Exercise may boost impact of pre-surgical chemo in patients with food pipe (oesophageal) cancer

chemo
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

‘Prehab’ exercise may boost the impact of chemotherapy given to patients with cancer of the food pipe (oesophagus) to shrink their tumour (s) before surgery, reveals the first study of its kind, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Tumour shrinkage was greater in the exercisers than in those who didn’t , the comparative trial data show.

If the findings are confirmed in further larger studies, they should strengthen the argument for ‘prehab’ exercise to become standard care for all patients about to start treatment for cancer, and not just those who need surgery, say the researchers.

Prehabilitation exercise, dubbed ‘prehab’, can be used to boost strength, stability, balance, and mobility in preparation for surgery or other medical intervention.

An increasing body of evidence points to the effectiveness of exercise in , and animal studies have indicated that it may help shrink tumours after chemotherapy.

The researchers wanted to find out if prehab might boost the impact of pre-surgical chemo, formally known as neoadjuvant chemotherapy, in patients with .

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can improve survival in patients with this type of cancer, by shrinking the tumour and helping to stop it spreading elsewhere, an effect known as ‘downstaging’.

But pre-surgical chemo can take a tremendous toll on the body, effectively reducing physical fitness, and hastening the loss of skeletal muscle mass and function (sarcopenia), which may limit subsequent treatment options, and potentially survival, say the researchers.

They offered patients with operable oesophageal cancer either a structured programme of moderate exercise incorporating aerobic and strength training (‘prehab’) plus pre-surgical chemo or conventional best practice (lifestyle advice) plus pre-surgical chemo.

The exercise programme was designed to last until the day before surgery—an average period of around 5 months–and comprised 150 weekly minutes of moderate intensity activity plus 2 strength based sessions. Each patient underwent 4 cycles of chemo before their surgery.

To assess the impact of the exercise programme during chemo, were taken before starting treatment, within a week of finishing, and then again, 1, 3, and 6 days after surgery to check on levels of inflammation and other key biochemical indicators of immunity.

Each patient was also scanned to assess changes in skeletal muscle mass and visceral fat and tumour size before and after chemo.

In all, 21 patients were assigned to prehab and 19 to conventional best practice with no additional structured exercise.

Analysis of all the showed that after pre-surgical the prehab group had higher rates of tumour shrinkage than patients treated conventionally: 15/20 (75%) compared with 7/19 (37%).

And based on tissue samples and the number of affected lymph nodes, more patients in the prehab group had their cancer downstaged: 9 (43%) vs 3 (16%).

These patients also had greater skeletal muscle mass and less visceral fat, but without any weight loss, as well as a stronger immune response and lower levels of inflammatory chemicals in their blood.

A relatively small number of patients were included in this clinical trial and they weren’t randomly allocated to try and eliminate the influence of unknown factors, so further larger studies are needed to confirm the findings, caution the researchers.

But they point out: “Tumour downstaging and response to chemotherapy are arguably the most important prognostic factors in oesophageal cancer.

“That structured exercise programmes might contribute to improved cancer regression, possibly through enhanced immunological and/or inflammatory modulation, is potentially clinically significant.”

They add: “The results from this analysis, showing improvements in pathological regression in the primary tumour and clinical downstaging are hypothesis generating and the first to be demonstrated in a clinical trial in oesophageal cancer.”

And they conclude: “While the limitations in patient numbers and non-randomised design mandate caution, the impact for patients is potentially significant. Further work to confirm or refute these findings is urgently required, including whether or not improvements in chemotherapy response may translate into a survival advantage.

“Pending this, the present results further strengthen the rationale for exercise to be prescribed as standard care in undergoing treatment for .”



More information:
Exercise prehabilitation during neoadjuvant chemotherapy may enhance tumour regression in oesophageal cancer: results from a prospective non randomised trial, British Journal of Sports Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2021-104243

Citation:
Exercise may boost impact of pre-surgical chemo in patients with food pipe (oesophageal) cancer (2022, February 1)
retrieved 22 February 2022
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-02-boost-impact-pre-surgical-chemo-patients.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
First Recording of Dying Brain Shows Memory Patterns thumbnail

First Recording of Dying Brain Shows Memory Patterns

For the first time, neuroscientists have recorded the brain activity of a dying person, revealing a brain wave pattern similar to that seen when memories are recalled. Although only a single case study, researchers say the recording raises the possibility that as we die, our lives really do flash before our eyes. Dr Ajmal Zemmar…
Read More
Faxes and Snail Mail: Will Pandemic-Era Flaws Unleash Improved Health Technology? thumbnail

Faxes and Snail Mail: Will Pandemic-Era Flaws Unleash Improved Health Technology?

Jamie Taylor received two letters from the Missouri Department of Social Services Family Support Division that began, “Good news,” before stating that she was denied Medicaid coverage. Her income exceeded the state’s limits for the federal-state public health insurance program for people with low incomes. Missouri officials now blame the incongruous greeting for the decidedly…
Read More
전주·익산시, ‘중소도시 스마트시티 조성 사업’ 선정 thumbnail

전주·익산시, ‘중소도시 스마트시티 조성 사업’ 선정

전주, 스마트 주차관리 시스템 도입익산, 수요응답형 교통체계 구축 전북 전주시 한옥마을 일대에 스마트 서비스를 활용하는 주차관리 시스템을 도입한다. 익산시에는 수요응답형 교통체계(DRT)를 구축한다. 4일 전북도에 따르면 정부가 핵심 국정과제인 스마트시티 조성 사업 일환으로 추진 중인 ‘중소도시 스마트시티 조성 사업’에 전주·익산시 두 곳이 선정됐다. 전주시는 풍남동·중앙동 일대를 대상으로 ‘스마트 주차관리 시스템’을 구축하며, 익산시는 ‘수요응답형 교통 체계 및 도로 위험 감지…
Read More

WHO field officer killed in South Sudan

Juba, 21 September 2022 – World Health Organization (WHO) expresses its profound shock and sadness at the killing of its polio field surveillance officer in Bentiu city in South Sudan and condemns the violent death. Daniel Deng Galuak was shot dead by an unidentified attacker at a health facility in Bieh Internally Displaced Persons camp
Read More
Rethinking culture in healthcare cybersecurity strategy thumbnail

Rethinking culture in healthcare cybersecurity strategy

Data privacy is about more than keeping personal information safe and secure, says Dr. Eric Liederman, Kaiser Permanente's director of medical informatics – it's an essential component for establishing trust with patients that healthcare organizations take personal safety seriously. At the HIMSS 2023 Healthcare Cybersecurity Forum, scheduled for September 7 and 8 in Boston, Liederman
Read More
Boosters Thwart Omicron Death; Watchdog Slams HHS; Noxious Gas Stoves thumbnail

Boosters Thwart Omicron Death; Watchdog Slams HHS; Noxious Gas Stoves

Note that some links may require registration or subscription. Real-world data showed that COVID-19 boosters demonstrate about 95% vaccine effectiveness against death from Omicron for people ages 50 and up, the U.K. Health Security Agency announced. And for some more good news, Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics said their authorized oral antiviral drug molnupiravir was active…
Read More
Index Of News
Consider making some contribution to keep us going. We are donation based team who works to bring the best content to the readers. Every donation matters.
Donate Now

Subscription Form

Liking our Index Of News so far? Would you like to subscribe to receive news updates daily?

Total
0
Share