Abstract 229P
Background
Fatigue is a common adverse effect suffered by prostate cancer patients receiving androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). A growing body of evidence has proposed exercise as a treatment to relieve and prevent the adverse effects of ADT. Recently, high-quality randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of supervised exercise have been conducted to get more assessment. However, the pooled estimate for the effect of supervised exercise on fatigue has not been established yet. This study aims to determine the pooled effect of supervised exercise on fatigue in prostate cancer patients receiving ADT.
Methods
A literature search was conducted from PubMed, Clinicaltrial, and Cochrane Library, published up to January 2020 following the PRISMA guideline. We screened RCTs with our inclusion criteria and assessed the quality using the tools provided by Cochrane. The primary outcome analyzed in this study was fatigue measured as Standardized Mean Difference (SMD) with 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs). Heterogeneity was assessed using the I2 test. Subgroup analysis was conducted to determine the difference in exercise duration (<12 weeks and >12 weeks), modality (aerobic, resistance, and combination), and the onset of ADT (initiation and long-term). All analysis was performed using STATA 16.
Results
A total of 7 RCTs comprising 455 patients reported the fatigue using the FACIT-Fatigue, EORTC QLQ-C30, and Schwartz Cancer Fatigue Scale. The included studies presented a low risk of bias. Supervised exercise showed an overall reduction on fatigue (SMD = 0.25, 95%CI 0.07-0.44, p = 0.01, I2 = 0%). The subgroup test results showed no significant difference between exercise duration (p = 0.4), modality (p = 0.67), and onset of ADT (p = 0.57). The Egger’s test results showed no indication of publication bias (p = 0.64).
Conclusions
Supervised exercise reduces fatigue in prostate cancer patients receiving ADT. The available data show that there is no difference between exercise duration and modality. Furthermore, our findings highlight the benefits of supervised exercise in the initiation of ADT for preventing toxicities as well as relieving adverse effects in long-term ADT.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
51P - Real world outcomes in elderly women with HER2-positive advanced breast cancer
Presenter: Nicole Evans
Session: e-Poster Display Session
52P - Chemotherapy selection in routine clinical practice in Japan for HER2-negative advanced or metastatic breast cancer (KBCRN A001: E-SPEC Study)
Presenter: Yookija Kang
Session: e-Poster Display Session
53P - Aromatase inhibitor and cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor treated HR+/HER2- metastatic breast cancer differ to those treated with Aromatase inhibitors alone on progression
Presenter: Indunil Weerasena
Session: e-Poster Display Session
54P - Platinum-based chemotherapy in advanced breast cancer (ABC): Real-world outcome from a tertiary cancer centre in India
Presenter: Indhuja Vijesh
Session: e-Poster Display Session
55P - Eribulin in heavily pretreated metastatic breast cancer: A real-world data from India
Presenter: Tanmoy Mandal
Session: e-Poster Display Session
56P - Treatment of palbociclib in hormone receptor-positive breast cancer in China: A real-world study
Presenter: Yiqi Yang
Session: e-Poster Display Session
57P - Therapeutic vulnerability of malignant phyllodes tumour to pazopanib identified through a novel patient-derived xenograft and cell line model
Presenter: Dave Ng
Session: e-Poster Display Session
58P - Survival benefit of local treatments in breast cancer with lung metastasis: Results from a large retrospective study
Presenter: Yimeng Chen
Session: e-Poster Display Session
59P - The impact of site of metastasis on overall survival in indigenous and non-indigenous patients of Western Australia with breast cancer
Presenter: Azim Khan
Session: e-Poster Display Session
60P - Risk factors of bone metastasis and skeletal-related events in high-risk breast cancer patients
Presenter: Sumadi Lukman Anwar
Session: e-Poster Display Session