4.6 Article

Social cognitive variables and physical activity during chemotherapy for breast cancer: An intensive longitudinal examination

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 425-435

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pon.5820

Keywords

breast cancer; cancer; chemotherapy; exercise; oncology; psycho-oncology

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [K07CA196840]
  2. Northwestern Memorial Hospital Lynn Sage Cancer Research Foundation Grants Initiative
  3. [T32CA193193]

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Physical activity among breast cancer survivors during chemotherapy is related to within-person differences in social cognitive theory constructs, such as self-efficacy and physical outcome expectations. Interventions targeting these constructs could help increase physical activity levels during chemotherapy.
Objective Although physical activity is associated with better health outcomes in breast cancer survivors (BCS), activity often declines during cancer treatment. Social cognitive theory (SCT) constructs have been associated with physical activity in post-treatment BCS, but little is known about the relation between these constructs and physical activity during chemotherapy. Methods BCS (n = 67; M-age = 48.6 [SD = 10.3]) undergoing chemotherapy wore accelerometers and completed prompts in the morning and at night assessing same-day and next-day exercise self-efficacy, physical and psychological outcome expectations, and goal-setting for 10 consecutive days (3 days pre-, day of, and 6 days post-chemotherapy dose) at three time points (beginning, middle, and end of chemotherapy). Separate mixed models assessed between- and within-person associations of each of the SCT constructs associations with same- and next-day moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and light physical activity (LPA), independently. Results Within-person differences in all SCT variables were statistically significantly related to same-day MVPA (p's < 0.001) and LPA (p's < 0.001). Every one-point increase in SCT construct related to an increase in MVPA ranging from (a) 3.70 (self-efficacy) to 8.02 (physical outcome expectations) minute increase in MVPA and (b) 12.72 (self-efficacy) to 20.38 (physical outcome expectations) increase in LPA that day. No same-day between-person effects nor any next-day effects were significant. Conclusion MVPA and LPA were related to same-day within-person differences in SCT variables. Interventions targeted at increasing or mitigating chemotherapy-related declines in daily within-person changes in SCT constructs could help to increase physical activity among BCS during chemotherapy.

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