Physical activity interventions for disease-related physical and mental health during and following treatment in people with non-advanced colorectal cancer

May 4, 2020The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Physical activity programs for physical and mental health during and after treatment in people with early-stage colorectal cancer

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Abstract

A total of 992 participants were involved in 16 randomized control trials assessing physical activity interventions for individuals with non-advanced colorectal cancer.

  • Physical activity interventions may improve aerobic fitness (standardized mean difference of 0.82) and reduce cancer-related fatigue (mean difference of 2.16) at immediate-term follow-up.
  • Health-related quality of life showed positive effects associated with physical activity interventions (standardized mean difference of 0.36) at immediate-term follow-up.
  • No evidence was found that physical activity interventions improve physical function or disease-related mental health, including anxiety and depression.
  • Minor adverse events, such as neck and muscle pain, were reported, but no serious adverse events occurred in either intervention or usual care groups.
  • The quality of the evidence was generally low to moderate, and findings should be interpreted cautiously due to variability in study design and participant treatment status.

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