MedPath

Telehealth-Based Resistance Training Intervention for Endometrial Cancer Survivors

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Endometrial Cancer
Interventions
Other: Baseline Measures
Other: Mid-point Measures
Behavioral: Strength-Training
Other: Post-Study Measures
Registration Number
NCT03722030
Lead Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Brief Summary

This 2-arm pilot trial will enroll 40 participants to test the feasibility, adherence, and benefits of a home-based strength training intervention for endometrial cancer survivors relative to a wait-listed control group.

Detailed Description

Endometrial cancer survivors have an extremely high prevalence of inactivity and obesity. Inactivity and obesity are associated with poorer outcomes among survivors. Other interventions have demonstrated that walking and aerobic exercise are safe and feasible in endometrial cancer patients. However few published studies have examined strength training in endometrial cancer survivors, and these have done so only in combination with aerobic intervention (and often also dietary change) in the context of a larger multi-component intervention.

There is a critical need for data about the feasibility and benefits of strength training in this population. The investigators propose a 2-arm pilot trial of a home-based strength training intervention (vs. waitlist control) among 40 endometrial cancer survivors. The intervention will consist of (a) an initial in-person instructional session; (b) instructional materials and resistance training equipment (e.g., resistance bands) and (c) support and feedback provided via video coaching sessions. The purpose of a pilot trial is not to conduct hypothesis testing, but rather to field-test the logistical components of the study to incorporate into a larger, future study design.

The proposed trial will determine the feasibility of an at-home resistance training protocol and measurements of exercise logging, functional fitness testing, DXA, dried blood spots and questionnaire measures. Participants will be assigned either to the resistance training program (i.e., initial in-person instructional session, telephone coaching, and self-monitoring) or to a comparison arm (wait-list control).

* Aim 1: To determine the feasibility of recruiting and retaining endometrial cancer survivors to a home- based resistance training 2 sessions per week of 20-40 minutes of exercise.

* Aim 2: To determine participant satisfaction with each component of the intervention and identify opportunities for refinement of the intervention prior to testing in a larger study.

* Aim 3: To establish that functional and objective assessments are feasible and well-tolerated in enrolled participants, as assessed using the functional fitness test (FFT) battery, dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), finger-pricks for dried blood spots and patient-reported outcomes.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • Willing to provide written informed consent
  • Willing to comply with all study procedures and be available for the duration of the study
  • Fluent in spoken and written English
  • Documented diagnosis of Type I, stage I-IIIc endometrial cancer within the past 5 years
  • Completion of current treatment for endometrial cancer, period of time of ≥10 weeks from treatment completion to study enrollment is required
Exclusion Criteria
  • Absolute contraindications to exercise (i.e., acute myocardial infarction, severe orthopedic or musculoskeletal limitations
  • Have evidence of recurrent or metastatic disease
  • Are currently performing resistance training ≥2 days per week
  • Report of chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting, or angina pectoris
  • Have physical disability that would limit range of motion through exercises such as sitting, standing and inability to walk one block
  • Plans to move from the area
  • Enrolled in another clinical trial or has used of any investigational drugs, biologics, or devices within 30 days prior to randomization
  • Women who are pregnant or breast-feeding
  • Not suitable for study participation due to other reasons at the discretion of the investigator

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Strength-Training InterventionPost-Study MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will receive an initial in-person instructional session, instructional material and resistance training equipment, support and feedback via video coaching, mid-point assessment, and an in-person study visit to collect post study measures. Intervention will be 10 weeks, with a 5 week follow up period.
Waitlist ControlMid-point MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will provide mid-point measures, and in-person post-study measures with no 10-week strength training intervention.
Strength-Training InterventionBaseline MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will receive an initial in-person instructional session, instructional material and resistance training equipment, support and feedback via video coaching, mid-point assessment, and an in-person study visit to collect post study measures. Intervention will be 10 weeks, with a 5 week follow up period.
Strength-Training InterventionStrength-TrainingFollowing baseline measures, participants will receive an initial in-person instructional session, instructional material and resistance training equipment, support and feedback via video coaching, mid-point assessment, and an in-person study visit to collect post study measures. Intervention will be 10 weeks, with a 5 week follow up period.
Waitlist ControlBaseline MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will provide mid-point measures, and in-person post-study measures with no 10-week strength training intervention.
Waitlist ControlPost-Study MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will provide mid-point measures, and in-person post-study measures with no 10-week strength training intervention.
Strength-Training InterventionMid-point MeasuresFollowing baseline measures, participants will receive an initial in-person instructional session, instructional material and resistance training equipment, support and feedback via video coaching, mid-point assessment, and an in-person study visit to collect post study measures. Intervention will be 10 weeks, with a 5 week follow up period.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of Participants Who Completed 100% of the Prescribed Exercisesup to 20 weeks from beginning of intervention

Compliance/adherence will be measured via detailed exercise logs. A participant needs to complete at least 50% of the prescribed exercises in a session to be considered adherent to the session.

