(Press-News.org) MIAMI, FLORIDA (JULY 18, 2023) – Researchers from Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston have been awarded $7 million in total funding to study how diet and exercise impact mental and physical functioning in older cancer survivors and their caregivers.
The funding is being provided by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), a nonprofit, Washington, D.C.-based organization that supports research designed to help patients, caregivers and clinicians make better informed healthcare decisions.
Tracy Crane, PhD, RDN, co-lead of Cancer Control and director of Lifestyle Medicine, Prevention and Digital Health at Sylvester and associate professor of medical oncology, will be the study’s co-principal investigator along with Christina Dieli-Conwright, PhD, MPH, exercise oncology and population sciences researcher at Dana- Farber and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Their five-year study, expected to begin in spring 2024, will compare the effectiveness of supervised and unsupervised exercise-and-diet interventions in pairs of older cancer patients and their caregivers. The researchers plan to recruit a total of 763 patient-caregiver pairs from each organization’s respective service area. Prospective patients must be age 65 or older and have completed treatment for lung, breast, colorectal or prostate cancer within the past year. Caregivers can be any age so long as they provide informal care for the patient.
Participants will be randomly assigned to either the supervised group, which will participate in exercise and nutrition sessions via videoconferencing to promote aerobic and resistance training and to follow a Mediterranean diet pattern, or an unsupervised group whose participants will use wearable devices to track exercise activity and follow the same diet pattern. Both interventions will last six months and participants will be evaluated at six- and 12-month intervals to measure the impact on mental and physical functioning as well as physical activity and diet.
“Past research has demonstrated the importance of healthy diet and exercise in improving outcomes, including physical and cognitive function, for older persons as well as cancer survivors,” Crane said. “What remains unknown is the best way to deliver these interventions, especially in a racially and ethnically diverse population of older cancer survivors and their caregivers.”
Crane, whose Sylvester lab examines the impact of diet, exercise and digital health tools on cancer survivorship, added that caregivers play a vital role for cancer survivors and, in some cases, their health also declines during the patient’s cancer journey.
“Our study seeks to determine the best way to deliver a lifestyle intervention,” she explained. “With advances in digital health, especially wearable devices, it’s important to understand how effective this lower-cost method can be versus the gold standard of one-on-one supervised programs.”
By 2040, there will be more 26 million cancer survivors, with almost 75% of them over age 65, the researchers noted. Following their diagnosis, older cancer patients often experience declines in mental and physical abilities.
“These health challenges are complicated by the natural aging process and ‘accelerated aging’ that can occur with cancer treatment,” said Dana Farber’s Dieli-Conwright. “However, these declines are likely improved by a physically active lifestyle and well-balanced diet.”
Crane and Dieli-Conwright’s funding award has been approved pending completion of a business and programmatic review by PCORI staff and issuance of a formal award contract.
“Sylvester continually strives to improve the health and wellness of our cancer patients and their caregivers throughout South Florida and beyond,” said Director Stephen D. Nimer, M.D. “We congratulate Dr. Crane and are grateful for the funding she and her collaborator will receive to advance our knowledge and ability to develop ‘best practices’ for delivering care to this vulnerable patient group.”
“This study was selected for our funding for its potential to answer the need for real-world comparative clinical effectiveness research across the aging continuum that could inform evidence-based clinical practice for this important population,” said PCORI Executive Director Nakela L. Cook, MD, MPH. “We look forward to following the study’s progress and working with Sylvester and Dana-Farber to share the results.”
# # #
END
English serves as a convenient, common language for science. However, this practice poses insurmountable barriers to those whose first language is not English — the majority of people around the world. According to research published on July 18th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, led by Dr. Tatsuya Amano at the University of Queensland, Australia, the disadvantages of being a non-native English speaker in science range from difficulties in reading and writing papers to reduced participation in international conferences.
Few studies to date have ...
