Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Cancer Care Spotlight: CHRISTOPHER FITZMAURICE (DRAFT ONLY)

Redefining Cancer Care through Exercise Oncology


In today’s rapidly evolving healthcare landscape, innovation is no longer confined to pharmaceuticals, surgical techniques, or diagnostic breakthroughs. Increasingly, a powerful yet often underutilized tool is gaining recognition within oncology: exercise as medicine. At the forefront of this movement is Christopher Fitzmaurice, MS, CEP, CSCS, CET, a clinical exercise physiologist at the University of Miami Health System whose work is helping reshape how cancer patients and survivors approach recovery, resilience, and long-term health.

With credentials that span clinical exercise physiology, strength and conditioning, and cancer-specific training, Fitzmaurice represents a new generation of healthcare professionals bridging performance science with medical care. As a Certified Cancer Exercise Trainer (CET) and Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), his expertise lies not only in optimizing physical performance, but in translating that knowledge into meaningful, life-enhancing outcomes for individuals navigating one of the most challenging diagnoses imaginable.

 

From Clinical Practice to Purpose-Driven Mission

Currently working within the executive health and concierge medicine program at the University of Miami, Fitzmaurice’s journey was shaped by his earlier tenure at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, where he spent several years working directly with cancer patients and survivors. It was here that his professional path evolved into a mission.

“My mission is to make exercise the standard of care—not just for some, but for all, and especially for cancer survivors.”  While many practitioners enter oncology through traditional clinical routes, Fitzmaurice’s perspective was informed by both personal and professional experiences. Having lost family members to cancer, he carried a personal connection to the disease. However, it was his hands-on clinical exposure that crystallized his purpose.

“I’ve always been connected to cancer through family, but I didn’t become truly passionate until I started working directly with patients and saw the need firsthand.”

 

Exercise Oncology: From Concept to Clinical Reality


Exercise oncology has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past decade. Once viewed as supplementary or optional, it is now supported by a growing body of evidence demonstrating its clinical value. 
Fitzmaurice has been both a witness to and a contributor within this expanding field. “We’ve seen an explosion in randomized clinical trials—nearly a 300% increase—showing how exercise can dramatically impact cancer survivors.”

These studies have revealed that structured exercise can reduce treatment-related side effects, improve cardiovascular and muscular function, enhance mental well-being, and support overall quality of life. More importantly, exercise is now being examined not just as recovery, but as a therapeutic intervention throughout the cancer journey.

 

Beyond Rehabilitation: A Continuum of Care

Historically, physical rehabilitation in oncology was largely reactive—focused on helping patients recover from surgery or treatment-related impairments. Fitzmaurice is part of a growing movement that challenges this limited framework. “Exercise is no longer just something we think about after treatment. We now understand its value during treatment and even before it—what we call prehabilitation.”

This shift introduces a continuum of care: exercise before treatment to build resilience, during treatment to maintain function, and after treatment to support recovery and long-term health. “Rehabilitation helps treat the burden of disease, but exercise helps maintain function and improve outcomes over time.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Fitzmaurice expanded this model through telehealth, delivering both individual and group-based exercise programs to patients who were otherwise isolated from care. “The impact wasn’t just physical—it was mental as well. You could see how much it meant for patients to stay active and engaged.”

 

Advocacy and Addressing Hidden Challenges

Courtesy of: Scott Baker

Beyond clinical application, Fitzmaurice is also an advocate—particularly in areas where stigma or lack of awareness can hinder care. One such area is male breast cancer, a condition often overlooked or underreported. Through his work with cancer survivors, he has observed how denial and social perceptions can delay diagnosis and treatment. “The most important thing is not to be in denial. When people avoid acknowledging a diagnosis, they miss the opportunity to access the care and support that could help them.”

He emphasizes that survivorship programs and supportive care models must be inclusive and accessible to all patients. “We need to create a space where everyone feels included—especially men—because the rates are rising, and the need is real.”

 

Collaboration and Leadership in a Growing Field

Fitzmaurice’s work is strengthened by his collaborations with leading voices in oncology and exercise science, including Dr. Jay Harness, a former oncologic surgeon who has become a strong advocate for exercise-based interventions in cancer care.

