lity and Acceptability of Prehabilitation before Surgery for Endometrial Cancer
10.5763/kjsm.2020.38.2.85
- Author:
Sang-Hwa LEE
1
;
Na-Ra LEE
;
Jae-Weon KIM
;
Maria LEE
;
Seok-Ju SEONG
;
Jae-Yun SONG
;
Yeon-Soo KIM
Author Information
1. Department of Physical Education, Seoul National University College of Education, Seoul, Korea
- Publication Type:Clinical Article
- From:The Korean Journal of Sports Medicine
2020;38(2):85-94
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Purpose:To investigate the safety of and adherence to a prehabilitation program among patients with endometrial cancer and to provide preliminary evidence of the program’s efficacy in terms of health-related fitness (HRF) and patient-reported outcomes.
Methods:Nineteen patients with endometrial cancer were recruited in a 2-week trial for a one-on-one supervised exercise program. All patients participated in an individual exercise program—the Challenge, Overcome, Resolve, and Enhance (CORE) program—which consisted of 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous intensity resistance, core stability, and aerobic exercise, supervised five times within 2 weeks before surgery.
Results:Seventeen (89.5%) of the 19 participants completed the CORE program, and no adverse events occurred. All participants accomplished the daily mean step counts and sustained the prescribed target heart rate (reserve 50%–60%) during the CORE program sessions. Participants who completed the exercise program exhibited significantly improved HRF (cardiorespiratory fitness, 30-second chair stand, hand grip strength, curl-ups, sit and reach, single-leg standing with closed eyes; p<0.001 for all) without changes in the body mass index (p=0.113). Their quality of life (general, p=0.001; function, p=0.001; symptom, p=0.003), symptom clusters (p=0.006), anxiety (p<0.001), and depression (p<0.001) were significantly improved.
Conclusion:The 2-week prehabilitation CORE program is safe and feasible for patients scheduled to undergo surgery for early-stage endometrial cancer and may improve their physical and psychological health status.