Aerobic and Resistance Exercise Improves Shoulder Function in Women Who Are Overweight or Obese and Have Breast Cancer: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Frank C Sweeney, Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, Kerry S Courneya, Nathalie Sami, Kyuwan Lee, Debu Tripathy, Kimiko Yamada, Thomas A Buchanan, Darcy V Spicer, Leslie Bernstein, Joanne E Mortimer, Christina M Dieli-Conwright, Frank C Sweeney, Wendy Demark-Wahnefried, Kerry S Courneya, Nathalie Sami, Kyuwan Lee, Debu Tripathy, Kimiko Yamada, Thomas A Buchanan, Darcy V Spicer, Leslie Bernstein, Joanne E Mortimer, Christina M Dieli-Conwright

Abstract

Background: Adverse upper limb musculoskeletal effects occur after surgical procedures and radiotherapy for breast cancer and can interfere with activities of daily living.

Objective: The objective of this study was to examine the effects of a 16-week exercise intervention on shoulder function in women who are overweight or obese and have breast cancer.

Design: This study was a randomized controlled trial.

Setting: The study was performed at the Division of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy at the University of Southern California.

Participants: One hundred women with breast cancer were randomly allocated to exercise or usual-care groups. The mean (SD) age of the women was 53.5 (10.4) years, 55% were Hispanic white, and their mean (SD) body mass index was 33.5 (5.5) kg/m2.

Intervention: The 16-week exercise intervention consisted of supervised, progressive, moderate to vigorous aerobic and resistance exercise 3 times per week.

Measurements: Shoulder active range of motion, isometric muscular strength, and patient-reported outcome measures (including Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand and the Penn Shoulder Scale) were assessed at baseline, after the intervention, and at the 3-month follow-up (exercise group only). Differences in mean changes for outcomes were evaluated using mixed-model repeated-measures analysis.

Results: Compared with the usual-care group, the exercise group experienced significant increases in shoulder active range of motion (the mean between-group differences and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were as follows: shoulder flexion = 36.6° [95% CI = 55.2-20.7°], external rotation at 0° = 23.4° [95% CI = 31.1-12.5°], and external rotation at 90° = 34.3° [95% CI = 45.9-26.2°]), improved upper extremity isometric strength, and improved Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand and Penn Shoulder Scale scores.

Limitations: Limitations include a lack of masking of assessors after the intervention, an attention control group, and statistical robustness (shoulder function was a secondary end point).

Conclusions: A 16-week exercise intervention effectively improved shoulder function following breast cancer treatment in women who were overweight or obese, who were ethnically diverse, and who had breast cancer.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01140282.

© 2019 American Physical Therapy Association.

Figures

Figure
Figure
CONSORT diagram of the metabolic syndrome trial. BMI = body mass index; EXE = exercise group; UC = usual-care group. Reprinted with permission from 12: Dieli-Conwright CM, Courneya KS, Demark-Wahnefried W, et al. Effects of aerobic and resistance exercise on metabolic syndrome, sarcopenic obesity, and circulating biomarkers in overweight or obese survivors of breast cancer: a randomized controlled trial. J Clin Oncol. 2018;36:875--883. © 2018 American Society of Clinical Oncology. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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