Their partnership reflects a powerful convergence of clinical oncology and performance science. “When I learned about Dr. Harness’s history—over 30 years as an oncologist—and his commitment to exercise oncology, it opened my eyes to how impactful this field can be.” Together, they are contributing to publications and initiatives aimed at advancing exercise as a recognized and standardized component of cancer care.

 

The Future: Research, Education, and Systemic Change

Looking ahead, Fitzmaurice is committed to further advancing the field through research and education. He plans to pursue a PhD with a focus on exercise oncology, with the goal of strengthening the scientific foundation that supports its integration into clinical practice. “I want to help build the evidence that ensures cancer survivors receive the level of care they deserve—and that practitioners know how to implement exercise properly.”

His long-term vision is clear: to influence healthcare systems, inform clinical guidelines, and ensure that exercise is no longer considered optional, but essential.

 

A New Standard in Cancer Care

Christopher Fitzmaurice embodies a shift in modern medicine—one that prioritizes proactive, integrative, and patient-centered care. With a unique blend of clinical expertise and human insight, he is helping to redefine the role of movement in oncology.

In his model, exercise is not an afterthought. It is a strategy. A therapy. A lifeline. As research continues to validate what practitioners like Fitzmaurice have long understood, the future of cancer care will increasingly embrace this approach—where healing is not only delivered through treatment, but cultivated through movement, strength, and resilience.

And in that future, exercise will not simply support recovery—it will help define it.



 


Aftermath

On Exercise as a Clinical Ally in Cancer Recovery

By Robert L. Bard, MD, DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS

As a diagnostic imaging specialist, my role has always centered on identifying disease—locating it, defining it, and understanding its behavior. But over the years, one of the most important realizations in oncology has been this: detection is only the beginning. What follows—how the body responds, heals, and adapts—defines the patient’s true outcome.

In this context, exercise has emerged as one of the most valuable yet historically underutilized tools in cancer care.

From a clinical standpoint, cancer and its treatments impose a profound physiological burden. Chemotherapy, radiation, and surgical interventions often leave patients with decreased muscle mass, impaired circulation, chronic inflammation, and significant fatigue. These are not secondary issues—they directly influence recovery, resilience, and long-term survival.

What professionals like Christopher Fitzmaurice are advancing through exercise oncology is a critical shift in how we approach this recovery phase. Exercise is not simply about fitness. It is about restoring function at a cellular and systemic level.

We now understand that structured physical activity improves vascular circulation, enhances oxygen delivery, and supports lymphatic flow—key mechanisms that help the body clear metabolic waste and reduce inflammatory burden. From an imaging perspective, we often correlate improved blood flow with better tissue health and recovery potential. Movement, quite literally, fuels healing.

Equally important is the role of exercise in preserving muscle integrity and metabolic stability. Loss of strength is one of the most overlooked consequences of cancer treatment, yet it is directly tied to a patient’s independence and long-term prognosis. Rebuilding that strength is not cosmetic—it is foundational to survival.

There is also a neurological component that cannot be ignored. Physical activity stimulates neurochemical pathways associated with mood, cognition, and resilience. Patients who engage in structured exercise programs frequently demonstrate improved mental clarity and emotional stability—factors that are essential when navigating the psychological weight of a cancer diagnosis.

From a rehabilitation standpoint, exercise bridges the gap between treatment and true recovery. Traditional rehab often addresses isolated impairments, but exercise provides a global, integrative benefit—supporting cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and neurological systems simultaneously.


Most importantly, exercise introduces agency back into the patient experience. Cancer treatment can often feel passive—patients receive therapies, undergo procedures, and wait for results. Exercise shifts that dynamic. It gives patients an active role in their own recovery, reinforcing both physical capability and psychological empowerment.

As we look toward the future of oncology, it is clear that multidisciplinary collaboration will define the highest standard of care. Imaging, medical treatment, rehabilitation, and performance science must work together—not in silos, but as an integrated system.

Exercise oncology is not an alternative concept. It is a necessary evolution.



 

 Reprise: Exclusive from HealthTech Reporter


ReBuilding to Last: Strength, Longevity, and the Technology That Multiplies Human Potential

An exclusive interivew with ELLEN TYSON

Written by: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D


ELLEN TYSON
 does not frame fitness as vanity. She frames it as survival, agency, and long-term independence. A strength training coach and Visionbody brand evangelist, Tyson speaks with the authority of lived experience: the arc of her life reshaped by movement after decades of chemical depression, and later refined by a clear-eyed understanding of what aging demands of the body. Her message is simple but uncompromising: muscle is the infrastructure of longevity. “Muscle is your biggest organ of longevity,” Tyson says. “Before supplements, before vitamins—build your muscles.” For Ellen, strength training is not a trend. It is preventive medicine. 

