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  3. Eurythmy therapy versus slow movement fitness in the treatment of fatigue in metastatic breast cancer patients: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
 

Eurythmy therapy versus slow movement fitness in the treatment of fatigue in metastatic breast cancer patients: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.146571
Date of Publication
2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Kompleme...

Author
Meier, Delphine
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin, Anthroposophisch erweiterte Medizin (AeM)
Ribi, Karin
Gerstenberg, Gisa Almut
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin, Anthroposophisch erweiterte Medizin (AeM)
Ruhstaller, Thomas
Wolf, Ursula
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin, Anthroposophisch erweiterte Medizin (AeM)
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Trials
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1745-6215
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s13063-020-04542-5
PubMed ID
32631427
Uncontrolled Keywords

Cancer-related fatigu...

eurythmy therapy

mindful therapies

complementary therapi...

metastatic breast can...

randomized controlled...

Description
Background: Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is the most taxing symptom for many breast cancer patients during and after therapy. In patients with metastatic disease, the prevalence of CRF exceeds 75%. Currently, there is no gold standard for the treatment of CRF. Physical activity can reduce CRF and is recommended during and after cancer treatment, but may be too burdensome for patients with metastatic breast cancer. The aim of this study is to assess the effect on fatigue of eurythmy therapy (ERYT) compared to slow movement fitness (CoordiFit) in metastatic breast cancer patients.
Methods: The ERYT/CoordiFit study is a randomized controlled, open label, two-arm, multi-center Swiss clinical trial. A sample of 196 patients presenting with CRF will be recruited by oncologists from the departments of clinical oncology at each local study site. All participants will be randomly allocated to the intervention or control group in a 1:1 ratio. The control group is an active control intervention (CoordiFit) in order to control for potential non-intended effects such as therapist-patient interaction and participation in a program. Both ERYT and CoordiFit exercises are easy to learn, and the training sessions will follow the same frequency and duration schedule, i.e. 13 standardized therapy sessions of 45 minutes (once a week for 6 weeks and then once every second week) during the total intervention period of 20 weeks. The primary endpoint of the study is the change from baseline over the whole intervention period (i.e. including measurements at baseline, weeks 8, 14, and 20) in the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Fatigue (FACIT-F) subscale score.
Discussion: This study is the first-known randomized clinical trial assessing eurythmy therapy in the treatment of fatigue in metastatic breast cancer patients. Given the distress that fatigue causes patients, it is important to validate treatment options. If eurythmy therapy proves beneficial in CRF as part of this randomized controlled clinical trial, the study may be very impactful with implications not only for metastatic breast cancer patients but also for other cancer patients, health care personnel, scientists, and funding and regulatory bodies.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/37151
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2020_ERYTprotocol_Trials.pdfAdobe PDF604.22 KBpublishedOpen
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