Number of Participants With Adverse Eventsup to 20 weeks

The primary safety endpoint will be total number of adverse events over the duration of the intervention.

Feasibility - Number of Participants Recruitedup to 2 years

The feasibility of recruiting endometrial cancer survivors to a home-based resistance training; 2 sessions per week of 20-40 minutes of exercise. This will be measured by the number of participants recruited. The goal is 40 participants.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Fat Mass From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Baseline and post-study fat mass will be assessed using dual-energy absorptiometry (DXA) utilizing the enCORE Lunar iDXA software suite (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

Change in Visceral Fat Mass From Baselineup to 20 weeks

Baseline and post-study visceral fat mass will be assessed using dual-energy absorptiometry (DXA) utilizing the enCORE Lunar iDXA software suite (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

Change in Total Percent Body Fat From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Baseline and post-study % body fat will be assessed using dual-energy absorptiometry (DXA) utilizing the enCORE Lunar iDXA software suite (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

Change in Number of Arm Curls Performed From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Arm curls are part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. These tests will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The 30 second arm curl assesses the strength of the upper body, where participants hold a 5 pound dumbbell in a seated position, and they will have 30 seconds to curl their arm and extend it as many times as possible within the time frame.

Change in Hemoglobin A1c From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Baseline and post-study blood biomarkers to assess Hemoglobin A1c will be collected and reported in a table as a change from baseline.

Change in Handgrip Weight From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Handgrip is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

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Change in C-Reactive Protein From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Baseline and post-study blood biomarkers to assess c-reactive protein will be collected and reported in a table as a change from baseline.

Changes in FACT-En From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) questionnaire including the Endometrial subscale (FACT-En). The Endometrial component contains concerns specific to endometrial cancer such as hot/flashes, cramps, and swelling; measured on a scale of 0-64, the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

FACT Social Subscale Scoresbaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, emotional, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Number of Participants Reporting "Very" or "Extremely" Satisfied With InterventionAt final visit - up to 20 weeks

Participants will complete semi-structured qualitative interviews with the study coordinator. Interviews will be recorded, transcribed and coded to identify content themes. These interviews will be used to collect qualitative information and overall satisfaction with the intervention, as well as areas to improve with future interventions and barriers to participation.

Change in Lean Muscle Mass From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Baseline and post-study lean muscle mass will be assessed using dual-energy absorptiometry (DXA) using the enCORE Lunar iDXA software suite (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

Change in Back Scratch Distance From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

The back scratch test is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The back scratch test assesses the upper body flexibility, where the person is seated and one arm will be flexed behind the head, and the other arm will be extended behind the shoulder. The assessment measures the distance between the finger tips of both hands.

FACT Physical Subscale Scoresbaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, emotional, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Self-Efficacy ScoresBaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Self-efficacy will be assessed at baseline, mid-point, and post-study using the validated self-efficacy for exercise scale, modified for specificity to strength training.

This instrument has 9 items, each of which is scored from 0-10, with a maximum score of 90. Higher scores indicate higher self-efficacy for exercise. These scores will be reported descriptively at each time point (baseline, mid-point, final), and will also be reported in a table as change over time.

Change in Number of Sit to Stand Repetitions Performed From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

The 30 second chair stand is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The 30 second chair stand assesses the strength of the lower body. Each person will have 30 seconds to stand up and sit down from a chair as many times as possible within the time frame.

Change in 6-minute Walk Distance From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

The 6-minute walk test is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The 6 minute walk test measures the total distance that a person can quickly walk on a flat hard surface within a period of 6 minutes, using a 100ft length of distance.