A “clear and significant” language barrier cost faced by non-native English-speaking scientists has been quantified by a University of Queensland-led international survey.
The study, led by UQ’s Dr Tatsuya Amano, surveyed 908 environmental science researchers on scientific activities across five categories – paper reading, writing, publication, dissemination, and conference participation – finding a substantial disadvantage for non-native English speakers in all five.
“Compared to native English speakers, non-native English speakers need up to twice as ...
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infections are commonly associated with abdominal pain, bloating, and acidity. Clinical evidence suggests that infection with H. pylori cagA+ strains dramatically increases the risk of developing gastric cancer. A specialized protein delivered by H. pylori to the host, oncoprotein “CagA,” has been shown to interact with multiple host proteins and promote gastric carcinogenesis (transformation of normal cells to cancer cells). However, the underlying mechanisms associated with its biochemical activity have not been fully determined yet.
A new study published in Science Signaling on 18 July 2023 shares insights ...
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A fifth of neighborhood blocks in the continental United States most vulnerable to natural disaster account for a quarter of the lower 48 states’ risk, according to a detailed assessment of vulnerability.
Leaders in data-driven risk modeling, researchers at The University of Alabama used advanced data analysis and machine learning of more than 100 factors that influence vulnerability to natural hazards for about 11 million United States Census Bureau blocks, finding significant differences can exist between neighboring blocks.
The result published in the journal Nature Communications is the first mapping ...
INDIANAPOLIS—A new study led by Indiana University School of Medicine researchers shows primary care clinicians who receive specialized training can make accurate autism diagnoses for over 80 percent of young children referred with developmental delays, providing compelling evidence that community-based models of autism evaluation are a potential solution for improving access to this needed service. They recently published their findings in Pediatrics.
One in 36 children are now diagnosed with autism, according to the latest 2023 report from the Centers for Disease Control. In many regions of the county, waitlists ...
Vanderbilt University Medical Center has received a $7 million, five-year funding award from PCORI (Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute) to compare two sedatives used to place breathing tubes in the emergency department (ED) or intensive care unit (ICU).
To provide support with a breathing machine, doctors must place a breathing tube into a patient’s mouth and throat, and they are given a medication to make them sleep during this procedure. The two medications doctors most often give ...
Lewy body disease is the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer's disease. A research group from Lund University has now shown that the disease can be detected before symptoms appear, using a spinal fluid test. The studies are published in Nature Medicine, where the researchers also demonstrate that reduced sense of smell is strongly linked to Lewy body disease even before other clear symptoms have developed. The findings are also reported simultaneously at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference.
Lewy ...
The landmark United States Supreme Court ruling in Loving v. Commonwealth of Virginia abolished bans on interracial marriage in the United States in 1967, but a new academic paper from Rice University and Texas A&M University said an uptick in interracial relationships since then has not ended discriminatory tendencies, even among individuals who are in these romantic partnerships.
The paper, “Mixing races, maintaining racism? Considering the connection between interracial families, social distance and racial inequality,” is online and will appear in an upcoming edition ...
BESSY II's high-brilliance X-rays can be used to produce microscopic images with spatial resolution down to a few tens of nanometres. Whole cell volumes can be examined without the need for complex sample preparation as in electron microscopy. Under the X-ray microscope, the tiny cell organelles with their fine structures and boundary membranes appear clear and detailed, even in three dimensions. This makes cryo x-ray tomography ideal for studying changes in cell structures caused, for example, by external triggers. Until now, however, the evaluation of 3D tomograms has required largely manual and labour-intensive data ...
A bifacial perovskite solar cell, which allows sunlight to reach both sides of the device, holds the potential to produce higher energy yields at lower overall costs, according to scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
The dual nature of a bifacial solar cell enables the capture of direct sunlight on the front and the capture of reflected sunlight on the back, allowing this type of device to outperform its monofacial counterparts.
“This perovskite cell can operate very ...