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Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power Training in Postmenopausal Oncological Women: the POWER Health Study

Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power Training in Postmenopausal Oncological Women: the POWER Health Study

Recruiting
35-75 years
Female
Phase N/A

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Overview

POWER Health is a randomized clinical trial with a two-arm parallel design whose objectives are 1) to study metabolic flexibility and autonomic function (both capacities that describe cardiovascular health) in a sample of postmenopausal oncological women vs postmenopausal untreated controls (CT); and 2) to analyze the impact of two different 8-week physical exercise supervised interventions: HIIT training vs strength training focused on muscle power, on both cardiovascular capacities in these populations.

Description

Nowadays, breast cancer is the most common type of cancer worldwide, accounting for 30% of all cancers in Spanish women in 2023. Cancer is also the second leading cause of death in developed countries, following cardiovascular diseases, with which it shares a close relationship. Additionally, we know that the incidence of breast cancer increases with age, experiencing a rise after menopause. However, lifestyle and physical exercise are known to improve the prevention, prognosis, and survival of this disease, as well as enhance quality of life in these patients. Indeed, recent studies have highlighted the relevance of cardiovascular health in this oncological process, as well as the potential of physical exercise interventions to improve cardiovascular health following the disease.

POWER Health is a randomized clinical trial aimed at studying metabolic flexibility and autonomic health in a population of breast cancer recurrence-free women (RFC) compared to postmenopausal untreated controls (CT), along with the implementation of two supervised exercise interventions in both populations. These interventions will last for 8 weeks, one involving HIIT exercise focused on improving metabolic power (MPI), and the other one involving strength exercise focused on enhancing muscular power, with the hypothesis of better metabolic flexibility and autonomic function, and consequently, better cardiovascular health.

POWER health is a mixed method design: cross-sectional & longitudinal study. Given the feasibility and simple application of POWER Health, this clinical trial will contribute to the prevention and improvement of the health of postmenopausal women, with an important clinical and economic impact, not only in the scientific community but also in clinical practice.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients diagnosed of relapse free-cancer (RFC) or patients not diagnosed of any cancer at least the last 15 years (CG)
  • Aged between 35 and 75 years
  • Diagnostic of breast cancer (i.e., including ductal carcinoma, invasive carcinoma, triple negative; RFC) or physiological menopause (CG)
  • Not participating in a nutritional/dietary intervention
  • Not being physically active (i.e., not to be participating in any physical exercise program in the last 3 months, or performing less than 600 metabolic equivalents (METS)/week of moderate-vigorous physical activity).
  • To be capable and willing to provide informed consent
  • Not to suffer from any specific condition that may impede testing of the study hypothesis or make it unsafe to engage in the exercise intervention (i.e., determined by the research staff).

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Medical contraindication for being engaged in an exercise.
  • Additional surgery planned within the intervention
  • Consuming usually betablocker or any drugs alterning nervous system functioning
  • History of another primary invasive cancer (RFC) or suffer a serious chronic illness (CG)
  • To present any of the following cardiac conditions: (i) myocardial infarction or coronary revascularization procedure within prior 3 months, (ii) uncontrolled hypertension (i.e., systolic ≥180 mmHg or diastolic ≥100 mmHg), (iii) uncontrolled arrhythmias (iv) valvular disease clinically significant, (v) decompensated heart failure or (vi) to suffer from known aortic aneurysm.

Study details
    Breast Cancer Female
    Cardiometabolic Syndrome
    Metabolism Disorder
    Lipid
    Autonomic Dysfunction
    Cardiovascular Diseases in Old Age

NCT06336070

University of Valencia

13 April 2024

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