A Motion Exergaming Approach to Promote Self-Managing Fatigue and Pain After Head and Neck Cancer Treatment
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Summary
This overall objective of the RCT is to test an intervention to overcome the PA barriers for head and neck cancer (HNC) patients during the first 6 months after their treatment. PAfitME stands for a personalized Physical Activity intervention with fitness graded Motion Exergames. PAfitME is delivered via a tested mix of FaceTime calls and home visits, uses commercially available exergaming platforms (Nintendo Switch). We propose the following specific aims: (1) When compared to an attention control group, determine the effect of PAfitME on fatigue and musculoskeletal pain at week 6, when controlling for age and sex; (2) when compared to an attention control group, determine the effect of PAfitME on functional status and QOL at week 6, when controlling for age and sex; and (3) explore if PA self-efficacy, PA enjoyment, and exergame minutes mediate the effect of PAfitME on fatigue and musculoskeletal pain. This study will evaluate 150 post-treatment (radiation, chemotherapy, or chemoradiation) HNC patients in an RCT with an attention control. For 6 weeks, the experimental (PAfitME) group will receive the PAfitME intervention, and the attention control group will receive NCI-based survivorship education and exergame equipment. For Aims 1 and 2, using an intention-to-treat framework, we will fit a series of linear mixed effects models with each of the outcome variables. For Aim 3, we will conduct our exploratory analyses in ml\_mediation (STATA 15), which will compute direct and indirect effects for multi-level data.
Description
Among head and neck cancer (HNC) patients, 92% report fatigue and 73% have pain. A 10% increase in fatigue or pain is associated with a 10-25% reduction in HNC survival. During the critical transition period from the end of active treatment to 6 months post-treatment, untreated physical symptoms negatively impact functional status (ADL) and quality of life (QOL). Fatigue and musculoskeletal pain are known to improve in response to physical activity (PA). However, 51% of HNC survivors rarely engage in any type of PA because of complicated PA barriers. Our overall objective is to test an interve…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: To be eligible for this study, patients must be: 1. diagnosed with head and neck cancer (Tumor sites in the head and neck area); 2. 18 years or older; 3. able to understand English; 4. able to communicate; 5. have a Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) score of \>= 60%; 6. be cleared by their provider to resume low to moderate intensity PA; 7. have fatigue or pain of ≥moderate severity; and A KPS score of \>= 60% has been used in previous exercise trials in the HNC population. This is equal to ECog scores ≤ 2. Moderate fatigue or pain severity is defined as a worst score…
Interventions
- BehavioralA personalized Physical Activity intervention with fitness graded Motion Exergames (PAfitME)
A total of 7 weekly intervention sessions will occur in a period of 6 weeks. Week 0 is a setup session conducted at the participant's home, including equipment set up, safety instruction, personalized exergame prescription development, exergame physical activity practice, discussion of barriers and strategies, and Q\&A session. Weeks 1 and 2 are coaching sessions delivered by the interventionist using the FaceTime application in iPad, including exergame minutes and prescription review, exergame physical activity practice, discussion of barriers and strategies, and Q\&A session. Week 3 is a progress session conducted at the participant's home. The personalized exergame prescription will be adjusted. This session also will include exergame minutes review, exergame physical activity practice, discussion of barriers and strategies, and Q\&A session. Weeks 4 and 5 are the same as weeks 1 and 2. Week 6 is the final session. Exergame platform will be picked up at the participant's home.
Location
- University of Alabama at BirminghamBirmingham, Alabama