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Home-Based Interventions improved Elderly
Cancer Survivors’ ability to function
Newswise — Climbing stairs,
carrying groceries, taking a shower – these
are activities that we take for granted;
however, after a cancer diagnosis, many
survivors are unable to function as they
used to.
Home-based diet and exercise
interventions may improve physical
functioning in older, long-term cancer
survivors, according to data presented at
the American Association for Cancer
Research’s Seventh Annual International
Conference on Frontiers in Cancer Prevention
Research.
Wendy Demark-Wahnefried,
Ph.D., professor of behavioral science at
the University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center, focused this study on
survivors older than 65 years old. She said
this age group often suffers long-term side
effects of cancer and its treatment which
could threaten the ability to live
independently.
“Younger cancer
patients are usually able to bounce back,
but older patients may need a structured
program to stop functional decline and
retain independence,” said Demark-Wahnefried.
Demark-Wahnefried and
colleagues identified 20,015 cancer
survivors from cancer registries and
self-referral sources.
Of these cases, 1,208 were
screened and 641 participants were enrolled
in the trial. To be included, patients had
to be older than 65 years, have survived
their cancer for at least five years with no
evidence of recurrence, have no medical
conditions that would preclude unsupervised
exercise, and be overweight or obese.
Participants were randomly
assigned to an intervention or a wait-list
control group. Those in the intervention
group received tailored mailed print
materials on diet and exercise, a pedometer
and exercise bands.
For the first three weeks,
participants received weekly phone calls,
which tapered off to every two weeks and
then once a month until the end of the
study.
At the end of one year,
researchers evaluated physical function,
diet quality and physical activity using
standard measures.
Participants in the
intervention group demonstrated significant
improvements in their diet and exercise
behaviors, and their weight status.
What’s more, according to the
SF-36 physical function test, participants
in the intervention group had a 2.5 point
decline compared with a 5.3 point decline in
the control group.
Similar differences were seen
in measures of basic lower extremity and
advanced lower extremity functioning.
Overall, the magnitude of
effect was similar to preventing physical
function losses comparable to that imposed
by ischemic heart disease.
The ability to perform
moderate to vigorous physical activity
improved as well. In the intervention group,
participants increased their ability by 44.9
minutes a week compared with 29.7 minutes
per week in the control group.
Body mass index declined by
0.8 in the active group compared with 0.3 in
the control group.
Demark-Wahnefried said these
findings are important because the number of
cancer survivors is skyrocketing, and we’re
just beginning to see the long-term health
effects of the disease and its treatment.
Given current economic concerns, such
research is particularly relevant.
“Last year alone, we spent
$219 billion on cancer care, but only 40
percent of that was spent on treatment,”
said Demark-Wahnefried.
“The majority of costs
were due to lost productivity and health
problems that surfaced afterwards.”
The current study did not
directly assess cost-effectiveness, but
Demark-Wahnefried said she expects to see
cost savings when they conduct further
studies.
The mission of the American
Association for Cancer Research is to
prevent and cure cancer. Founded in 1907,
AACR is the world’s oldest and largest
professional organization dedicated to
advancing cancer research.
The membership includes more
than 28,000 basic, translational and
clinical researchers; health care
professionals; and cancer survivors and
advocates in the United States and 80 other
countries.
The AACR marshals the full
spectrum of expertise from the cancer
community to accelerate progress in the
prevention, diagnosis and treatment of
cancer through high-quality scientific and
educational programs.
It funds innovative,
meritorious research grants. The AACR Annual
Meeting attracts more than 17,000
participants who share the latest
discoveries and developments in the field.
Special conferences throughout the year
present novel data across a wide variety of
topics in cancer research, treatment and
patient care.
The AACR publishes five major
peer-reviewed journals: Cancer Research;
Clinical Cancer Research; Molecular Cancer
Therapeutics; Molecular Cancer Research; and
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers &
Prevention.
The AACR’s most recent
publication and its sixth major journal,
Cancer Prevention Research, is dedicated
exclusively to cancer prevention, from
preclinical research to clinical trials.
The AACR also publishes CR, a
magazine for cancer survivors and their
families, patient advocates, physicians and
scientists. CR provides a forum for sharing
essential, evidence-based information and
perspectives on progress in cancer research,
survivorship and advocacy.
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