Natural killer cell mobilization and egress following acute exercise in men with prostate cancer

New Findings What is the central question of this study? What are the characteristics of the NK cell response following acute moderate‐intensity aerobic exercise in prostate cancer survivors and is there a relationship between stress hormones and NK cell mobilization? What is the main finding and it...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental physiology 2020-09, Vol.105 (9), p.1524-1539
Hauptverfasser: Hanson, Erik D., Sakkal, Samy, Que, Shadney, Cho, Eunhan, Spielmann, Guillaume, Kadife, Elif, Violet, John A., Battaglini, Claudio L., Stoner, Lee, Bartlett, David B., McConell, Glenn K., Hayes, Alan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:New Findings What is the central question of this study? What are the characteristics of the NK cell response following acute moderate‐intensity aerobic exercise in prostate cancer survivors and is there a relationship between stress hormones and NK cell mobilization? What is the main finding and its importance? NK cell numbers and proportions changed similarly between prostate cancer survivors and controls following acute exercise. Consecutive training sessions can likely be used without adverse effects on the immune system during prostate cancer treatment. Prostate cancer treatment affects multiple physiological systems, although the immune response during exercise has been minimally investigated. The objective was to characterize the natural killer (NK) cell response following acute exercise in prostate cancer survivors. Prostate cancer survivors on androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and those without (PCa) along with non‐cancer controls (CON) completed a moderate intensity cycling bout. NK cells were phenotyped before and 0, 2 and 24 h after acute exercise using flow cytometry. CD56 total NK cell frequency increased by 6.2% at 0 h (P 
ISSN:0958-0670
1469-445X
DOI:10.1113/EP088627