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Effects of combined exercise training on the inflammatory profile of older cancer patients treated with systemic therapy


ABSTRACT: Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is a major issue in older cancer patients as it is associated with functional decline and a lower quality of life, and an increased inflammatory activity during cancer therapy is suspected to play a key role in CRF etiology. Combined aerobic and resistance exercise training is known to reduce CRF, and this could be mediated by a protective effect against this increased inflammatory activity. Hence, the main objective was to measure the effect of a 12-week combined exercise training on the inflammatory profile of older cancer patients undergoing systemic therapy. A secondary objective was to verify if there was an association between inflammatory profile and CRF.

Methods

Twenty older non-metastatic cancer patients initiating chemotherapy and/or hormone therapy were randomly assigned to 12 weeks of supervised, combined exercise or a control group (static stretching). Primary outcomes were the inflammatory profile, Indoleamine 2,3-deoxygenase activity (KYN/TRP ratio), and CRF (FACIT-F questionnaire). Control outcomes were the fasting nutritional and hormonal blood profiles, body composition (iDXA), physical activity habits (PASE questionnaire), nutritional habits (3-day log), and treatment-related variables.

Results

No worsening of the inflammatory profile was observed in both arms of the study after the intervention. No significant change in CRF was observed, although there was a trend for a reduction in the experimental group (p ​= ​0.10). Significant correlations were found at both timepoints between the KYN/TRP ratio and the delay with the previous treatment received (p ​≤ ​0.03).

Conclusion

These results suggest that exercise might have elicited a positive effect on CRF, which was not mediated by the modulation of the pro-inflammatory cytokine profile. However, the decrease in IL-6/IL-10 ratio in the exercise group might reflect a possible anti-inflammatory effect of exercise. Moreover, exploratory analyses suggest that an acute effect of chemotherapy treatments influenced the inflammatory profile measurements, which could explain the absence of change in the fasting inflammatory profile. Highlights • We studied the anti-inflammatory effect of exercise in older cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.• Exercise could alter the ratio of anti-to pro-inflammatory markers during chemotherapy.• Chemotherapy might induce acute inflammatory peaks in the week following treatment.• We propose that exercise could interact acutely with these pro-inflammatory peaks.

SUBMITTER: Parent-Roberge H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8474500 | biostudies-literature |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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