 

FROM SURVIVAL TO STRENGTH: A PERSONAL TURNING POINT

Tyson’s path into strength training was not born of aesthetics or athletic ambition. For much of her adult life, she managed recurring chemical depression. In her forties, she discovered that consistent exercise did something medication never fully achieved: it stabilized her mental health. “Since I was 44… I have not had a depressive episode,” she explains. “I’ve been sad, but not the chemical depression that sent me over the edge every couple of years.”

What began as a social activity became a physiological reset. Over time, she recognized a deeper pattern: movement changed not only her mood, but her metabolism, bone density, and resilience. This realization reframed fitness from self-improvement to self-preservation. “Resistance training is preventative medicine,” she says.

As her children grew older, Tyson transitioned into professional training. The work resonated because it mirrored her own transformation. She no longer trained clients for appearance. “I care not what I look like in a bikini… I care about being strong and healthy. The byproduct is the lean body.

The outcome is functional longevity: the ability to walk well, recover faster, and remain metabolically active with age.

 

STRENGTH AS THE SPINE OF LONGEVITY

Tyson’s philosophy rests on a clinical truth increasingly supported by research: skeletal muscle is a metabolic organ that influences glucose control, immune competence, hormonal balance, and bone density. As muscle declines with age (sarcopenia), risk rises for falls, insulin resistance, and frailty. Tyson compresses this science into lived wisdom: “Once your muscles go, your immune system goes down, your bone density goes down—everything goes.

For postmenopausal women, the stakes are higher. Hormonal shifts favor visceral fat gain, accelerate bone loss, and slow recovery. Tyson frames muscle as the first line of defense. “For postmenopausal women… the first line of defense always is muscle.

Her guidance is not punitive. It is practical: build the engine that supports every other system. She also confronts the most common barrier—time. “If you don’t take time for your wellness, you will be forced to take time for your illness.

In this framing, exercise is not an added burden; it is a protective investment against the future cost of disease.

 

VISIONBODY: WHEN TECHNOLOGY MULTIPLIES EFFORT

Tyson’s role as a Visionbody brand evangelist grew out of years of experience with electro-muscle stimulation (EMS). Visionbody’s wireless suit delivers
low to mid frequency
electrical stimulation to contract muscles deeply during movement, amplifying conventional training. The suit engages most major muscle groups in short sessions, turning 20 minutes into a comprehensive workout.

What differentiates Visionbody in Tyson’s account is depth and comfort. She contrasts higher-frequency stimulation with older EMS systems that sting and work superficially. The Visionbody platform, she explains, reaches deeper muscle layers, increasing oxygen demand and circulation. “It engages, activates your muscles deep and hard—more than you can on your own.

This physiological load accelerates adaptation while preserving joint safety. For busy professionals and older adults, efficiency matters. “It’s a 20-minute workout. It maximizes your time.” Tyson notes.

In her practice, the suit does not replace training—it sharpens it. She still coaches form, balance, and progressive loading. Technology becomes a multiplier, not a shortcut. The platform’s clinical applications extend beyond fitness. Tyson describes medical protocols for individuals with limited mobility—patients in wheelchairs, neurological conditions, or prolonged bed rest—where stimulation can help maintain circulation and reduce muscle atrophy.

This dual-use design—performance and rehabilitation—reflects her broader belief that wellness tools should scale across health states, not only serve the already fit.

 


STRENGTH AS REHABILITATION, NOT JUST PERFORMANCE

In conversations with clinicians, Tyson emphasizes how muscle preservation intersects with recovery from illness and cancer treatment. She references Visionbody’s origins in survivorship and rebuilding after severe muscle loss. Increased circulation and oxygenation, she notes, support cellular recovery.

While not a medical cure, strength training—augmented by EMS—becomes a rehabilitative bridge back to autonomy. Her coaching style remains cautious with vulnerable populations. Stimulation intensity is titrated; progression is gradual. “Too much of a good thing… you can actually deteriorate muscles if you go too strong.  The principle mirrors her longevity ethic: sustainable gains beat dramatic but brittle progress.

