe psychological distress (Neo-Train program). The primary outcome is tumour size change (maximum diameter of the largest lesion in millimetre) measured by magnetic resonance imaging prior to surgery. Secondary outcomes include clinical/pathological, physical and patient-reported measures such as relative dose intensity of NACT, hospital admissions, body composition, physical fitness, muscle strength, health-related quality of life, general anxiety, depression, and biological measures such as intratumoural vascularity, tumour infiltrating lymphocytes, circulating tumour DNA and blood chemistry. Outcomes will be measured at baseline (one week before to 1–2 weeks after starting NACT), during NACT (approximately week 7, 13 and 19), pre-surgery (approximately week 21–29), at surgery (approximately week 21–30) and 3 months post-surgery (approximately 33–42 weeks from baseline).
Discussion: this study will provide novel and important data on the potential benefits of supervised aerobic and resistance exercise concomitant to NACT on tumour response and the tumour microenvironment in patients with breast cancer, with potential importance for survival and risk of recurrence. If effective, our study may help increase focus of exercise as an active part of the neoadjuvant treatment strategy.
Trial registration: the trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04623554) on November 10, 2020.
Text
s12885-023-11284-5
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 9 August 2023
Published date: 19 August 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
The authors wish to thank the Danish Cancer Biobank and Region Zealand Biobank for the handling and storage of biological material, and the DIMA department at KMD A/S for the collaboration on management of physical activity data from the activity trackers (Vivosmart 4, Garmin International Inc., Olathe, KS, USA). We also wish to thank the exercise locations: (1) Department of Physiotherapy, Naestved-Slagelse-Ringsted Hospitals, Naestved; (2) Department of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy, Zealand University Hospital, Roskilde; (3) Department of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy, Holbaek Hospital, Holbaek; (4) Department of Physiotherapy, Naestved-Slagelse-Ringsted Hospitals, Slagelse/ Physiotherapy Centre Aktivt Velvaere, Slagelse; (5) Guldborgsund Municipal Rehabilitation Centre, Nykoebing Falster. Last, a special thanks to the clinicians who provided feedback in the design phase, and the patients with breast cancer who participated in the patient panel and the pilot study.
Funding Information:
This trial will be conducted as part of research activities in the Danish Research Centre for Equality in Cancer (COMPAS), which is supported by ‘Knæk Cancer’/Danish Cancer Society (grant no. R223-A13094-18-S68). The study also received funding from Krista and Viggo Petersen Foundation (grant no. 6030/2HAH/ks), Helsefonden (grant no. 21-B-0396), Dansk Kræftforskningsfond, Dagmar Marshall Fond, Aase og Ejnar Danielsens Fond (grant no. 21-10-0143), the Department of Clinical Oncology and Palliative Care, Zealand University Hospital, and Region Zealand. The funders have no role in the design, data collection, analyses or interpretation of the study.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.
Keywords:
Breast neoplasms, High intensity interval training, Neoadjuvant therapy, Prehabilitation, Preoperative exercise, Treatment outcome
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 485632
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485632
ISSN: 1471-2407
PURE UUID: 7fd757e7-cf01-4a30-8733-f6371ab8b2ed
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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2023 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:24
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Contributors
Author:
Eva Kjeldsted
Author:
Gunn Ammitzbøll
Author:
Lars Bo Jørgensen
Author:
Alexey Lodin
Author:
Rasmus Dahlin Bojesen
Author:
Silvia Gonzalez Ceballos
Author:
Susanne Rosthøj
Author:
Anne-vibeke Lænkholm
Author:
Søren T. Skou
Author:
Sandy Jack
Author:
Julie Gehl
Author:
Susanne Oksbjerg Dalton
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