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Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

Cardiorespiratory fitness in childhood cancer survivors: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

  • 2024-10-04
  • European journal of preventive cardiology 33(4)
    • Kaitlyn Weinkauf
    • Emma Fyfe
    • Dean Hewitt
    • Jing Wang
    • Megan Kennedy
    • Edith Pituskin
    • Andre La Gerche
    • Stephen J Foulkes
    • Mark J Haykowsky

Study Design

Type
Meta-Analysis
Sample size
n = 2,165
Population
childhood cancer survivors (CCS) and age-matched non-cancer controls (CON)
Methods
Embase, Scopus, MEDLINE, CINAHL, and SPORTDiscus databases were searched from inception to June 2023 for eligible studies; cross-sectional studies with V̇O2peak measured in CCS and CON were included; fixed-effects meta-analysis

Aims

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a leading cause of mortality in childhood cancer survivors (CCS) that may be related to the cardiotoxic effects of radiation or chemotherapy and concomitant reductions in cardiorespiratory fitness. Therefore, we sought to compare cardiorespiratory fitness (peak oxygen uptake, V̇O2peak) between CCS and age-matched non-cancer controls (CON). Secondary outcomes included haemodynamics and resting cardiac function.

Methods and results

Embase, Scopus, MEDLINE, CINAHL, and SPORTDiscus databases were searched from inception to June 2023 for eligible studies. Cross-sectional studies with V̇O2peak measured in CCS and CON were included. Differences in outcomes and pooled estimates for each outcome were estimated from a fixed-effects meta-analysis and between-group differences were reported as a weighted mean difference (WMD). Of 2026 studies identified, 18 reported V̇O2peak (CCS: n = 786, 44% female, mean age: 16 years, time post-therapy: 5.8 years; CON: n = 1379, 50% female, mean age: 16 years). V̇O2peak was lower in CCS [WMD: -7.08 mL/kg/min, 95% confidence interval (CI): -7.75 to -6.42, I2: 79%, n = 2165] with no difference for peak exercise heart rate (WMD: -1.4 b.p.m., 95% CI: -3.0 to 0.2, I2: 63%, n = 741). Resting left ventricular ejection fraction (WMD: -1.61%, 95% CI: -2.60 to -0.62, I2: 49%, n = 222) and systolic blood pressure were lower (WMD: -3.8 mmHg, 95% CI: -5.7 to -1.9, I2: 25%, n = 184) while resting heart rate was higher in CCS (WMD: 4.9 bpm; 95% CI: 1.8-7.9, I2: 55%, n = 262).

Conclusion

Childhood cancer survivors have a marked reduction in cardiorespiratory fitness (7.1 mL/kg/min lower than CON) that may have important prognostic implications for their future risk of CVD and mortality.

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