 

THE EDUCATOR’S ETHIC: TEACHING AGENCY

Tyson’s influence is not confined to training sessions. She identifies as an educator, translating physiology into habits people can sustain. Her most repeated lesson is behavioral: the hardest part is showing up. “The hardest part about working out is actually getting to the gym. Once you’re there, you’re motivated.

 This framing lowers the psychological barrier to action and builds consistency—the real driver of results. Her messaging to midlife women is resolute and hopeful. “It’s never too late to build muscles.”  She positions strength as a reclaiming of agency during hormonal transitions often framed as decline. In doing so, she reframes longevity as something practiced daily, not postponed to later interventions.

WHY ELLEN TYSON RESONATES

Tyson’s authority is not performative. It emerges from congruence: she practices what she teaches. Her body becomes evidence, but her story carries the proof. She connects mental health, metabolic health, and musculoskeletal resilience into a single narrative of self-stewardship. Technology fits into this arc not as spectacle, but as a pragmatic amplifier of effort. “I don’t understand people who wait until they’re sick to take care of their health,” she says.

In her framework, the body is not a machine to fix when broken; it is an ecosystem to support while it’s working.


THE TAKEAWAY

Ellen Tyson’s message to the longevity movement is blunt and humane: build muscle to protect your future self. Pair disciplined training with smart tools like Visionbody when appropriate. Treat strength as infrastructure—for balance, immunity, bone density, recovery, and mental health. And begin now, not later. Her ethic closes the loop between effort and technology, prevention and performance, body and agency. Strength training, in her view, is not about aesthetics, but actually being powerful from the inside an out. It is about staying capable—long enough to keep living well, longer.




WHERE ENERGY MEETS EVIDENCE: Imaging the Physiology Of Strength And Recovery

This February, Ellen Tyson of Visionbody and Dr. Robert Bard will collaborate on a focused performance review and medical validation initiative examining the clinical impact of Visionbody’s EMS muscle-strengthening technology. The project is designed to move beyond anecdotal claims by applying objective diagnostic imaging and monitoring protocols to evaluate measurable physiological change.

Dr. Bard’s interest centers on imaging-guided assessment of EMS-driven energy induction and its real-world effects on neuromuscular activation, muscle strength development, tissue response, and functional regeneration. Of particular interest is how EMS may influence neuromuscular signaling pathways associated with neurotransmitter activity and recovery mechanisms—areas that are increasingly relevant to aging populations, rehabilitation, metabolic dysfunction, and post-treatment recovery.

Throughout February, performance data will be documented through serial monitoring and imaging-based observation to identify patterns of response, adaptation, and potential therapeutic relevance. This initiative reflects a growing demand for evidence-based validation of non-invasive technologies entering the clinical and wellness landscape.

Findings and clinical observations from this collaboration will be published exclusively in HealthTechReporter.com, offering clinicians, researchers, and informed patients a transparent look at how emerging EMS technologies perform under real diagnostic scrutiny.


 

 

Copyright Notice © 2025 Overture Publications. All rights reserved. This work and all materials contained herein are the intellectual property of Overture Publications under the Institute for Global Health Innovations and its authorized contributors. No part of this manuscript may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without prior written permission from the publisher. All names, images, and materials are protected under applicable copyright and intellectual-property laws in the United States and internationally. Any reference to individuals, institutions, or proprietary entities is for informational purposes only and does not imply endorsement or affiliation unless expressly stated. All trademarks and service marks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.

If our goal is not only to extend life but to improve the quality and strength of that life, then exercise must be recognized as a central pillar in cancer recovery, rehabilitation, and ultimately, longevity.





Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The Scott Baker Story -part 2 (DRAFT ONLY, DO NOT PUBLISH)

 INSIGHTS FROM A CANCER SURVIVOR-ADVOCATE

Lessons in Movement, Purpose, and Paying It Forward

From an exclusive interview with SCOTT BAKER / 4x Cancer Survivor

Edited by: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D   |  Daniel Root

 

"...that moment with Jason meant more to me than I expected. It reminded me how powerful human connection can be in the middle of illness."

