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Feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of Tai Chi versus mindful yoga on psycho-spiritual distress in patients with advanced cancer: A mixed-method pilot randomized controlled trial.

Naomi Takemura, Jojo Yan-Yan Kwok, Wing Lok Chan, Daniel Yee-Tak Fong

European journal of oncology nursing : the official journal of European Oncology Nursing Society January 30, 2026 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejon.2026.103111 via PubMed

Summary

Both Tai Chi and mindful yoga are feasible and acceptable for people with advanced cancer, with attendance rates above 86% and high satisfaction. Compared to a control group that received only written exercise guidelines, Tai Chi and mindful yoga led to preliminary reductions in depression and improvements in balance that lasted 12 weeks after the programs ended. Mindful yoga also showed additional enhancements in mindfulness and spiritual well-being at the 24-week follow-up. Qualitative interviews revealed themes that may explain these improvements. A large-scale trial is needed to confirm the findings.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Three-armed mixed-method pilot randomized controlled trial Qualitative Peer reviewed
Sample size 46
Population Patients with advanced cancer, mean age 61 years
Keywords Advanced cancer Psychological Spiritual Tai chi Yoga
Key finding Tai Chi and mindful yoga showed preliminary reductions in depression and improvements in balance ability at 12 and 24 weeks, with mindful yoga additionally enhancing mindfulness and spiritual outcomes at 24 weeks.

Abstract

Psycho-spiritual distress is prevalent and distressing among advanced cancer patients. While mind-body exercises have shown promise in alleviating psychological distress, their effectiveness in advanced cancer patients is still being explored. This study aimed to explore the feasibility and acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of two mind-body exercises-Tai Chi and mindful yoga-each rooted in distinct philosophies, compared to control among patients with advanced cancer. We conducted a three-armed mixed-method pilot randomized control trial. Participants were randomized into Tai Chi, mindful yoga, or control groups. Over 12-week, 60-min Tai Chi classes were held twice a week, 120-min mindful yoga classes weekly, and control group received written exercise guidelines. Feasibility outcomes were assessed through questionnaires and semi-structured interviews at 12-week. Effect outcomes were assessed by questionnaire and physical functioning test at baseline, 12-week (post-intervention), and 24-week (12-week post-intervention). Forty-six patients with advanced cancer, with a mean age 61 years, were enrolled. Both Tai Chi and mindful yoga demonstrated satisfactory feasibility and acceptability, with attendance rates exceeding 86%, satisfactory levels of self-practice, and high satisfaction and credibility. Compared with control group, Tai Chi and mindful yoga groups showed preliminary reductions in depression and improvements in balance ability at 12 and 24 weeks. Additionally, mindful yoga showed additional preliminary enhancements in mindfulness and spiritual outcomes at 24-week. Qualitative interviews revealed three themes that contextualize and may underpin the improvements in depression, mindfulness, spiritual well-being, and physical functioning. Tai Chi and mindful yoga were feasible, well-accepted, and showed promising trends in psycho-spiritual, mindfulness, and physical outcomes. A large-scale trial is warranted to confirm these findings.

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