Prehabilitation During the Neoadjuvant Window of Opportunity in Older Women With Ovarian Cancer
NCT ID: NCT05092763
Last Updated: 2025-04-29
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
30 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-12-10
2024-10-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Although all patients with ovarian cancer undergo this treatment schedule, older women are at particularly high risk for adverse events. Among women with ovarian cancer, more than 50% are over the age of 60 and up to 40% of these older women are defined as frail. Both age and frailty have been shown to be independent predictors of surgical complications, chemotherapy complications, as well as under-treatment with chemotherapy, resulting in inferior cancer-specific survival. Additionally, the definition of aging contains mechanisms beyond the chronological age of the patient. Both a cancer diagnosis and receipt of chemotherapy lead to synergistic biologic and physiologic changes that accelerate aging and increase frailty. Many older women with ovarian cancer are treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy which is delivered in 3-4 cycles prior to surgery and this time period provides an optimal window to intervene to improve high-risk older patients' surgical outcomes.
Prehabilitation is the process of enhancing an individual's functional capacity prior to a forthcoming stressor, such as a major surgery, with the goal of improving postoperative outcomes. Prehabilitation programs are multimodal and can involve medical optimization, preoperative physical exercise, nutritional support and stress/anxiety reduction. Benefits of prehabilitation include reduced length of stay, fewer postoperative complications and improved postoperative pain. Even small increases in light physical activity or reducing sedentary time has been shown to slow or halt functional decline and improve quality of life. Among advanced cancer patients, physical activity interventions have been shown to be safe and feasible. They have also been associated with improved aerobic capacity, increased strength, and increased physical function. These parameters are important in older ovarian cancer patients to prevent functional decline, reduce frailty, and decrease surgical morbidity.
However, not all prehabilitation interventions or physical activity interventions are effective. There are populations that do not have sufficient time prior to surgery to have a meaningful change in activity or nutrition, this is especially true for cancer patients who often have a short window between diagnosis and surgery. Furthermore, many physical activity interventions in the pre-operative period have used structured, in-person, professionally-led programs with high intensity activity that may not be appropriate for the changing symptom burden of older ovarian cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Instead of a one-size fits all approach, the American Cancer Society recommends that patients with advanced cancer engage in physical activity tailored to their capability. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis of prehabilitation in cancer patients undergoing abdominal operations noted that data specific to older patients are sparse. This study seeks to address this critical research gap by testing a home-based, patient-tailored, physical activity prehabilitation program (FIT4SURGERY) among older women with ovarian cancer undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Physical activity has been shown to improve functional health and energy balance as well as decrease rates of frailty and sarcopenia, important prognostic factors prior to surgery, especially for older adults, and important prognostic factors for ovarian cancer. Increasing physical activity and motivating behavior change is difficult and many preoperative physical activity interventions have not utilized techniques and frameworks which have been successfully used among patients with chronic diseases. Social cognitive theory (SCT) is a framework which has been successfully used to design physical activity inventions that lead to behavior change. SCT has three main components, self-monitoring, self-judgment and self-evaluation which all contribute to self-regulation which is ultimately what drives behavior change. Behavioral interventions using SCT frameworks have been studied in healthy participants including cancer survivors, and have been shown to increase physical activity. Among women with metastatic breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy, an mHealth behavioral physical activity intervention consisting of a wearable activity tracker to provide direct feedback and a mobile app with motivational messaging, has been implemented by our research group. This study examines a modified version of this intervention, as prehabilitation, for the older ovarian cancer patient, as SCT-driven physical activity interventions have not been studied in a preoperative population.
Compared to the gold standard of professionally led, physical activity interventions, interventions via phone and email have been shown to be potentially as effective as more resource intensive interventions at increasing physical activity. Interventions using mHealth app-based platforms have also been shown to increase physical activity. Specifically, for older patients with ovarian cancer undergoing chemotherapy, interventions using wearable devices may be useful because they are home-based, easy to use, give immediate feedback, and use technology most patients already own. Caregivers can also be enlisted to help patients; activating social support for physical activity. Wearable devices allow for remote monitoring of participants and prevent the need for in-person visits which may be difficult for patients undergoing chemotherapy particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, Fit4Surgery incorporates daily reported symptom burden into activity goals as symptoms can wax and wane during treatment. Such a tailored, home-based, patient-specific approach that facilitates the gradual and safe adoption of physical activity that can be supported by caregivers is ideal for older ovarian cancer patients.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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FIT4SURGERY Intervention
The Fit4Surgery intervention consists of the FitBit Inspire HR device, the Fit4Surgery mobile app, and weekly coaching calls.
FIT4SURGERY
The Fit4Surgery intervention consists of the FitBit Inspire HR device, the Fit4Surgery mobile app, and weekly coaching calls. Patients are asked to wear the Fitbit through the entire 9-12 weeks in which they are receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy both when asleep and when awake. Patients are taught how to understand the Fitbit outputs on the application, for example, understanding how to monitor their steps and heart rate. Caregivers are also be encouraged to assist patients. Patients are provided with information about the benefits of physical activity and effective behavior change strategies for incorporating physical activity into their daily lives. These include things such as short bouts of activity by walking around the room during commercial breaks or planning to be dropped off a short walk from a destination.
Healthy Lifestyle Control
The Healthy Lifestyle Control group engages in their usual activities and receives education about physical activity and a healthy lifestyle for ovarian cancer patients. They receive weekly check in calls.
Healthy Lifestyle Control
Participants assigned to this study arm are instructed to go about their usual activities and receive education about physical activity and a healthy lifestyle for ovarian cancer patients. They are encouraged to download the free Cancer.Net mobile app and visit the cancer.net website for educational materials related to ovarian cancer and survivorship. At the end of the 9-12 week intervention, participants in the Healthy Lifestyle group receive a Fitbit for their optional, personal use after surgery.
Interventions
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FIT4SURGERY
The Fit4Surgery intervention consists of the FitBit Inspire HR device, the Fit4Surgery mobile app, and weekly coaching calls. Patients are asked to wear the Fitbit through the entire 9-12 weeks in which they are receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy both when asleep and when awake. Patients are taught how to understand the Fitbit outputs on the application, for example, understanding how to monitor their steps and heart rate. Caregivers are also be encouraged to assist patients. Patients are provided with information about the benefits of physical activity and effective behavior change strategies for incorporating physical activity into their daily lives. These include things such as short bouts of activity by walking around the room during commercial breaks or planning to be dropped off a short walk from a destination.
Healthy Lifestyle Control
Participants assigned to this study arm are instructed to go about their usual activities and receive education about physical activity and a healthy lifestyle for ovarian cancer patients. They are encouraged to download the free Cancer.Net mobile app and visit the cancer.net website for educational materials related to ovarian cancer and survivorship. At the end of the 9-12 week intervention, participants in the Healthy Lifestyle group receive a Fitbit for their optional, personal use after surgery.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Diagnosed with ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer and undergoing planned neoadjuvant chemotherapy and are expecting to undergo planned surgery
* Fluent in spoken and written English
* Own a smartphone
* Have access to the internet to complete assessments
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with uncontrolled cardiovascular disease, who are non-ambulatory, or who have severe cognitive or functional limitations precluding their ability to participate in a physical activity intervention
* Pregnant women or prisoners
* Patients whose oncologist has not provided clearance for their participation
60 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Northwestern University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Emma Barber
Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Emma Barber, MD, MS
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Northwestern University
Locations
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Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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STU00215518
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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