Background
To address the lack of access to supportive cancer care resources, the purpose of this study was to examine the feasibility of a tailored exercise program for neuro-oncology patients.
Methods
Patients with a primary brain tumour diagnosis, >18 years, and able to consent in English were recruited at two tertiary cancer centres in Alberta. Recruitment occurred via electronic medical record as well as self-referral. A 12-week, tailored exercise intervention with health coaching was delivered in both one-on-one and group-based formats, either in-person or online. Measures of feasibility included tracking referral, enrollment, intervention completion and adherence, measurement completion, fidelity, participant satisfaction, and safety. Participant-reported outcomes and functional fitness were assessed at baseline and 12-weeks. Objective physical activity was tracked via a Garmin activity tracker.
Results
Recruitment occurred between April 2021-December 2022. N=70 patients enrolled into the study and n=51 completed the intervention. Referral rate was 31%, enrollment rate was 66%, and intervention completion and adherence rates were 82.3% and 89.7%. At baseline and 12-weeks, measurement completion rates were 100% and 77.4% for patient-reported outcomes, and 98.4% and 75.8% for functional fitness. Average wear-time for the activity tracker was 72.8%. Fidelity of intervention delivery was 100% for exercise sessions and 87.8% for health coaching. Overall participant satisfaction was 86.5%. No major and four minor adverse events occurred.
Conclusions
Delivery of a tailored neuro-oncology exercise program with referral included via electronic medical record is feasible. Future work is needed to optimize tailored programming as well as to address factors critical for implementation into standard cancer care.