Cancer has a way of changing everything. It changes how you look at time, at your body, at the people around you, and at the meaning of being alive. When I was first diagnosed at 29, I didn’t realize that cancer would shape the rest of my life—not just medically, but personally and spiritually.

 

Over the years, I’ve faced cancer four separate times, including a battle with brain lymphoma. But what those experiences gave me was a perspective I never expected: a responsibility to help others navigate the road I’ve already walked. My mission now isn’t just surviving—it’s helping other people survive too.

 

Through advocacy, speaking engagements, patient visits, and simple conversations, I try to share what I’ve learned from living through cancer treatment and recovery. Survivorship isn’t just about making it through therapy—it’s about learning how to live again with purpose, resilience, and compassion.


 

Movement as Medicine: My Journey with Exercise Oncology

One of the most important lessons I’ve learned through cancer is that movement matters. I had never even heard the term exercise oncology until recently, but the truth is I’ve been living it for decades. “I have never heard the term exercise oncology,” I’ve said before, “but I’ve been living it for 27 years.”  When I was first diagnosed, all I could think about was getting back to the gym. For me, the gym represented healing. It represented normal life. And as I went through treatment after treatment, that belief stayed with me. If all I could do was walk, then I walked. And I walked a lot.

 

Sometimes that meant a long walk around the neighborhood. Other days it meant just making it to the mailbox. But movement—any movement—meant progress.

 

Chemotherapy and cancer treatment take a serious toll on the body. The drugs attack fast-growing cells, which means they affect far more than the cancer itself. I lost my sense of taste. My digestive system was wrecked. I experienced brain fog—what many patients call “chemo brain.” And the exhaustion is hard to explain to someone who hasn’t lived through it. It’s not just being tired—it’s a deep physical depletion. But I learned something important: even small movement helps the body fight back.

 

Exercise helps circulation. It helps the body process medications. It helps clear toxins from the system. And maybe most importantly, it gives you back a sense of control. There are many things cancer patients can’t control. We can’t control the cells in our bodies that start behaving badly. But there are things we can control. We can control how we move. We can control how we manage stress. And we can control the food we put into our bodies.

 

For me, those became the three pillars of survival. Today I still participate in the Livestrong program at the YMCA, working out alongside other cancer survivors in 12-week training groups. I’ve been doing it for more than a decade now. Every time I walk into that room, I’m reminded that movement is one of the most powerful tools we have in the fight against cancer.

 


The Hidden Cost of Cancer Treatment

Cancer treatment saves lives, but it doesn’t come without a price. Chemotherapy is incredibly powerful medicine. It can wipe out cancer cells and give people a second chance at life. But it also puts enormous stress on the body.

 

Patients lose strength. They lose stamina. Many struggle with neurological effects like brain fog and difficulty concentrating. The fatigue can feel overwhelming. That’s why movement is so important—even when it feels impossible. I always encourage patients to start small.

 

Some days your victory may simply be standing up and walking down the hallway. Other days it might be a three-mile walk. The key is not comparing one day to another. If you move, you’re winning.


 

NO ONE RISES ALONE

What Almost Dying Taught Me About Living- By Scott Baker


I have battled cancer four times including two bouts with a rare form of brain cancer. The moment I learned that I had a brain tumor I wasn’t comfortable with who I was as a human being. I decided that the experience of battling brain cancer would help me find a path to being comfortable with myself. I had faith in that idea but I had no idea how brain cancer would provide the clarity I needed. As I wrote the stories that make up this book I began to understand that it was the experiences I had with perfect strangers that changed me. The events that took place in the extremely difficult 12 months that followed proved to be the perfect people at the perfect time over and over and the sum of all those experiences provided me with an inner peace I never knew could exist. When I finally finished active treatment and was discharged from the hospital I needed to share the experiences I had that carried me through the most difficult time of my life and changed my life at the same time. The same thing is available to all of us. All we need to do is choose to see it.

 ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY

Copyright © 2025



Paying It Forward

One of the most meaningful parts of survivorship for me has been learning the importance of paying it forward. When I underwent a stem cell transplant for brain lymphoma, I was placed in isolation for weeks. It was one of the most difficult periods of my life.

 

Then something unexpected happened. A woman named Rosalie came into my hospital room. She had the exact same disease I had, and she had gone through the exact same transplant two years earlier. Seeing her that day completely changed how I looked at the next month of treatment. Suddenly I wasn’t just facing the unknown—I was seeing proof that someone else had survived it. That visit gave me hope.