FACT-En Scoresbaseline, 5 Weeks,10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) questionnaire including the Endometrial subscale (FACT-En). The Endometrial component contains concerns specific to endometrial cancer such as hot/flashes, cramps, and swelling; measured on a scale of 0-64, the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Change in Steps Per Day From Baselinebaseline and Week 10

Although aerobic and lifestyle physical activity (PA) are not a focus of the intervention, they will be assessed to determine baseline PA level and identify whether uptake of resistance training is associated with changes in other PA types. Participants will wear the ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometer (ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL) for 7 days during all waking hours, at baseline, mid-point, and post-study visit. The ActiGraph is a gold standard method of objective activity assessment. Accelerometer data will be measured in total minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity over a 7-day period.

Change in Sit and Reach Distance From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

The chair sit and reach test is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The chair sit and reach assesses lower body flexibility where the participant will sit in a chair, extend one leg in front of them and flex at the waist, reaching toward their toes, the measure is the distance between their toes and fingers.

FACT Scoresbaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) questionnaire including the Endometrial subscale (FACT-En). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28, and emotional well being on a scale of 0-24. The Endometrial component contains concerns specific to endometrial cancer such as hot/flashes, cramps, and swelling; measured on a scale of 0-64. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores and then the entire instrument will have a total composite score (0-172; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements) and will be reported as such.

FACT Functional Subscale Scoresbaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, emotional, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Changes in Accelerometer-Measured Physical Activity From Baselinebaseline and Week 10

Although aerobic and lifestyle physical activity (PA) are not a focus of the intervention, they will be assessed to determine baseline PA level and identify whether uptake of resistance training is associated with changes in other PA types. Participants will wear the ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometer (ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL) for 7 days during all waking hours, at baseline, mid-point, and post-study visit. The ActiGraph is a gold standard method of objective activity assessment. Accelerometer data will be measured in total minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity over a 7-day period.

Light intensity is Moderate intensity is Vigorous intensity is

Change in 8 Foot Up and Go Time From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

The 8-foot-up and go test is part of the functional fitness test (FFT); a battery of tests measuring strength, flexibility, fitness, body composition, and agility. This test will be performed at baseline and post-study time points. Data will be reported in a table as change from baseline.

The 8-foot-up and go is an assessment of speed agility and balance. The participant begins in a seated position and will be timed for the duration it takes to rise from the chair, walk as quickly as possible around a cone 8 feet away from the chair, and return to a seated position.

Changes in FACT From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) questionnaire including the Endometrial subscale (FACT-En). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28, and emotional well being on a scale of 0-24. The Endometrial component contains concerns specific to endometrial cancer such as hot/flashes, cramps, and swelling; measured on a scale of 0-64. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores and then the entire instrument will have a total composite score (0-172; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements) and will be reported as such.

FACT Emotional Subscale Scoresbaseline, 5 weeks, 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, emotional, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Changes in FACT Subscales From Baselinebaseline and 10 weeks

Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT) changes from baseline, mid-point, to post-study will be captured using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies (FACT). The FACT assessment measures physical, social/family, emotional, and functional well-being, each on a scale of 0-28. Each of these sections will be scored for sub-scale scores; the higher the score, the more quality of life improvements.

Changes in Mental Well-being From Baselinebaseline and Week 10

Changes in mental well-being from baseline, mid-point, and post-study (including anxiety, depression, and fatigue) will be assessed using standardized NIH-provided Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) measures.

The fatigue assessment asks about self-reported systems of fatigue and tiredness, all the way up to exhaustion overall, and ask about fatigue over the past seven days. The depression assessment asks about depressive symptoms over the past seven days. The anxiety assessment asks about symptoms adjacent-to and including anxiety over the past seven days. For each of these three instruments (which comprise the mental well-being assessments) the data will be reported as change over time, specifically using the T-score (standardized mean) and the standard error.

Each is standardized to a mean of 50 and a range of 0-100; a higher scores indicate a higher "level" of that construct, whether it's higher levels of depression, fatigue or anxiety.

Changes in Self-Efficacy From BaselineBaseline and 10 weeks

Self-efficacy will be assessed at baseline, mid-point, and post-study using the validated self-efficacy for exercise scale, modified for specificity to strength training.

This instrument has 9 items, each of which is scored from 0-10, with a maximum score of 90. Higher scores indicate higher self-efficacy for exercise. These scores will be reported descriptively at each time point (baseline, mid-point, final), and will also be reported in a table as change over time.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center

🇺🇸

Madison, Wisconsin, United States

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