Remotely-supported exercise showed non-inferior improvements to partly-supervised training in timed up and go and body fat percentage among breast cancer survivors over 8 weeks.
Does 8 weeks of remotely-supported exercise training improve cardiorespiratory fitness, functional fitness, and body composition non-inferiorly to partly-supervised exercise training in female breast cancer survivors?
30 female breast cancer survivors, mean age 57 ± 6 years, BMI 25.3 ± 3.3 kg/m².
8 weeks of remotely-supported exercise training (progressing from 105 to 150 min/week, 55%-70% heart rate targets).
8 weeks of partly-supervised exercise training (two supervised and one unsupervised session per week, progressing from 55% to 70% and 35-50 min).
Changes in cardiorespiratory fitness, functional fitness, and body composition at 8 weeks.surrogate
Remotely-supported exercise training is non-inferior to partly-supervised training for some functional and body composition outcomes in breast cancer survivors, though adherence is lower.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
ABSTRACT Background This randomised, controlled non‐inferiority trial investigated whether 8 weeks of remotely‐supported exercise training changes cardiorespiratory fitness, functional fitness and body composition by a magnitude that is not meaningfully inferior to changes caused by partly‐supervised exercise training. Methods Thirty female breast cancer survivors (57 ± 6 years, 28.9 ± 6.1 mL·kg −1 ·min −1 , BMI 25.3 ± 3.3 kg·m −2 ) were randomised to 8 weeks of partly‐supervised ( n = 15) or remotely‐supported ( n = 15) exercise training. The partly‐supervised group undertook two supervised and one unsupervised session per week, progressing from 55% to 70% and 35–50 min. The remotely‐supported group were prescribed the same total duration of exercise per week (progressing from 105 to 150 min). Intensity was prescribed using heart rate targets corresponding to 55%–70% . , functional fitness, body composition and blood pressure were assessed pre‐ and post‐intervention. Results Adherence was higher in the partly‐supervised group (87% ± 7%) versus the remotely‐supported group (64% ± 25%; p = 0.01). The remotely‐supported group exhibited changes in timed up and go (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI −0.8 to 0.4 s) and percentage body fat (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI −0.6 to 0.5 kg·m −2 ) that were non‐inferior to the partly‐supervised group. It was inconclusive whether changes among the remotely‐supported group for (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI −3.3 to 1.1 mL·kg −1 ·min −1 ), blood pressure (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI systolic; −3 to 12 mmHg, diastolic; −5 to 6 mmHg), 6 min walk (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI −54.0 to 0.4 m), or sit to stand (difference to partly‐supervised; 95% CI −3 to 2 repetitions), were non‐inferior to the partly‐supervised group. Conclusion Remotely‐supported exercise might be an alternative to partly‐supervised exercise regarding functional fitness (assessed by timed up and go) and body composition (assessed by percentage body fat). It remains inconclusive whether remotely‐supported exercise is an alternative regarding , blood pressure and other functional fitness measurements (6‐min walk, sit to stand). Trials Registration: NCT06376578 (20/11/2020).
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Lauren Struszczak
Jean‐Philippe Walhin
University of Bath
James A. Betts
Cancer Medicine
University of Birmingham
University of Exeter
University of Bath
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Struszczak et al. (Sun,) reported a other. Remotely-supported exercise showed non-inferior improvements to partly-supervised training in timed up and go and body fat percentage among breast cancer survivors over 8 weeks.
synapsesocial.com/papers/698c1c53267fb587c655eb92 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.71608