 

Years later, I had the chance to do the same thing for another patient named Jason who was undergoing the same transplant. I went to Sloan Kettering to sit with him for about an hour, just to talk and share my experience. To me, paying it forward means giving someone something that someone once gave you when you needed it most.  That moment with Jason meant more to me than I expected. It reminded me how powerful human connection can be in the middle of illness.


 

The Role of Advocacy

Cancer advocacy often starts with a simple idea: be useful to someone else. During my treatments, the nurses who cared for me became some of my greatest inspirations. They didn’t just administer medication or monitor vital signs. They treated me like family. They treated me like their own son.

 

That level of compassion stuck with me. I realized I might not be able to wear scrubs or a white coat, but there had to be another way I could help people.

 

Over the years I’ve found many ways to do that. I visit patients in hospitals. I speak to students and community groups. I participate in donor-registry drives encouraging people to become stem-cell donors. I share my story wherever it might help someone who is struggling.

 

Advocacy doesn’t always require a formal title. Sometimes it simply means showing up for someone who needs encouragement. And when you do that, something interesting happens—you receive something back. Helping someone else reminds you that your own struggle had purpose.


 

Outreach, Storytelling, and Social Media

In today’s world, outreach also happens online. Social media has become an incredibly powerful tool for cancer advocacy. A single post can reach thousands of patients, survivors, physicians, and caregivers around the world. That reach matters. Sharing stories online creates connections. It helps survivors find each other. It helps newly diagnosed patients realize they’re not alone. For advocates like me, the goal isn’t fame or attention. It’s visibility for hope. The more stories we share, the more people realize that survivorship is possible.


 

Living with Purpose

Today my life looks very different than it did before cancer. I spend time speaking at colleges, encouraging young people to join stem-cell donor registries. I continue my exercise programs with other survivors. And I try to make myself available whenever someone needs encouragement.

 

If cancer taught me anything, it’s that survival carries responsibility. When you make it through something that difficult, you have knowledge others don’t yet have. And that knowledge can become a lifeline for someone else. That’s why I keep telling my story.

 

Because somewhere out there is a patient sitting in a hospital room, wondering if they’ll make it.

And if hearing my story helps them believe they can—then everything I went through has meaning.

 

Monday, March 2, 2026

Spotlight: Dr. Jay Harness of CancerFitness.org


The Surgeon Who Refused to Let Healing End in the Operating Room

A Visionary Champion of Exercise Oncology, Patient Empowerment, and Survivorship Care

By: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D - Sr. Publisher of  the AngioMedical Press and ICRS NEWS (Integrative Cancer Resource Society)


For nearly five decades, Dr. Jay Harness built his life around the operating room. As a surgical oncologist specializing in breast cancer, he helped guide thousands of patients through one of the most frightening moments of their lives. He removed tumors, navigated complex treatment pathways, and bore witness to both triumph and loss. But after 47 years of clinical practice, Dr. Harness reached a profound realization: surgery and medicine alone were not enough to fully serve the long-term needs of people living with and beyond cancer.

Instead of stepping quietly into retirement, Dr. Harness pivoted into what would become the most unexpected—and arguably most impactful—chapter of his career: Exercise Oncology. “I was thunderstruck by the science,” Dr. Harness says. “For over 35 years, there were thousands of clinical trials and tens of thousands of publications showing how exercise improves survival, reduces recurrence, and helps patients tolerate treatment. And yet, most physicians had never been taught this.”

This moment of discovery became a call to action. Dr. Harness realized that a powerful body of evidence existed—but it was trapped inside academic silos. Researchers in exercise physiology, kinesiology and sports medicine had been building a mountain of data, while oncologists and surgeons largely remained unaware of its implications. The result? Patients were missing out on one of the most accessible, evidence-backed tools available to support recovery, resilience, and long-term survival.

“For decades, the scientists were essentially talking to themselves,” he explains. “There was very little crossover into everyday oncology care. That gap is what I’m trying to fill.”

From Scalpel to Systems Change

Dr. Harness’s career shift was not about abandoning medicine—it was about expanding it. He recognized that true healing does not end when a tumor is removed or chemotherapy concludes. Cancer changes the body, the mind, and the identity of a person. Survivorship is not simply about being alive—it is about restoring function, confidence, and quality of life.

