Home-Based Physical Activity Intervention for Taxane-Induced CIPN
NCT ID: NCT04621721
Last Updated: 2020-11-09
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
312 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-08-14
2024-09-30
Brief Summary
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The proposed exercise intervention addresses gait/balance impairments and motor (resistance) components of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy. The mechanism by which the intervention achieves the proposed outcomes is though 1) increasing endoneurial blood flow to peripheral nerves and mitochondria resulting in reduction in neuropathic symptoms (including pain) and clinical manifestations of peripheral neuropathy, while improving gait/balance in those with persistent neuropathy; 2) The subsequent increase in nutrient supply allows the mitochondria to function more efficiently, and may alleviate the neuropathic manifestations of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy. 15
This is the first study proposing to test the home-delivery of an exercise intervention specifically aimed at persistent (long-term) taxane-induced neuropathy. If successful, this study will provide the only evidence-based intervention for patients suffering from persistent neuropathy from neurotoxic chemotherapy. Additionally, the home-delivery format makes this intervention easily translated into clinical practice.
Specific Aims:
In a sample of patients who completed a taxane-containing chemotherapy regimen (\> 1 year) for breast cancer and who have a persistent neuropathy (VAS score of \> 3) the specific aims of this RCT are:
1. To test the efficacy of a 16-week -delivered program of gait/balance training plus resistance exercise, compared to an educational attention control condition in increasing muscle strength, improving gait/balance and nerve conduction parameters, decreasing the severity of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy symptoms, and increasing quality of life.
2. To evaluate for differences in muscle strength, gait/balance, sensory (sural) and motor (peroneal) nerve conduction, peripheral neuropathy symptoms, and quality of life (QOL) between patients who receive the exercise program, compared to those in an educational attention control condition controlling for age, BMI, taxane cycles and intervals, neuropathic pain, neuropathy/pain medications, current resistance exercise participation and falls/near falls experienced.
Detailed Description
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Mitochondrial and vascular dysfunctions lead to sensory loss and reduced muscle strength, functions dependent upon cellular mitochondria to generate energy in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphate). Thus, mitochondrial dysfunction results in the loss of energy-generating capability, and vascular impairment deprives muscle and nerve cells of oxygen-rich nutrients, further impairing neuronal function. A limited number of human and animal studies have demonstrated that exercise stimulates endothelium-dependent vasodilation and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression, increasing endoneurial blood flow and energy generating capacity through mitochondrial protein synthesis and glycolysis, 13, 14
The proposed exercise intervention addresses gait/balance impairments and motor (resistance) components of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy. The mechanism by which the intervention achieves the proposed outcomes is though 1) increasing endoneurial blood flow to peripheral nerves and mitochondria resulting in reduction in neuropathic symptoms (including pain) and clinical manifestations of peripheral neuropathy, while improving gait/balance in those with persistent neuropathy; 2) The subsequent increase in nutrient supply allows the mitochondria to function more efficiently, and may alleviate the neuropathic manifestations of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy.
Specific Aims:
In a sample of patients who completed a taxane-containing chemotherapy regimen (\> 1 year) for breast cancer and who have a persistent neuropathy (VAS score of \> 3) the specific aims of this RCT are:
1. To test the efficacy of a 16-week -delivered program of gait/balance training plus resistance exercise, compared to an educational attention control condition in increasing muscle strength, improving gait/balance and nerve conduction parameters, decreasing the severity of taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy symptoms, and increasing quality of life.
2. To evaluate for differences in muscle strength, gait/balance, sensory (sural) and motor (peroneal) nerve conduction, peripheral neuropathy symptoms, and quality of life (QOL) between patients who receive the exercise program, compared to those in an educational attention control condition controlling for age, BMI, taxane cycles and intervals, neuropathic pain, neuropathy/pain medications, current resistance exercise participation and falls/near falls experienced
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Intervention Group
The intervention will consist of a 16-week, home-based gait/balance training and progressive resistance exercises for lower extremities using resistance power bands. Participants will be given the home-based gait/balance training and progressive resistance exercise training access via a link or by DVD, and the resistance training band, and wide, firm foam surface. The intervention group will begin with light warm-up and stretching activity then a 10 minute each of gait/balance and 10 minutes of resistive (strength) training components. The program begins with light stretching to address any range of motion limitations that may affect ability to maintain balance and postural stability, and consisted of hamstring quadricep, gastroc, and soleus stretches. During stretching exercises, participants held each stretch for 10-15 seconds, repeating each stretch 2-3 times for each lower extremity. Stretching exercises do not change during the intervention.
Gait/balance & resistive exercise
Walking forward and back, walking with head motion, static standing, Standing Partial Tandem, Tandem Standing heel to toe, Standing with head turns Single leg stance and March in place. Resistance exercises include: calf raises, lunges, supine leg curls and extensions.
Attention Control Group
The Attention Control group will receive an educational intervention via a journal in which to record their clinic appointments, and standardized American Cancer Society pamphlets which have been adjusted to fit within the journal binding for easy reference. At each data collection encounter, the intervention research assistant will discuss the information in each pamphlet, allowing time for questions related to the material. The educational materials consist of 1) Emotions and Breast Cancer; 2) Body Image and Sexuality After Breast Cancer; 3) Follow up Care After Breast Cancer Treatment; 4) Nutrition and Cancer. Sessions last approximately 45-60 minutes and occur at the same intervals as the intervention group and will precede data collection. Attention Control group participants will receive telephone calls every other week which will entail a social visit and reminder of data collection/attention intervention appointments to further equalize contact.
Gait/balance & resistive exercise
Walking forward and back, walking with head motion, static standing, Standing Partial Tandem, Tandem Standing heel to toe, Standing with head turns Single leg stance and March in place. Resistance exercises include: calf raises, lunges, supine leg curls and extensions.
Interventions
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Gait/balance & resistive exercise
Walking forward and back, walking with head motion, static standing, Standing Partial Tandem, Tandem Standing heel to toe, Standing with head turns Single leg stance and March in place. Resistance exercises include: calf raises, lunges, supine leg curls and extensions.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
21 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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National Cancer Institute (NCI)
NIH
University of South Florida
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Constance Visovsky
Role: primary
Jillian Coury
Role: backup
References
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Ozorio Dutra SV, Schwab L, Coury J, Ji M, Visovsky C. Process evaluation protocol plan for a home-based physical activity intervention versus educational intervention for persistent taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy (B-HAPI study): a randomized controlled trial. BMC Cancer. 2024 Jun 27;24(1):777. doi: 10.1186/s12885-024-12444-x.
Teran-Wodzinski P, Haladay D, Vu T, Ji M, Coury J, Adams A, Schwab L, Visovsky C. Assessing gait, balance, and muscle strength among breast cancer survivors with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN): study protocol for a randomized controlled clinical trial. Trials. 2022 Apr 27;23(1):363. doi: 10.1186/s13063-022-06294-w.
Other Identifiers
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Pro00040035
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id