Abstract

Lower-extremities sarcoma patients, with bone tumor and soft-tissue sarcoma, are a unique population at high risk of physical dysfunction and chronic heart diseases. Thus, providing an adequate physical activity (PA) program constitutes a primary part of the adjuvant treatment, aiming to improve patients' quality of life. The main goal of this paper is to offer clear suggestions for clinicians regarding PA around the time between diagnosis and offered treatments. These preliminary recommendations reflect our interpretation of the clinical and preclinical data published on this topic, after a systematic search on the PubMed database. Accordingly, patients could be advised to (1) start sessions of supportive rehabilitation and low-intensity PA after surgery and (2) increase PA intensities progressively during home stay. The usefulness of PA during the preoperative period remains largely unknown but emerging preclinical data on mice bearing intramuscular sarcoma are most likely discouraging. However, efforts are still needed to in-depth elucidate the impact of PA before surgery completion. PA should be age-, sex-, and treatment-adapted, as young/adolescent, women and patients receiving platinum-based chemotherapy are more susceptible to physical quality deterioration. Concerning PA intensity, the practice of moderate-intensity resistance and endurance exercises (30–60 min/day) are safe after surgery, even when receiving adjuvant chemo/radiotherapy. The general PA recommendations for cancer patients, 150 min/week of combined moderate-intensity endurance/resistance exercises, could be feasible after 18–24 months of rehabilitation. We believe that these suggestions will help clinicians to design a low-risk and useful PA program.

Highlights

  • Main concerns regarding sarcoma essentially consist in optimizing treatments, general outcomes and survival rates

  • We performed a systematic search on the PubMed database, until August 2017, in the aim to identify clinical and preclinical studies that addressed the impact of physical activity (PA) in sarcoma

  • Nine studies have assessed the impact of sarcomas and/or their treatments on physical function and quality of life (QoL), and only three studies have determined the effect of direct PA intervention and rehabilitation in sarcoma patients (Supplementary Table 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Main concerns regarding sarcoma essentially consist in optimizing treatments, general outcomes and survival rates. There is certainly an insufficient interest in PA application throughout sarcoma treatment and a lack of information regarding pre, per, and postoperative optimal level of PA for sarcoma patients This is the case in LESP, where general mechanical alteration occurs due to tumor growth, surgical treatment and its inherent muscular sacrifice, which impairs patients’ physical functioning (Morrison, 2003; Tang et al, 2012; Mason et al, 2013). After the announcement of such diagnosis and its potential treatments, most of patients, young and active ones ask for the level of PA to preserve before surgery or adjuvant chemotherapy Such information is crucial in order to maintain overall PA, without impairing general outcomes and survival. These suggestions reflect the current progress regarding the practice of PA in sarcoma at both clinical and preclinical levels

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call