Physical Activity Clinical Trial
Official title:
KAM: Kids Are Moving; An Exercise Program for Children With Cancer
During cancer treatment children are less active than their health peers. This inactivity
persists into survivorship and can negatively affect health and quality of life. Physical
activity may also improve fatigue, a prevalent and distressing symptom during treatment.
Improving health behaviors during treatment can have lifelong benefits for cancer survivors.
In this study, the effectiveness of the "Kids are Moving" exercise program will be
evaluated. The exercise program will follow program guidelines set up by the American
College of Sports Medicine and will be adapted for children with cancer. Children ages 6 to
18 years, who are receiving chemotherapy, and their parents, will be coached on how to
increase their physical activity and will receive an exercise prescription. This will occur
as part of the standard care they receive from the nurse practitioners during the first six
months of their outpatient visits. Investigators want to find out if children in the Kids
are Moving program are more active and have less fatigue. Activity will be measured through
patient questionnaires about activity and fatigue, and by wearing the FitBit activity
tracker and an actigraph. Outcomes will be compared to measurements collected from children
who received usual care before the exercise program started.
Physical activity is a vital for improving health and quality of life and for providing
energy for engaging in positive life experiences as children move along the developmental
continuum to a long and healthy future. Outcomes of the study will provide a foundation for
larger multi-site clinical trials.
During cancer treatment children are significantly less active than their healthy peers.
This inactivity persists into survivorship, negatively influencing their health and quality
of life. Physical activity may also improve fatigue, a near-universal and distressing
symptom during treatment. Improving health behaviors during treatment can have lifelong
benefit.
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Kids are Moving exercise
program that is delivered by nurse practitioners (NP's) during outpatient care provided to a
specific population of children. The study will be conducted at two pediatric cancer
treatment sites and will translate the American College of Sports Medicine's program,
Exercise is Medicine into practice. In this quasi-experimental design, children will receive
the study intervention, which includes exercise coaching and prescription, that is be
incorporated into the standard care they receive from the nurse practitioners during their
outpatient visits. Outcomes will be compared to historical control measurements of children
who received usual care. Study aims are to:
1. To compare measurements of activity levels of children receiving exercise coaching over
the first 6 months of cancer treatment as measured by self-report and the FitBit Flex
tracker
2. To compare activity levels of children receiving exercise coaching during cancer
treatment as measured by self-report and the FitBit Flex tracker, to activity levels of
children in the historical control group receiving usual care during cancer treatment.
3. To evaluate the influence of activity levels on fatigue experience by children
receiving cancer treatment
Children ages 6 to 18, and their parents, will be invited to participate in study
measurements which will be completed at the 2nd, 4th, and 6th months of cancer treatment.
Patients will be included if recently diagnosed with cancer (excluding bone tumors and bone
metastasis), and ambulatory. Validated self-report instruments will be used to measure
activity and fatigue. Additionally, the FitBit Flex tracker, a device that measures
steps/day and motion in three dimensions and an actigraph, will be worn by subjects over a 3
day period for each measurement point.
Physical activity is a vital intervention for improving health and quality of life and for
providing energy for engaging in positive life experiences that advance children along the
developmental continuum to a long and healthy future. Outcomes of the study will provide a
foundation for larger multi-site clinical trials.
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