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The associations of lifestyle factors with fatigue and the ability to work in the first year after colorectal cancer surgery and rehabilitation

Vlaski, T.; Caspari, R.; Fischer, H.; Bilsing, B.; Fernandes Almeida, C. M.; Hoffmeister, M.; Slavic, M.; Steindorf, K.; Brenner, H.; Schoettker, B.

2026-02-18 epidemiology
10.64898/2026.02.17.26346469 medRxiv
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BackgroundThe dynamic associations of lifestyle factors with fatigue and work ability in colorectal cancer (CRC) from pre-diagnosis, over rehabilitation until convalescence in the first year after rehabilitation are largely unexplored. MethodsN = 682 CRC patients were recruited for the MIRANDA cohort study in 4 German rehabilitation clinics. The five-component Healthy Lifestyle Score (HLS; smoking, alcohol, diet, physical activity, BMI) was assessed pre-diagnosis, during rehabilitation (which was up to 12 months after surgery), and 12 months after rehabilitation. Fatigue and the ability to work were assessed during rehabilitation and in 3-month-intervals thereafter. ResultsThe HLS was rather stable over time, whereas fatigue and ability to work improved in the first 3 months after rehabilitation and remained stable thereafter. Higher HLS points, either assessed prior diagnosis or during rehabilitation, were associated with lower fatigue and better ability to work during in-patient rehabilitation. Compliance with the smoking criterion was the most important factor. Compliance with the physical activity criterion during rehabilitation was also associated with fatigue and ability to work during rehabilitation. In longitudinal analysis adjusted for fatigue and ability to work at rehabilitation, pre-diagnosis adherence to the alcohol consumption criterion was associated with favorable changes of fatigue and ability to work from rehabilitation to 3- and 12-month follow-up. However, the total HLS and other life-style factors were not associated with the outcomes in longitudinal analysis. ConclusionsAddressing lifestyle factors during rehabilitation is an important cornerstone in fatigue management and can improve the ability to work of CRC patients.

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