Exercise in Metastatic Breast Cancer: EMBody
Exercise Study for Patients with Spread Breast Cancer
Tarah Ballinger, MD
Primary Investigator
Brief description of study
Detailed description of study
- To compare the effect of exercise versus usual care on objective physical functionured by the short physical performance battery (SBBP)
- To compare the effect of exercise versus usual care on subjective physical functioningured by PROMIS-29 questionnaire
- To compare the effect of exercise versus usual care on body composition, measured by visceral adiposity, lean muscle mass, and muscle density on CT scans obtained asdard of care using SliceOmatic software
- To compare the effect of exercise versus usual care on objective physical activityured by accelerometer wear
- To compare the effect of exercise versus usual care on patient reported outcomes,uding fatigue (BFI) and health related quality of life (PROMIS-29)
- To determine the fidelity of the exercise intervention, measured by changes in measuresucts of habit and intention administered by questionnaire
- To describe patient uptake and adherence with the intervention, measured by proportionhed patients who consent to the study, and proportion of assigned trainingded by patients randomized to the exercise arm.
Eligibility of study
You may be eligible for this study if you meet the following criteria:
- Conditions: Breast Cancer, Indolent Metastatic Breast Cancer
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Age: 18 years or above
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Gender: All
- Age ≥ 18 years
- Diagnosis of metastatic breast cancer
- No progression of disease in the 12 months prior to screening per the treatingvestigator
- If participant has changed treatments in the prior 12 months for reasons otherhan progressive disease, they remain eligible
- Participants on no treatment or "no evidence of disease" but still with adiagnosis of metastatic breast cancer are eligible
- ECOG performance status of 0-2
- Participants must be able to march in place for 30 seconds. Assistance by holding ontohair is allowed.
- Informed consent and authorization of the release of health information must bebtained according to institutional guidelines
- Currently not meeting physical activity guidelines (defined as less than 150 minutesderate to vigorous exercise per week measured by the RPAQ questionnairedministered during screening)
- Receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy at any point in the prior 12 months.
- Participants receiving endocrine therapy are eligible.
- Participants receiving targeted therapy or antibody therapy are eligible(examples including trastuzumab, pertuzumab, TDM-1, trastuzumab deruxtecan,uzumab govetecan, immunotherapy, CDK4/6 inhibitors, olaparib, alpelisib,.)
- Any condition precluding supervised exercise participation. A letter from a physician
supporting participation can supercede this eligibility criteria.
- NYHA class III or IV congestive heart failure
- Uncontrolled angina
- Myocardial infarction in the prior 12 months
- Orthopedic surgery in the previous 3 months or plans for orthopedic surgeryduring the study period
- Chronic uncontrolled pulmonary conditions such as uncontrolled asthma (symptoms >2 days/week) or dyspnea requiring oxygen
- Symptomatic peripheral vascular disease
- Or any other comorbidity that would interfere with the ability to complete andy with the protocol in the opinion of the investigator, includingychological illness.
- Active, untreated brain metastases
This study investigates the effects of exercise on patients with metastatic breast cancer, a type of cancer that has spread from the breast to other parts of the body. The study focuses on patients who have not experienced disease progression in the past 12 months and are not receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy. The purpose is to see how virtual, supervised exercise can impact fitness, muscle mass, and quality of life over 16 weeks.
Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two study arms: one group will engage in a structured exercise program, while the other will receive usual care without added exercise. The study will measure the effects of exercise on heart and lung fitness, physical function, body composition, and patient-reported outcomes using various tests and questionnaires.
- Who can participate: Adults aged 18 and older with metastatic breast cancer can participate if they have not had disease progression in the last year. Participants must be able to march in place and currently engage in less than 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise per week.
- Study details: Participants will either follow a 16-week virtual exercise program or continue with usual care. The exercise program includes supervised aerobic and resistance training. A placebo is not used in this study.
- Study timelines: The study will last 16 weeks.