Besides easing fatigue,
yoga also eases pain and depression for women with breast cancer undergoing
radiation therapy, according to a new study. Lorenzo Cohen, PhD, director of
the Integrative Medicine Program at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer
Center, in Houston, Texas and colleagues found that beyond the benefits of
stretching exercise, yoga appears to affect the physiology of breast cancer
patients, boosting patients’ self-reported quality of life and providing
long-term benefits. The results are published in the Journal of Clinical
Oncology.
“We know yoga is useful
for our population as a whole and it is important for everyone to engage in
some type of mind-body practice on a daily basis,” said Cohen.
The study randomized 163
patients women diagnosed with stage 0-III breast cancer to either yoga (n = 53)
or stretching (n = 56) for 1 hour three times a week for 6 weeks during
radiotherapy, or to a control group (n = 54) that did neither yoga nor
stretching. The median age of patients in the study was about 52. The retention
rate was high with similar loss to follow-up numbers in each of the groups—only
three patients in each group attended fewer than half the classes.
“What is unique about this
study is the use of an active control group, the women who were taught
stretching exercises,” said Cohen. “By comparing the women doing yoga to the
women doing stretching exercises we see that the benefits of yoga go beyond
just the physical aspects of yoga.”
At 1 and 3 months,
patients in the yoga group reported significantly greater increases in their
physical component scores through, as measured by a 36-item survey on medical
outcomes, compared with patients in the non-active control group (P = .01). At
all time points measured during the 6-month period, those in the yoga group had
greater increases in physical functioning as compared with both the active and
non-active control groups (P < .05).
Patients in both the yoga
and stretching groups had reduced fatigue (P < .05). No differences in sleep
patterns or mental health were seen among the three groups, consistent with a
previous pilot trial.
Those in the yoga group
had the highest decrease in circulating cortisol levels by the end of the study
as compared to the active and non-active control groups (P = .02). A marginally
significant effect was seen after 1 month of yoga (P = .01). The clinical
significance of this finding is still unclear, state the authors, although this
result may suggest that it does suggest positive effects of yoga on the stress
hormone cortisol. Further studies are needed to understand the link if any, of
stress hormone levels and yoga in cancer patients.
“We know that exercise in
the form of stretching did help with fatigue and a little with physical
functioning, but the benefits of yoga were apparent above and beyond stretching
and included patient reports of their quality of life and better stress hormone
regulation,” said Cohen. “Importantly, the benefits of yoga remained
significant even 6 months later.”
According to Cohen, much
more research is needed to understand exactly how yoga influences a cancer
patient’s physiology during different cancer stages and treatments.
“Patients often ask which
mind-body program is the best for reducing stress and improving quality of
life. The answer is the one they will do every day and make a part of their
life. Patients should be encouraged to find a mind-body approach that works for
them and to practice it daily,” said Cohen.
In collaboration with
India's largest yoga research institution, Swami Vivekananda Yoga Anusandhana
Samsthana in Bangalore, India, this research is part of ongoing studies to
validate, scientifically, mind-body interventions that may help cancer
patients.
Source:http://www.cancernetwork.com/breast-cancer/breast-cancer-patients-see-improved-qol-yoga
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