Through his leadership in CancerFitness.org, Dr. Harness has created an educational hub designed for both patients and clinicians. The platform translates complex science into practical guidance on how movement can support patients before treatment (prehabilitation), during therapy, and throughout long-term survivorship. “Exercise oncology should be a continuum of care,” he says. “It’s not just something you do after treatment. It starts before diagnosis, continues during therapy, and becomes part of long-term survivorship.”

The science supports him. Patients who were physically active prior to diagnosis show improved survival outcomes. Those who engage in moderate exercise during treatment often tolerate chemotherapy better and report less fatigue, anxiety, and depression. Long-term survivors who remain active experience significantly lower all-cause mortality.

“This isn’t about running marathons,” Dr. Harness emphasizes. “We’re talking about moderate activity—brisk walking, cycling, resistance training. Small, consistent movement can change biology.”

The Biology of Movement

What excites Dr. Harness most is not only what exercise does—but how it does it. “Every time muscles contract, they release signaling molecules that reduce inflammation and influence cancer-related pathways,” he explains. “Exercise stimulates mitochondrial function, improves immune response, enhances blood flow, and supports neurological health.”

This emerging understanding of exercise as a biological intervention reframes movement as more than lifestyle advice—it becomes a clinical tool. In this view, walking is not simply “good for you”; it is a molecular signal that tells the body how to heal. “We’re finally starting to understand that movement is medicine at the cellular level,” he says. “That changes how we should think about recovery.”

Education: The Missing Link in Cancer Care

Despite overwhelming evidence, adoption remains slow. Dr. Harness identifies physician education as the single greatest barrier. “The vast majority of my colleagues were never taught this science in medical school or residency,” he says. “You can’t refer patients to something you don’t know exists.”

To change this, Dr. Harness lectures nationally and internationally, including at major breast surgery and oncology conferences. He works to normalize exercise oncology as part of standard supportive care—not as an optional add-on, but as a core component of treatment strategy. “If Australia can integrate exercise into standard cancer care, we can too,” he notes. “This is not radical. It’s rational.”

Building Infrastructure for Survivors

Through collaborations with organizations like Maple Tree Cancer Alliance, Dr. Harness advocates for certified exercise oncology specialists embedded within cancer centers and community fitness programs. His goal is not to tell patients to “exercise more,” but to create structured, supervised pathways that safely integrate movement into care plans.

“Brochure therapy doesn’t work,” he says bluntly. “Handing patients a pamphlet and hoping they figure it out is not healthcare. Referrals to structured programs work.” This approach reflects Dr. Harness’s systems-level thinking: education alone is not enough. Infrastructure matters. Access matters. Training matters.

A Vision for 2026 and Beyond

With the formation of the Cancer Fitness Foundation, Dr. Harness is laying the groundwork for broader adoption of exercise oncology worldwide. His vision for the coming years includes expanding clinician education, increasing research collaborations, and embedding exercise programs within standard oncology workflows. “My goal is simple,” he says. “Exercise oncology should no longer be considered ‘alternative.’ It should be expected.”

At its heart, Dr. Harness’s work is not about fitness—it is about dignity. It is about restoring agency to patients who often feel their bodies have betrayed them. It is about reminding people that movement is not a punishment or a chore—it is a form of biological hope.

“Cancer takes a lot away from people,” he reflects. “Exercise gives them something back—a sense of control, strength, and forward momentum.”

The Legacy of a Modern Healer

Dr. Jay Harness represents a new archetype in oncology: the surgeon who refuses to let care stop at the operating table, the educator who bridges science and humanity, and the visionary who understands that healing is not only about removing disease—but restoring life. “If we truly care about outcomes,” he says, “we have to care about how people live after treatment. Survival is the starting line, not the finish.” In a healthcare system still catching up to the science of survivorship, Dr. Harness stands as both a catalyst and a compass—pointing toward a future where movement is no longer an afterthought, but a cornerstone of cancer care.

