Coleman, E. A., Goodwin, J. A., Kennedy, R., Coon, S. K., Richards, K., Enderlin, C., . . . Anaissie, E. J. (2012). Effects of exercise on fatigue, sleep, and performance: a randomized trial. Oncology Nursing Forum, 39, 468–477.
To compare usual care with a home-based individualized exercise program (HBIEP) in patients receiving intensive treatment for multiple myeloma (MM) and epoetin alfa therapy.
This was a randomized trial with repeated measures of two groups (one experimental and one control) and an approximate 15-week experimental period for the HBIEP. The control group received a recommendation to walk 20 minutes three times per week. In the HBIEP, patients were given color-coded stretch bands and materials to illustrate exercises to be used, and they were to perform aerobic walking to reach 65% to 80% of the maximal heart rate. Patients mailed in weekly activity summaries. Assessments were performed at baseline, 10 to 12 weeks later prior to the second chemotherapy cycle, and three to four weeks later when finishing stem cell collection.
This was a randomized, controlled trial with repeated measures of two groups and a 15-week experimental period.
No statistically significant differences existed among the experimental and control groups for fatigue, sleep, or performance (aerobic capacity). Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) were found in each of the study outcomes for all patients as treatment progressed, and patients experienced more fatigue and poorer nighttime sleep and performance.
The effect of exercise seemed to be minimal on decreasing fatigue, improving sleep, and improving performance. Exercise is safe and has physiologic benefits for patients undergoing MM treatment and, when combined with epoetin alfa, helped to alleviate anemia.
Although the results might indicate no derived benefit, patients became more fatigued, slept less, and experienced a decline in performance with more treatment. The HBIEP group required fewer red blood cell transfusions to maintain a similar hemoglobin level, less platelet transfusions, and fewer days to collect stem cells. When combined with epoetin alfa therapy, exercise had an effect in decreasing cancer-related anemia and improving cell count recovery after high-dose chemotherapy. These are benefits to patients and the healthcare economy. Cancer rehabilitation exercises may result in improved performance. Having fatigue prior to treatment might predict having fatigue after treatment. Energy conservation measures should be considered with endurance and resistance exercises. Rehabiltation therapy might be needed for deconditioned patients. Exercise should be tailored individually based on the patient's disease stage, presence of bone lesions, and values. The HBIEP may have helped to alleviate anemia, but there is no evidence that HBIEP combining muscle strengthening and aerobic walking exercises decreases fatigue.