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Published in: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 1/2019

Open Access 01-12-2019 | Endometrial Cancer | Short report

Change in physical activity and quality of life in endometrial cancer survivors receiving a physical activity intervention

Authors: Michael C. Robertson, Elizabeth J. Lyons, Jaejoon Song, Matthew Cox-Martin, Yisheng Li, Charles E. Green, Bernardine M. Pinto, Cindy L. Carmack, Carol Harrison, George Baum, Karen M. Basen-Engquist

Published in: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

Endometrial cancer survivors are at an increased risk of poor quality of life outcomes. Physical activity is positively associated with general quality of life in this population, however, little is known about how changes in physical activity may be associated with changes in specific aspects of quality of life. The aim of this secondary data analysis was to explore the relationships between change in physical activity and change in physical, mental, social, and other aspects of quality of life in endometrial cancer survivors receiving a physical activity intervention.

Methods

Endometrial cancer survivors (N = 100) participated in a telephone-based physical activity intervention for six months. At baseline and post-intervention we measured physical activity via accelerometry and ecological momentary assessment, and quality of life via the Short Form Health Survey (SF-36), the Quality of Life of Adult Cancer Survivors instrument, the Brief Symptom Inventory, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and the Perceived Stress Scale. We conducted structural equation modeling path analyses to investigate how physical activity post-intervention was associated with the quality of life measures’ subscales post-intervention, adjusting for baseline levels and potentially confounding covariates.

Results

Increasing physical activity was positively associated with improvements in general health (p = .044), role limitation due to physical health (p = .005), pain (p = .041), and somatic distress (p = .023). There was no evidence to indicate that change in physical activity was associated with change in other aspects of quality of life.

Conclusions

Endometrial cancer survivors are at higher risk for suffering from challenges to physical quality of life, and findings from this study suggest that increasing physical activity may alleviate some of these problems. Further research is needed to determine whether other aspects of quality of life are linked to change in physical activity.

Trial registration

Trial registration number: NCT00501761
Name of registry: clinicaltrials.​gov
Date of registration: July 16, 2007.
Date of enrollment: June 16, 2005.
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Metadata
Title
Change in physical activity and quality of life in endometrial cancer survivors receiving a physical activity intervention
Authors
Michael C. Robertson
Elizabeth J. Lyons
Jaejoon Song
Matthew Cox-Martin
Yisheng Li
Charles E. Green
Bernardine M. Pinto
Cindy L. Carmack
Carol Harrison
George Baum
Karen M. Basen-Engquist
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes / Issue 1/2019
Electronic ISSN: 1477-7525
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1154-5

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