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A. Hoorelbeke



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    P1.06 - Poster Session with Presenters Present (ID 458)

    • Event: WCLC 2016
    • Type: Poster Presenters Present
    • Track: Advanced NSCLC
    • Presentations: 1
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      P1.06-040 - Home-Based Pulmonary Rehabilitation in Advanced Non Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients Treated by Oral Targeted Therapy: A Feasibility Study (ID 4453)

      14:30 - 14:30  |  Author(s): A. Hoorelbeke

      • Abstract
      • Slides

      Background:
      Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is valuable in the peri-operative setting of non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, but not established for stage IIIB-IV disease. Previously, we showed that home-based PR is feasible and may significantly improve quality of life (QoL) and functional status of NSCLC patients treated by chemotherapy (submitted). The goal of this study was to assess the feasibility and value of home-based PR in advanced NSCLC patients treated by oral targeted therapies.

      Methods:
      Advanced NSCLC patients with oral targeted therapy were recruited in a prospective study in 2015-2016 in Lille University Hospital, France. After written informed consent, they benefited from 8 weeks home-based PR including functional exercises, psychological and nutrition support, therapeutic education. Exclusion criteria were cardiovascular contraindication to PR, symptomatic brain metastasis, bone metastasis with high fracture risk, or severe cognitive disorder. Main endpoints were adherence, inclusion rate, and cause of refusal. Secondary endpoints were PR benefits assessed by QoL scales (EORTC QLQ C 30, FACT-L, HAD); functional capacity: 6min walk test, 6 min stepper test, spirometry, respiratory muscle strength; and global condition: nutrition, treatment tolerance. This study was approved by local Ethical Committee

      Results:
      Among 36 screened patients, the adhesion rate was 55.6% with 20 patients joining the study. Other patients refused mostly because (a) of “lack of interest for PR and they don’t want to be disturbed” (40% of cases), or (b) they considered “their physical activity already sufficient” (12%), or (c) “family constraints” (12%). Only 15 patients (41.6%) started PR (3 early deaths, 1 exclusion for intraventricular thrombosis, 1 consent withdrawal). No serious adverse event was reported but only grade 1 asthenia or musculoskeletal pain. Significant increases of FACT-L score from 84.7 to 100.2 (p=0.02) and 6 min stepper test from 140 to 195.7 steps (p=0.01) were found after PR, and preservation of patients’ autonomy reflected by stability of 6WT data. Most of other parameters exhibited a positive but not significant trend, likely due to the limited number of participants.

      Conclusion:
      Home-based PR is feasible and well-tolerated in patients with advanced NSCLC treated by oral targeted therapies. Significant improvements were obtained with PR based on 6ST and QoL FACT-L data. Moreover, PR was highly appreciated by patients, their relatives, and all medical teams raising our will to be able to propose PR to all our stage III-IV NSCLC patients. Currently, this study is still ongoing and multicentric, aiming at recruiting 50 extra patients.

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