医学
结直肠癌
随机对照试验
内科学
生活质量(医疗保健)
疾病
癌症
临床试验
物理疗法
护理部
作者
Hege Berg Henriksen,Hanna Ræder,Siv Kjølsrud Bøhn,Ingvild Paur,Ane Sørlie Kværner,Siv Åshild Billington,Morten Eriksen,Gro Wiedsvang,Iris Erlund,Arne E. Færden,Marit B. Veierød,Manuela Zucknick,Sigbjørn Smeland,Rune Blomhoff
出处
期刊:BMC Cancer
[Springer Nature]
日期:2017-01-30
卷期号:17 (1)
被引量:34
标识
DOI:10.1186/s12885-017-3072-4
摘要
Colorectal cancer survivors are not only at risk for recurrent disease but also at increased risk of comorbidities such as other cancers, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension and functional decline. In this trial, we aim at investigating whether a diet in accordance with the Norwegian food-based dietary guidelines and focusing at dampening inflammation and oxidative stress will improve long-term disease outcomes and survival in colorectal cancer patients. This paper presents the study protocol of the Norwegian Dietary Guidelines and Colorectal Cancer Survival study. Men and women aged 50–80 years diagnosed with primary invasive colorectal cancer (Stage I-III) are invited to this randomized controlled, parallel two-arm trial 2–9 months after curative surgery. The intervention group (n = 250) receives an intensive dietary intervention lasting for 12 months and a subsequent maintenance intervention for 14 years. The control group (n = 250) receives no dietary intervention other than standard clinical care. Both groups are offered equal general advice of physical activity. Patients are followed-up at 6 months and 1, 3, 5, 7, 10 and 15 years after baseline. The study center is located at the Department of Nutrition, University of Oslo, and patients are recruited from two hospitals within the South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority. Primary outcomes are disease-free survival and overall survival. Secondary outcomes are time to recurrence, cardiovascular disease-free survival, compliance to the dietary recommendations and the effects of the intervention on new comorbidities, intermediate biomarkers, nutrition status, physical activity, physical function and quality of life. The current study is designed to gain a better understanding of the role of a healthy diet aimed at dampening inflammation and oxidative stress on long-term disease outcomes and survival in colorectal cancer patients. Since previous research on the role of diet for colorectal cancer survivors is limited, the study may be of great importance for this cancer population. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01570010 .
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