Exercise During and After Cancer Diagnosis is Encouraged
"ScienceDaily (June 4, 2010) — Cancer patients
who've been told to rest and avoid exercise can -- and should -- find
ways to be physically active both during and after treatment, according
to new national guidelines."
"Kathryn Schmitz, PhD, MPH, an associate professor of Epidemiology and
Biostatistics and a member of the Abramson Cancer Center at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, will present these
guidelines at an educational session at the 2010 meeting of the American
Society of Clinical Oncology, aimed at making cancer exercise
rehabilitation programs as common as those offered to people who have
had heart attacks or undergone cardiac surgery. ("Exercise Testing and
Prescription for Cancer Survivors: Guidelines from the American College
of Sports Medicine.")
Schmitz, whose previous research reversed decades of cautionary
exercise advice given to breast cancer patients with the painful
arm-swelling condition lymphedema, led a 13-member American College of
Sports Medicine expert panel that developed the new recommendations
after reviewing and evaluating literature on the safety and efficacy of
exercise training during and after cancer therapy.
"We have to get doctors past the ideas that exercise is harmful to
their cancer patients. There is a still a prevailing attitude out there
that patients shouldn't push themselves during treatment, but our
message -- avoid inactivity -- is essential," Schmitz says. "We now have
a compelling body of high quality evidence that exercise during and
after treatment is safe and beneficial for these patients, even those
undergoing complex procedures such as stem cell transplants. If
physicians want to avoid doing harm, they need to incorporate these
guidelines into their clinical practice in a systematic way.
Cancer patients and survivors should strive to get the same 150
minutes per week of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise that is
recommended for the general public, the panel says. Though the evidence
indicates that most types of physical activity -- from swimming to yoga
to strength training -- are beneficial for cancer patients, clinicians
should tailor exercise recommendations to individual patients, taking
into account their general fitness level, specific diagnosis and factors
about their disease that might influence exercise safety.
Cancer
patients with weakened ability to fight infection, for instance, may be
advised to avoid exercise in public gyms.
One persistent area of concern for cancer patients is change in body
mass -- both weight gain and weight loss tied to disease symptoms and
treatment side effects. Patients with hormone-based tumors, breast and
prostate cancers, tend to gain weight during treatment and frequently
have difficulty losing it. Other patients, especially those with
gastrointestinal tumors, suffer from weight loss brought on by loss of
appetite and changes in their ability to swallow and properly digest
food. The new guidelines indicate that both groups can benefit from
exercise.
Studies show, for instance, that exercise for weight control
and reduction in body mass may actually reduce the risk of recurrence
for breast cancer patients, and ultimately decrease breast cancer
mortality. For patients suffering from cancer-related weight loss,
physical activity helps to maintain lean body mass, which can contribute
to increased strength and well being.
Schmitz and her colleagues analyzed published studies related to five
different adult cancer types (breast, during and after treatment,
prostate, hematologic -- with and without stem cell transplant -- colon,
and gynecologic), and reviewed the evidence for multiple health
outcomes. The panel found that although there are specific risks
associated with cancer treatment that need to be considered when
patients exercise, there is consistent evidence that exercise training
can lead to improvements in aerobic fitness, muscular strength, quality
of life and fatigue in breast, prostate, and hematologic cancer patients
and survivors. They found the data for colon and gynecologic cancers
were too scant to draw firm conclusions, and identified several areas
requiring further study. Age, for instance, is a critical variable,
Schmitz says, since more must be learned about the effects of physical
activity in cancer patients over age 65, to develop interventions that
may help these patients continue to live and function independently.
The panel urges fitness professionals to enhance their capacity to
serve the unique needs of cancer survivors. Schmitz noted that a
"groundswell" of training programs now assist physical therapists and
fitness trainers in deepening their knowledge of the effects of cancer
diagnosis and treatment and improve their skills in this emerging area.
Schmitz also feels strongly that practicing oncologists need to be
informed about the new guidelines and their importance, and says that
patients can play a role in changing attitudes and clinical practice.
Her hope is that patients will read the recommendations and discuss them
with their doctors, creating the demand for change that will drive more
cancer centers and oncology practices to create and offer cancer
exercise rehabilitation services."
The above is an article from the website, Science Daily.