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BREAST CANCER AND EXERCISE

BREAST CANCER AND EXERCISE BREX: A Multicenter Phase III Open Randomised Trial of the Efficacy of Exercise in the Prevention of Long-term Adverse Effects of Adjuvant Treatments and Breast Cancer Recurrences in Women With Primary Breast Cancer.

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00639210
Acronym
BREX
Enrollment
573
Registered
2008-03-20
Start date
2005-09-30
Completion date
2007-09-30
Last updated
2019-02-26

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Prevent Osteoporosis and Osteoporotic Fractures, Improve Quality of Life, Improve Weight Control, and Muscular and Cardiovascular Fitness, Help the Patients to Return to Working Life, Reduce the Risk of Breast Cancer Recurrence, Reduce All-cause Mortality in Patients With Primary Breast Cancer

Keywords

breast cancer, exercise, osteoporosis, fracture, quality of life

Brief summary

A Finnish Breast Cancer Group Study (BREX 01-2004). A multicenter phase III open randomised trial of the efficacy of exercise in the prevention of long-term adverse effects of adjuvant treatments and breast cancer recurrences in women with primary breast cancer. The aim of the study is to investigate whether regular exercise training could reduce the long-term side effects of adjuvant treatments of primary breast cancer and improve quality of life and well being.

Detailed description

A multicenter phase III open randomised trial of the efficacy of exercise in the prevention of long-term adverse effects of adjuvant treatments and breast cancer recurrences in women with primary breast cancer. The aim of the study is to investigate whether regular exercise training could reduce the long-term side effects of adjuvant treatments of primary breast cancer and improve quality of life and well being. Large controlled prospective studies are needed to confirm the preliminary findings of exercises benefits in cancer patients, and to investigate the type, the frequency, intensity and tolerability of exercise training in cancer patients, before any clinical recommendations can be given. Prevention of osteoporosis, improvement of weight control, and muscular and cardiovascular fitness is been waited. The second aim of the study is to investigate, whether regular exercise training reduces the risk of breast cancer recurrence, prevents other diseases and reduce all-cause mortality and is cost effective in women with primary breast cancer.

Interventions

Design: supervised training is organised for the exercise group once a week in groups of 10 to 15 subjects. The training is guided by an experienced physical therapist.Content: The supervised training of the exercise group consists of two different classes alternating at four week periods; step aerobics class and circuit training class. The 60-minute aerobics and circuit training classes also include warming-up and cooling-down periods both lasting 10-15 minutes.

Sponsors

Finnish Breast Cancer Group
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
35 Years to 68 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

Histologically proven invasive breast cancer T1-4N0-3M0, pre- or postmenopausal breast cancer patient treated with adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy within 4 months or patient who has started adjuvant endocrine therapy (antiestrogens, aromatase inhibitors, LHRH agonists, or combinations) no later than 4 months earlier,age from 35 to 68 years,signed informed consent prior to beginning protocol specific procedures

Exclusion criteria

* Prior malignancy except basal cell carcinoma or in situ cervix carcinoma * Male gender * Haematogenous metastases (M1) * No systemic adjuvant therapy * Postmenopausal women treated with antiestrogens, tamoxifen or toremifene, adjuvant treatment only (+/- radiotherapy) * Pregnancy or recent lactation (\< 1 year) * Severe cardiac disease (New York Heart Association class III or greater), myocardial infarction within 12 months, uncontrolled hypertension * Verified osteoporosis (proximal femur or lumbar spine t-score \< -2.5 or fracture without trauma) * Concomitant medications affecting calcium and bone metabolism such as bisphosphonates, calcitonin, PTH, SERMs, oral corticosteroids (over 6 months), anticonvulsants (fenytoin, carbamazepine) and prolonged heparin therapy * Other diseases affecting calcium and bone metabolism such as hyperthyroidism, newly diagnosed hypothyroidism, primary hyperparathyroidism, renal failure, chronic hepatic diseases, organ transplant, Cushing's syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic bowel diseases such as celiac disease, Chron disease or history of total ventricular resection * Other serious illness or medical condition, which could be contraindication for exercise * Patients not capable of training (severe knee arthrosis, severe ligamental or cartilage injuries at lower extremities) * Residence more than one hour from the exercise centre * Competitive athlete

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
The aim of the study is to investigate whether regular exercise after adjuvant treatments of breast cancer could prevent osteoporosis and improve quality of life.1-10 years

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Fitness and weight control, number of falls and fractures, breast cancer recurrence.1-10 years

Countries

Finland

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 13, 2026