Heliyon (Nov 2023)

Effect of a lifestyle intervention program's on breast cancer survivors' cardiometabolic health: Two-year follow-up

  • Valentina Natalucci,
  • Carlo Ferri Marini,
  • Francesco Lucertini,
  • Giosuè Annibalini,
  • Davide Sisti,
  • Luciana Vallorani,
  • Roberta Saltarelli,
  • Andrea Rocco Panico,
  • Marta Imperio,
  • Marco Flori,
  • Paolo Busacca,
  • Anna Villarini,
  • Sabrina Donati Zeppa,
  • Deborah Agostini,
  • Silvia Monaldi,
  • Simone Barocci,
  • Vincenzo Catalano,
  • Marco Bruno Luigi Rocchi,
  • Piero Benelli,
  • Vilberto Stocchi,
  • Elena Barbieri,
  • Rita Emili

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. e21761

Abstract

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The purpose of this study is to assess the cardiometabolic responses of a lifestyle intervention (LI) conducted at home among breast cancer (BC) survivors during the two years of COVID-19 pandemic. A 3-month LI focused on diet and exercise was performed on thirty BC survivors (women; stages 0-II; non-metastatic; aged 53.6 ± 7.6 years; non-physically active) with a risk factor related to metabolic/endocrine diseases. Anthropometrics, cardiorespiratory fitness (V˙ O2max), physical activity level (PAL), adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MeDiet modified questionnaire), and several biomarkers (i.e., glycemia, insulin, insulin resistance [HOMA-IR] index, triglycerides, high- [HDL] and low- [LDL] density lipoproteins, total cholesterol, progesterone, testosterone, and hs-troponin) were evaluated before and 3-, 6-, 12-, and 24-month after the LI. Beneficial effects of the LI were observed on several variables (i.e., body mass index, waist circumference, MeDiet, PAL, V˙ O2max, glycemia, insulin, HOMA-IR index, LDL, total cholesterol, triglycerides, testosterone) after 3-month. The significant effect on Mediterranean diet adherence and V˙ O2max persisted up to the 24-month follow-up. Decreases in HOMA-IR index and triglycerides were observed up to 12-month, however did not persist afterward. This study provides evidence on the positive association between LI and cardiometabolic health in BC survivors.

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