Associations Between Personality Traits and Longitudinal Change in Physical Function in Survivors of Childhood Cancer
Megan E. Ware, Matthew D. Wogksch, Michael Neel, Robyn E. Partin, Jennifer Q. Lanctot, Daniel A. Mulrooney, Melissa M. Hudson, Kirsten K. Ness

TL;DR
This study found that survivors of childhood cancer with higher conscientiousness showed better long-term walking speed improvement after exercise.
Contribution
The study is the first to show a link between personality traits and long-term physical function maintenance in childhood cancer survivors.
Findings
Higher conscientiousness was associated with greater improvement in walking speed four years after an exercise intervention.
Participants showed mixed results in grip and quadriceps strength, with no strong associations to personality traits.
The study suggests that personality factors like conscientiousness may influence long-term physical function outcomes.
Abstract
Exercise interventions for survivors of childhood cancer (survivors) focus on improving cardiovascular fitness and muscle strength. We aimed to examine associations between personality traits and change in physical function outcomes in survivors who completed a resistance training (RT) intervention. Participants were 5+ year survivors in the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort. Personality traits were assessed using the Big Five Inventory 2 (BFI‐2). Grip strength was measured using hand‐held dynamometry. Quadriceps strength was measured using isokinetic dynamometry. Walking speed was measured with the Six‐Minute Walk Test (6MWT). Associations between personality traits and grip strength, quadriceps strength, and walking speed were evaluated using multivariable regression adjusted for gender, age at assessment, race, primary cancer diagnosis, and grade 3‐4 chronic health conditions (National…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Cancer survivorship and care · Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
