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Barriers to Supervised Exercise Training in a Randomized Controlled Trial of Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Chemotherapy
Authors:Kerry S. Courneya PhD  Donald C. McKenzie MD   PhD  Robert D. Reid PhD  John R. Mackey MD  Karen Gelmon MD  Christine M. Friedenreich PhD  Aliya B. Ladha MS  Caroline Proulx MS  Kirstin Lane PhD  Jeffrey K. Vallance PhD  Roanne J. Segal MD
Affiliation:(1) University of Alberta, E-488 Van Vliet Center, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, T6G 2H9;(2) University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada;(3) University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Canada;(4) Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;(5) British Columbia Cancer Agency, Vancouver, Canada;(6) Alberta Cancer Board, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;(7) Ottawa Hospital Regional Cancer Center, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract:
Background Exercise adherence is a challenge for breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy but few studies have identified the key barriers. Purpose In this paper, we report the barriers to supervised exercise in breast cancer patients participating in a randomized controlled trial. Methods Breast cancer patients initiating adjuvant chemotherapy (N = 242) were randomly assigned to usual care (n = 82) or supervised resistance (n = 82) or aerobic (n = 78) exercise. Participants randomized to the two exercise groups (n = 160) were asked to provide a reason for each missed exercise session. Results The two exercise groups attended 70.2% (5,495/7,829) of their supervised exercise sessions and provided a reason for missing 89.5% (2,090/2,334) of their unattended sessions. The 2,090 reasons represented 36 different barriers. Feeling sick (12%), fatigue (11%), loss of interest (9%), vacation (7%), and nausea/vomiting (5%) accounted for the most missed exercise sessions. Disease/treatment-related barriers (19 of the 36 barriers) accounted for 53% (1,102/2,090) of all missed exercise sessions. Demographic and medical variables did not predict the types of exercise barriers reported. Conclusions Barriers to supervised exercise in breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy are varied but over half can be directly attributed to the disease and its treatments. Behavioral support programs need to focus on strategies to maintain exercise in the face of difficult treatment side effects. Rapid Communication Accepted by Annals of Behavioral Medicine (October 8, 2007).
Keywords:Breast Cancer  Chemotherapy  Exercise Barriers
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