The women in steady exercise research (WISER) survivor trial

The innovative transdisciplinary design of a randomized controlled trial of exercise and weight-loss interventions among breast cancer survivors with lymphedema.

Renate M. Winkels, Kathleen M. Sturgeon, Michael J. Kallanb, Lorraine T. Dean, Zi Zhangb, Margaret Evangelist, Justin C. Browne, David B. Sarwer, Andrea B. Troxel, Crystal Denlinger, Monica Laudermilk, Anna Fornash, Angela DeMichele, Lewis A. Chodosh, Kathryn H. Schmitz. Contemporary Clinical Trials 61 (2017) 63–72.

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The women in steady exercise research (WISER) survivor trial: The innovative transdisciplinary design of a randomized controlled trial of exercise and weight-loss interventions among breast cancer survivors with lymphedema.

Renate M. Winkels, Kathleen M. Sturgeon, Michael J. Kallanb, Lorraine T. Dean, Zi Zhangb, Margaret Evangelist, Justin C. Browne, David B. Sarwer, Andrea B. Troxel, Crystal Denlinger, Monica Laudermilk, Anna Fornash, Angela DeMichele, Lewis A. Chodosh, Kathryn H. Schmitz. Contemporary Clinical Trials 61 (2017) 63–72.

Introduction: Breast cancer survivors face dual challenges: long term sequelae of treatment, and risk of recurrent disease. Obesity and a sedentary lifestyle complicate both challenges. The WISER Survivor trial assessed the effects of exercise and/or weight-loss on lymphedema, biomarkers of breast cancer recurrence, and quality of life. We report on the innovative transdisciplinary design of this trial and report attrition rates.

Methods: This one year trial randomized breast cancer survivors who had a BMI of ≥25 kg/m2, were sedentary and had breast-cancer-related-lymphedema to 1) exercise (weight training and aerobic exercise) 2) weight-loss 3) exercise and weight-loss 4) or control group. Innovative aspects included: adaptation of a community-based weight training program to a largely home-based program; use of a commercial meal replacement system as part of the lifestyle modification weight-loss program; inclusion of measures of cost-effectiveness to enable economic evaluations; and alignment with a parallel mouse model for breast cancer recurrence to enable transdisciplinary research. In this model, mice bearing dormant residual tumor cells, which spontaneously relapse, were placed on a high-fat diet. Overweight animals were randomly assigned to exercise, calorie restriction, both, or control group and followed for cancer recurrence. The animal model will guide mechanistic biomarkers to be tested in the human trial.

Results & discussion: 351 participants were randomized;13 experienced breast cancer recurrence during the trial. Of the 338 participants without recurrence, 83% completed the trial. The WISER Survivor trial will show the effects of exercise and weight-loss on lymphedema outcomes, biomarkers of recurrence and quality of life.

Main findings

The results for this study are not available yet. This paper described the method and the assessment protocol for this study.