Exercise training as a novel primary treatment for localised prostate cancer: a multi-site randomised controlled phase II study

被引:0
|
作者
L. Bourke
R. Stevenson
R. Turner
R. Hooper
P. Sasieni
R. Greasley
D. Morrissey
M. Loosemore
A. Fisher
H. Payne
S. J. C. Taylor
D. J. Rosario
机构
[1] Sheffield Hallam University,Health and Wellbeing
[2] Sheffield Teaching Hospitals,Acute Therapy Services
[3] Queen Mary University of London,Centre for Primary Care and Public Health
[4] Queen Mary University of London,Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine
[5] Queen Mary University of London,William Harvey Research Institute
[6] University College Hospitals,Institute of Sport Exercise and Health
[7] University College London,Department of Behavioural Science & Health
[8] University College Hospitals,Department of Oncology and Metabolism
[9] University of Sheffield,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Alternative management strategies for localised prostate cancer are required to reduce morbidity and overtreatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility, safety and acceptability of exercise training (ET) with behavioural support as a primary therapy for low/intermediate risk localised prostate cancer. Men with low/intermediate-risk prostate cancer were randomised to 12 months of ET or usual care with physical activity advice (UCwA) in a multi-site open label RCT. Feasibility included acceptability, recruitment, retention, adherence, adverse events and disease progression. Secondary outcomes included quality of life and cardiovascular health indices. Of the 50 men randomised to ET (n = 25) or UCwA (n = 25), 92% (n = 46) completed 12 month assessments. Three men progressed to invasive therapy (two in UCwA). In the ET group, men completed mean: 140 mins per week for 12 months (95% CI 129,152 mins) (94% of target dose) at 75% Hrmax. Men in the ET group demonstrated improved body mass (mean reduction: 2.0 kg; 95% CI −2.9,−1.1), reduced systolic (mean: 13 mmHg; 95%CI 7,19) and diastolic blood pressure (mean:8 mmHg; 95% CI 5,12) and improved quality of life (EQ.5D mean:13 points; 95% CI 7,18). There were no serious adverse events. ET in men with low/intermediate risk prostate cancer is feasible and acceptable with a low progression rate to radical treatment. Early signals on clinically relevant markers were found which warrant further investigation.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Synthesis and characterization of a novel multi-site phase transfer catalyst and a kinetic study of the intramolecular cyclopentanation of indene
    Vivekanand, P. A.
    Balakrishnan, T.
    APPLIED CATALYSIS A-GENERAL, 2009, 364 (1-2) : 27 - 34
  • [32] Prostate cancer - evidence of exercise and nutrition trial (PrEvENT): study protocol for a randomised controlled feasibility trial
    Lucy Hackshaw-McGeagh
    J. Athene Lane
    Raj Persad
    David Gillatt
    Jeff M. P. Holly
    Anthony Koupparis
    Edward Rowe
    Lyndsey Johnston
    Jenny Cloete
    Constance Shiridzinomwa
    Paul Abrams
    Chris M. Penfold
    Amit Bahl
    Jon Oxley
    Claire M. Perks
    Richard Martin
    Trials, 17
  • [33] Prostate cancer - evidence of exercise and nutrition trial (PrEvENT): study protocol for a randomised controlled feasibility trial
    Hackshaw-McGeagh, Lucy
    Lane, J. Athene
    Persad, Raj
    Gillatt, David
    Holly, Jeff M. P.
    Koupparis, Anthony
    Rowe, Edward
    Johnston, Lyndsey
    Cloete, Jenny
    Shiridzinomwa, Constance
    Abrams, Paul
    Penfold, Chris M.
    Bahl, Amit
    Oxley, Jon
    Perks, Claire M.
