Author:
Ma Ximei,Zhuang Simin,Hou Jiawen,Zhao Yanan,Xiao Guanghong,Chen Mengyun,Wang Yanhong
Abstract
Background
Global Cancer Statistics 2020 reported that breast cancer had exceeded lung cancer as the most frequently diagnosed cancer. Surgery is the primary treatment modality for breast cancer, but postoperative upper limb dysfunction often occurs; functional exercise can alleviate this and restore upper limb function. However, exercise compliance is low in postoperative breast cancer patients; thus, many studies have been conducted in recent years to improve patient compliance with exercise.
Objective
The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of different interventions to improve exercise adherence in postoperative breast cancer patients.
Methods
We searched PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, EMBASE, Wan Fang, CNKI, VIP, and CBM databases for eligible studies. Exercise adherence rate and quality-of-life difference were assessed as outcomes. Sensitivity analysis and inconsistency detection were performed to evaluate whether the exclusion of high-risk studies affected the validity. Risk of bias was assessed using the risk-of-bias table in RevMan 5.4. Surface under the cumulative ranking was used to estimate the rankings among different interventions.
Results
Twenty-five randomized controlled trials involving 9 interventions were included, and the network meta-analysis results showed that patients in the pedometer + counseling group had the best exercise adherence.
Conclusion
Pedometer + counseling care measures are recommended to improve exercise adherence in postoperative breast cancer patients.
Implications for Practice
Oncology nurses can improve patients’ exercise compliance through counseling and by giving them pedometers to wear.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Oncology (nursing),Oncology