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UNC Lineberger member Carmina Valle, PhD, research assistant professor of health behavior at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, has been awarded a four-year, $2.2 million grant from the National Cancer Institute.

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Valle will use the grant to lead a randomized, controlled trial of whether wearable activity trackers, personalized activity goals, and frequent, individualized text-message support can increase physical activity in young cancer survivors in the United States. UNC co-investigators on the project include Deborah Tate, PhD, Gillings School professor of health behavior and of nutrition, and Donald Rosenstein, MD, director of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Support Program and professor of medicine and psychiatry in the School of Medicine.

“I am excited to have the opportunity to work with young adult cancer survivors and help address their unmet needs,” Valle said. “We hope that the findings from this novel study will inform a new generation of high-reach, low-cost, technology-based intervention strategies that have potential to be scalable and to reduce cancer-related chronic illness and health disparities.”

More than 560,000 young adult cancer survivors live in the United States. Diagnosed between the ages of 18 and 39, young adult cancer survivors are an underserved and vulnerable subgroup of survivors who experience increased risk over time for obesity and chronic diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Increasing physical activity is a promising behavioral intervention that has positive effects on physical function, body composition, cardiovascular fitness and health-related quality of life among cancer survivors.

To date, few interventions have been designed specifically to promote physical activity in young adult cancer survivors, and none has been successful in promoting long-term adherence to physical activity guidelines of 150 minutes per week of activity that is of moderate to vigorous intensity.

Effective physical activity interventions have used self-monitoring as a behavior change technique to help individuals monitor daily activity, set goals and enhance motivation. The widespread availability of lower-cost wearable activity trackers presents a unique opportunity to simplify self-monitoring and deliver more precisely tailored interventions. These interventions dynamically adapt goals and messages in response to an individual’s changing activity patterns over time to provide more relevant and timely support.

Little is known, however, about the types of support needed to help young adult cancer survivors engage in regular activity and maintain it over time.

To address this research gap, Valle is building on preliminary work completed as part of her doctoral dissertation in nutrition at Gillings that included research that used a Facebook-delivered intervention to increase light physical activity.