    Martin, Richard
    TRIALS, 2016, 17
  • [34] Improvements in Spatial Bias and Functional Outcomes in Chronic Hemispatial Neglect: Results of a Multi-Site Phase II Efficacy Trial of a Novel Computerized Attention Training Program
    Van Vleet, Tom
    DeGutis, Joseph
    Corbetta, Maurizio
    Bonato, Paolo
    Fabara, Eric
    NEUROLOGY, 2019, 92 (15)
  • [35] A multicentre phase II study of carboplatin and prolonged oral etoposide in the treatment of cancer of unknown primary site (CUPS)
    E Warner
    R Goel
    J Chang
    W Chow
    S Verma
    J Dancey
    E Franssen
    H Dulude
    M Girouard
    J Correia
    G Gallant
    British Journal of Cancer, 1998, 77 : 2376 - 2380
  • [36] A multicentre phase II study of carboplatin and prolonged oral etoposide in the treatment of cancer of unknown primary site (CUPS)
    Warner, E
    Goel, R
    Chang, J
    Chow, W
    Verma, S
    Dancey, J
    Franssen, E
    Dulude, H
    Girouard, M
    Correia, J
    Gallant, G
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1998, 77 (12) : 2376 - 2380
  • [37] Phase II, double blind, placebo controlled, multi-site study to evaluate the safety, feasibility and desirability of conducting a phase III study of anamorelin for anorexia in people with small cell lung cancer: A study protocol (LUANA trial)
    Sousa, Mariana S.
    Martin, Peter
    Johnson, Miriam J.
    Lind, Michael
    Maddocks, Matthew
    Bullock, Alex
    Agar, Meera
    Chang, Sungwon
    Kochovska, Slavica
    Kinchin, Irina
    Morgan, Deidre
    Fazekas, Belinda
    Razmovski-Naumovski, Valentina
    Lee, Jessica T.
    Itchins, Malinda
    Bray, Victoria
    Currow, David C.
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (05):
  • [38] Radiotherapy to the primary tumour for newly diagnosed, metastatic prostate cancer (STAMPEDE): a randomised controlled phase 3 trial
    Parker, Christopher C.
    James, Nicholas D.
    Brawley, Christopher D.
    Clarke, Noel W.
    Hoyle, Alex P.
    Ali, Adnan
    Ritchie, Alastair W. S.
    Attard, Gerhardt
    Chowdhury, Simon
    Cross, William
    Dearnaley, David P.
    Gillessen, Silke
    Gilson, Clare
    Jones, Robert J.
    Langley, Ruth E.
    Malik, Zafar I.
    Mason, Malcolm D.
    Matheson, David
    Millman, Robin
    Russell, J. Martin
    Thalmann, George N.
    Amos, Claire L.
    Alonzi, Roberto
    Bahl, Amit
    Birtle, Alison
    Din, Omar
    Douis, Hassan
    Eswar, Chinnamani
    Gale, Joanna
    Gannon, Melissa R.
    Jonnada, Sai
    Khaksar, Sara
    Lester, Jason F.
    O'Sullivan, Joe M.
    Parikh, Omi A.
    Pedley, Ian D.
    Pudney, Delia M.
    Sheehan, Denise J.
    Srihari, Narayanan Nair
    Tran, Anna T. H.
    Parmar, Mahesh K. B.
    Sydes, Matthew R.
    LANCET, 2018, 392 (10162): : 2353 - 2366
  • [39] PACE-A: An international phase 3 randomised controlled trial (RCT) comparing stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to surgery for localised prostate cancer (LPCa)-Primary endpoint analysis.
    Van As, Nicholas John
    Tree, Alison
    Ostler, Peter James
    van der Voet, Hans
    Ford, Daniel
    Tolan, Shaun
    Wells, Paula
    Mahmood, Rana
    Winkler, Mathias
    Chan, Andrew
    Thompson, Alan
    Ogden, Christopher
    Brown, Stephanie
    Pugh, Julia
    Burnett, Stephanie M.
    Griffin, Clare
    Patel, Jaymini
    Naismith, Olivia
    Hall, Emma
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 41
  • [40] A Phase II Randomised Control Trial of High Dose Vitamin D in Localised Prostate Cancer Patients with Intermediate Risk of Disease Progression - ProsD
    Nair-Shalliker, V.
    Rodge, J.
    Woo, H.
    Yaxley, J.
    Rasiah, K.
    Patel, M.
    Gillatt, D.
    Frydenberg, M.
    Malouf, D.
    Ende, D.
    Mancuso, P.
    Kimlin
    Gardiner, R.
    Gebski, V.
    Fenech, M.
    Smith, D.
    Gurney, H.
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2018, 14 : 40 - 40