By John M. de Castro, Ph.D.
“Cancer patients who practice yoga as therapy during their treatment often refer to their yoga practice as a life-saver. No matter how sick from treatments and no matter how little energy, many find that the one thing that would bring relief were a gentle set of therapeutic yoga poses geared for cancer patients.” – Yoga U
About 12.5% of women in the U.S. develop invasive breast cancer over their lifetimes and every year about 40,000 women die. Indeed, more women in the U.S. die from breast cancer than from any other cancer, besides lung cancer. Breast cancer diagnosis, however, is not a death sentence. It is encouraging that the death rates have been decreasing for decades from improved detection and treatment of breast cancer. Five-year survival rates are now at around 95%.
The improved survival rates mean that more women are now living with cancer. Surviving cancer, however, carries with it a number of problems. “Physical, emotional, and financial hardships often persist for years after diagnosis and treatment. Cancer survivors are also at greater risk for developing second cancers and other health conditions.” (National Cancer Survivors Day). In addition, breast cancer survivors can have to deal with the consequences of chemotherapy, and often experience increased fatigue, pain, and bone loss, reduced fertility, difficulty with weight maintenance, damage to the lymphatic system, heightened fear of reoccurrence, and an alteration of their body image.
Treatments often involve aromatase inhibitor therapy which have been shown to be beneficial for survival and reduced rates of reoccurrence, but produce problematic side effects such as joint pain and stiffness, bone loss, and menopausal symptoms. This can lead to patients not adhering to, or even discontinuing treatments. So there is a need for safe and effective treatment for these side effects. Mindfulness training has been shown to help with cancer recovery and help to alleviate many of the residual psychological symptoms and improve cognitive function. Indeed, yoga practice has been found to improve sleep quality and memory, reduce the side effects from chemotherapy and improve the quality of life in cancer survivors. So, it makes sense to see if yoga can help to improve the side effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy in breast cancer survivors.
In today’s Research News article “The effect of YOCAS©® yoga for musculoskeletal symptoms among breast cancer survivors on hormonal therapy. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment.” See:
or see summary below or view the full text of the study at:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467273/
Peppone and colleagues recruited breast cancer survivors who were receiving aromatase inhibitor therapy and randomly assigned them to either participate in a twice a week, 75-minute session, 4-week community based yoga training or to receive treatment as usual. Participants were measured for musculoskeletal symptoms both before and after treatment. They found that the yoga treatment group relative to controls improved significantly on almost all measured dimensions of musculoskeletal symptoms, including pain, illness, time in bed, fatigue, muscle aches, arm weakness, sluggishness, and physical ability.
These results are very encouraging and suggest that yoga practice may be a safe and effective treatment for the musculoskeletal side effects of aromatase inhibitor therapy for breast cancer survivors. This is important not just for the comfort of the patients, but for their compliance with treatment and ultimate survival. This adds to the long list of beneficial effects of yoga practice. It would be expected that these women would not only have improved side effects but also receive a myriad of other physical and psychological benefits from the yoga practice.
So, improve the physical discomfort from cancer treatment with yoga.
“one of the main reasons that people with cancer use yoga is because it makes them feel good. Yoga teachers promote it as a natural way to help you relax and cope with stress, anxiety and depression. Generally, it can help to lift your mood and enhance well being. Some people with cancer who have used yoga say that it helps calm their mind so that they can cope better with their cancer and its treatment. Others say that it helps to reduce symptoms and side effects such as pain, tiredness, sleep problems and depression. Yoga can sometimes help you to move around more quickly and easily after surgery for cancer.” Cancer Research UK
CMCS – Center for Mindfulness and Contemplative Studies
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Study Summary
Peppone, L. J., Janelsins, M. C., Kamen, C., Mohile, S. G., Sprod, L. K., Gewandter, J. S., … Mustian, K. M. (2015). The effect of YOCAS©® yoga for musculoskeletal symptoms among breast cancer survivors on hormonal therapy. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment, 150(3), 597–604. http://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-015-3351-1
Abstract
Up to 50 % of breast cancer survivors on aromatase inhibitor therapy report musculoskeletal symptoms such as joint and muscle pain, significantly impacting treatment adherence and discontinuation rates. We conducted a secondary data analysis of a nationwide, multisite, phase II/III randomized, controlled, clinical trial examining the efficacy of yoga for improving musculoskeletal symptoms among breast cancer survivors currently receiving hormone therapy (aromatase inhibitors [AI] or tamoxifen [TAM]). Breast cancer survivors currently receiving AI (N = 95) or TAM (N = 72) with no participation in yoga during the previous 3 months were randomized into 2 arms: (1) standard care monitoring and (2) standard care plus the 4-week yoga intervention (2×/week; 75 min/session) and included in this analysis. The yoga intervention utilized the UR Yoga for Cancer Survivors (YOCAS©®) program consisting of breathing exercises, 18 gentle Hatha and restorative yoga postures, and meditation. Musculoskeletal symptoms were assessed pre- and post-intervention. At baseline, AI users reported higher levels of general pain, muscle aches, and total physical discomfort than TAM users (all P ≤ 0.05). Among all breast cancer survivors on hormonal therapy, participants in the yoga group demonstrated greater reductions in musculoskeletal symptoms such as general pain, muscle aches and total physical discomfort from pre-to post-intervention than the control group (all P ≤ 0.05). The severity of musculoskeletal symptoms was higher for AI users compared to TAM users. Among breast cancer survivors on hormone therapy, the brief community-based YOCAS©® intervention significantly reduced general pain, muscle aches, and physical discomfort.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4467273/
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