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A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial Comparing Effects of Qigong and Exercise/Nutrition Training on Fatigue and Other Outcomes in Female Cancer Survivors
被引:4
|作者:
Zimmerman, Chloe S.
[1
,3
,6
]
Temereanca, Simona
[2
,4
]
Daniels, Dylan
[1
]
Penner, Cooper
[1
]
Cannonier, Tariq
[1
]
Jones, Stephanie R.
[1
,2
,5
]
Kerr, Catherine
[1
,3
]
机构:
[1] Brown Univ, Dept Neurosci, Providence, RI USA
[2] Brown Univ, Robert J & Nancy D Carney Inst Brain Sci, Providence, RI USA
[3] Miriam Hosp, Womens Med Collaborat Lifestyle Med, Providence, RI USA
[4] Brown Univ, Dept Psychiat & Human Behav, Warren Alpert Med Sch, Providence, RI USA
[5] VA Providence, VA RR&D Ctr Neurorestorat & Neurotechnol, Providence, RI USA
[6] Brown Univ, Dept Neurosci, Sidney Frank Hall Life Sci, Box GL M,185 Meeting St, Providence, RI 02912 USA
关键词:
Qigong;
exercise;
nutrition;
cancer-related fatigue;
cancer survivorship;
vitality;
vital energy;
QUALITY-OF-LIFE;
FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT;
MEDICAL QIGONG;
EFFECT SIZE;
TAI CHI;
THERAPY;
EXERCISE;
STATISTICS;
VALIDATION;
SLEEP;
D O I:
10.1177/15347354231162584
中图分类号:
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号:
100214 ;
摘要:
Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is a common and burdensome, often long-term side effect of cancer and its treatment. Many non-pharmacological treatments have been investigated as possible CRF therapies, including exercise, nutrition, health/psycho-education, and mind-body therapies. However, studies directly comparing the efficacy of these treatments in randomized controlled trials are lacking. To fill this gap, we conducted a parallel single blind randomized controlled pilot efficacy trial with women with CRF to directly compare the effects of Qigong (a form of mind-body intervention) (n = 11) to an intervention that combined strength and aerobic exercise, plant-based nutrition and health/psycho-education (n = 13) in a per protocol analysis. This design was chosen to determine the comparative efficacy of 2 non-pharmacologic interventions, with different physical demand intensities, in reducing the primary outcome measure of self-reported fatigue (FACIT "Additional Concerns" subscale). Both interventions showed a mean fatigue improvement of more than double the pre-established minimal clinically important difference of 3 (qigong: 7.068 +/- 10.30, exercise/nutrition: 8.846 +/- 12.001). Mixed effects ANOVA analysis of group x time interactions revealed a significant main effect of time, such that both groups significantly improved fatigue from pre- to post-treatment (F(1,22) = 11.898, P = .002, generalized eta squared effect size = 0.116) There was no significant difference between fatigue improvement between groups (independent samples t-test: P = .70 ), suggesting a potential equivalence or non-inferiority of interventions, which we could not definitively establish due to our small sample size. This study provides evidence from a small sample of n = 24 women with CRF that qigong improves fatigue similarly to exercise-nutrition courses. Qigong additionally significantly improved secondary measures of mood, emotion regulation, and stress, while exercise/nutrition significantly improved secondary measures of sleep/fatigue. These findings provide preliminary evidence for divergent mechanisms of fatigue improvement across interventions, with qigong providing a gentler and lower-intensity alternative to exercise/nutrition.
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