Abstract

BackgroundExercise is an effective therapeutic intervention for cancer survivors. Concerns about the completeness of reporting of exercise interventions have been raised in the literature, but without any formal analysis. This study aimed to evaluate the completeness of reporting of exercise interventions for cancer survivors in a large sample of randomized clinical trials (RCTs).MethodsWe developed a pre-defined protocol. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CENTRAL for exercise trials in oncology between 2010 and 2017. Pairs of independent researchers screened the records, extracted study characteristics, and assessed 16 items on the TIDieR checklist (i.e., the 12 items, with item 5 divided into two and item 8 divided into four). For each of these items, the percentage of interventions in the included studies that reported the item was calculated.ResultsWe included 131 RCTs reporting 138 interventions in the analysis. Breast cancer was the most common type of cancer (69, 50%), and aerobic exercise was the most studied exercise modality (43, 30%) followed by combined aerobic and resistance training (40, 28%). Completeness of reporting ranged from 42 to 96% among the TIDieR items; none of the items was fully reported. ‘Intervention length’ was the most reported item across interventions (133, 96%), followed by ‘rationale’ (131, 95%), whereas ‘provider’ (58, 42%) and ‘how well (planned)’ (63, 46%) were the two least reported items. Half of the TIDieR items were completely reported in 50 to 70% of the interventions, and only four items were reported in more than 80% of the interventions (Items 2 and 8a to c). The seven items deemed to be core for replication (Items 3 to 9) exhibited a mean reporting of 71%, ranging from 42 to 96%.ConclusionExercise training interventions for cancer survivors are incompletely reported across RCTs published between 2010 and 2017. The reporting of information about the provider, materials, and modifications require urgent improvements. Stronger reporting will enhance usability of trial reports by both healthcare providers and survivors, and will help to reduce research waste.

Highlights

  • Exercise is an effective therapeutic intervention for cancer survivors

  • Incomplete reporting of interventions can impair the synthesis of evidence in several ways [11, 12]: trials may be erroneously included or excluded because of uncertainty about the intervention; and treatment differences may go unrecognized as a source of between-study variation in effect estimates

  • The present study aimed to evaluate the completeness of reporting of exercise training interventions in Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) that test exercise interventions in cancer survivors, using items on the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist

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Summary

Introduction

Exercise is an effective therapeutic intervention for cancer survivors. Concerns about the completeness of reporting of exercise interventions have been raised in the literature, but without any formal analysis. This study aimed to evaluate the completeness of reporting of exercise interventions for cancer survivors in a large sample of randomized clinical trials (RCTs). Exercise is recognized as one of the most effective nonpharmacological interventions for improving outcomes for cancer survivors [1]. The rapid accumulation of RCTs of exercise in cancer survivors should improve clinical outcomes, but only if the exercise interventions are reported thoroughly. Incomplete reporting of the exercise interventions impedes clinicians', researchers' and patients’ use of the evidence. Incomplete reporting of interventions can impair the synthesis of evidence (i.e. systematic reviews) in several ways [11, 12]: trials may be erroneously included or excluded because of uncertainty about the intervention; and treatment differences may go unrecognized as a source of between-study variation in effect estimates. Reporting the rationale/framework underlying the intervention may aid clinicians to adjust it to suit the comorbidities or other characteristics of individual patients

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