Abstract

To compare the effects of a 3-week multimodal rehabilitation involving supervised high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on female breast cancer survivors with respect to key variables of aerobic fitness, body composition, energy expenditure, cancer-related fatigue, and quality of life to those of a standard multimodal rehabilitation program. A randomized controlled trial design was administered. Twenty-eight women, who had been treated for cancer were randomly assigned to either a group performing exercise of low-to-moderate intensity (LMIE; n=14) or a group performing high-intensity interval training (HIIT; n=14) as part of a 3-week multimodal rehabilitation program. No adverse events related to the exercise were reported. Work economy improved following both HIIT and LMIE, with improved peak oxygen uptake following LMIE. HIIT reduced mean total body fat mass with no change in body mass, muscle or fat-free mass (best P<0.06). LMIE increased muscle and total fat-free body mass. Total energy expenditure (P=0.45) did not change between the groups, whereas both improved quality of life to a similar high extent and lessened cancer-related fatigue. This randomized controlled study demonstrates that HIIT can be performed by female cancer survivors without adverse health effects. Here, HIIT and LMIE both improved work economy, quality of life and cancer-related fatigue, body composition or energy expenditure. Since the outcomes were similar, but HIIT takes less time, this may be a time-efficient strategy for improving certain aspects of the health of female cancer survivors.

Highlights

  • Cancer survivors often suffer seriously from impaired health-related quality of life, including reduced cardiorespiratory and metabolic fitness and weight gain associated with cancer-related fatigue, as well as lower psychophysical health and higher premature mortality (Courneya and Friedenreich 2001)

  • Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society

  • A total of 93% of the participants in both groups completed all of the training sessions, for a total average duration of endurance exercise of 239 Æ 17 and 413 Æ 32 min for high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and low-to-moderate intensity (LMIE), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer survivors often suffer seriously from impaired health-related quality of life, including reduced cardiorespiratory and metabolic fitness and weight gain associated with cancer-related fatigue, as well as lower psychophysical health and higher premature mortality (Courneya and Friedenreich 2001). Recent meta-analyses indicate that energy expenditure improves the body composition, psychophysical health, and quality of life in such patients (Speck et al 2010; Fong et al 2012). In this context, another meta-analysis revealed that low-intensity walking potentially ameliorates cancer-related fatigue (Kangas et al 2008). Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society

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