RESUMEN
There is growing evidence about how physical activity can improve cancer care. Unfortunately, exercise is still not widely prescribed to oncology patients, despite the benefit it brings. For this to occur, it is necessary for a multidisciplinary approach involving different types of healthcare professionals, given that each treatment be tailored for each single case. Besides incorporating appropriate infrastructures and referral pathways, we need to integrate exercise into healthcare practice, which ameliorates patients' quality of life and treatment side effects. From the Spanish Society of Medical Oncology (SEOM), and through the Exercise and Cancer Working Group, we indicate considerations, analyze patient care scenarios, and propose a referral pathway algorithm for exercise prescription, taking in account the patient's needs. In later sections of this paper, we describe how this algorithm could be implemented, and how the exercise programs should be built, including the physical activity contents, the settings, and the delivery mode. We conclude that professionals, infrastructures, and organizations should be available at every assistance level to create programs providing adequate exercise training for cancer patients.
RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: The results of CHOP-21 (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone given every 21 days) for the treatment of aggressive B-cell lymphoma have recently been improved by the addition of rituximab and by increasing the dose density. R-CHOP-14 combines these two approaches. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We present our experience with R-CHOP-14 in a retrospective single-centre review of 50 patients consecutively treated for aggressive B-cell lymphoma. RESULTS: The median age was 59 years and 48% of patients were >60 years. Stage III-IV was present in 62% of the patients and international prognostic index was high-to-intermediate risk or high risk in 32% of the patients. Toxicity was mainly haematological, with grade 3-4 neutropenia observed in 32% and febrile neutropenia in 18%. Other relevant toxicities were peripheral neuropathy in 45% (grade 3 in 4%) and cardiac dysfunction grade 3 in 7.5%. After therapy, 82% of the patients achieved complete response or unproved complete response. With a median follow-up of 30 months, 3-year event-free survival and overall survival were 67% and 82% respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In our experience the combination of RCHOP- 14 is highly effective in patients with aggressive B-cell lymphoma. However special attention must be paid to the control of early and late toxicities.