 

 

 

 

PART 2

Active Surveillance After Cancer: Restoring the Terrain — Imaging the Body Back to Strength

By Dr. Robert L. Bard, MD,DABR, FAIUM, FASLMS
(Cancer Radiologist | Post-Treatment Active Surveillance Specialist)


As a cancer radiologist, much of my work takes place after the most visible battles are over. I see patients in the phase of active surveillance—the long, watchful period following surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, or immunotherapy. This is the quiet chapter of cancer care that rarely makes headlines. Tumors may be gone or shrinking, scans may show stability, and lab values may look reassuring. Yet the body I image is often profoundly altered by the treatments that saved the patient’s life.

What I monitor through ultrasound, Doppler imaging, elastography, thermography, and optical vascular scanning is not just the absence of disease—but the condition of the terrain in which healing must continue. Fibrosis, vascular compromise, lymphatic congestion, mitochondrial fatigue, neuropathy, and inflammatory burden often persist long after treatment ends. In many patients, the question is no longer “Is the cancer visible?” but rather, “Is the body resilient enough to prevent its return?”

This is where restorative medicine, rehabilitation, and exercise oncology intersect with diagnostic imaging.

From my clinical vantage point, movement is not a lifestyle suggestion—it is a biological signal. The tissues I evaluate change when circulation improves. Microvascular flow shifts. Oxygenation patterns normalize. Fibrotic tissue softens. Neural conductivity responds. These are measurable phenomena. When patients engage in consistent, moderate physical activity as part of their recovery, I often observe functional improvements in tissue health that imaging can corroborate over time.

Beyond the physical domain, there is a deeper, often underestimated dimension to survivorship: spirit and emotional resilience. I have witnessed how depression, chronic stress, and emotional withdrawal manifest physiologically. There is now strong scientific support for what clinicians have long suspected: psychological distress directly impairs immune function. Elevated cortisol from chronic stress suppresses natural killer cell activity—one of the immune system’s frontline defenses in tumor surveillance. Inflammation increases. The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis becomes dysregulated. The body shifts into a biological state that is less equipped to heal and less capable of defense.

In this context, exercise becomes more than physical rehabilitation. It becomes an immune-supportive intervention. Movement lowers baseline cortisol over time, improves mood through neurochemical regulation, and enhances mitochondrial function. These changes translate into improved immune signaling, better treatment tolerance, and, critically, improved psychological stamina. Patients who move tend to endure treatment better—not just physically, but emotionally. And emotional endurance matters. Hope, agency, and participation in one’s own recovery are not abstract ideals; they are biological contributors to immune competence.

From the imaging perspective, active surveillance is not passive observation. It is an opportunity to track recovery. Safe, repeatable imaging allows us to assess vascular response, tissue remodeling, inflammatory patterns, and structural recovery over time. When movement is integrated into survivorship care, we can correlate functional change with imaging evidence—providing patients with visual proof that their efforts are reshaping their internal environment.

Cancer treatment is often described as a war. But recovery is closer to reconstruction. It requires restoring circulation, rebuilding metabolic resilience, calming inflammation, and re-establishing neurological balance. Exercise oncology, when guided responsibly, supports each of these domains. Imaging allows us to verify that restoration is occurring—not as theory, but as measurable change within the body.

Active surveillance should not only watch for recurrence. It should actively support recovery. When diagnostics, movement, and emotional resilience align, the body is no longer merely surviving cancer—it is reclaiming its capacity to defend itself.

In this emerging model of post-cancer care, we are no longer just looking for what remains of disease. We are imaging the return of strength.

Friday, February 6, 2026

CANCER TREATMENTS, MICROCIRCULATION AND THE FEET

How oncology therapies reshape peripheral circulation, nerve health, and tissue integrity—and why the feet serve as a diagnostic sentinel

By: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D  / Phil Hoekstra, Ph.D

 

Introduction

Modern cancer therapies have transformed survival outcomes, yet survivorship often carries a hidden burden: long-term compromise of peripheral circulation, nerve integrity, and tissue resilience—most visibly expressed in the feet. Chemotherapy disrupts microvascular networks and damages peripheral nerves; radiation alters vascular regulation and autonomic signaling; and targeted and immunotherapies introduce new patterns of inflammatory and ischemic stress. These physiologic disruptions commonly manifest in the lower extremities as numbness, burning pain, edema, color changes, delayed wound healing, nail pathology, and skin breakdown—symptoms that erode mobility, independence, and quality of life.

PodiatryScan reframes the feet as a sentinel region for treatment-related injury—where early shifts in perfusion, nerve function, and tissue tolerance can be detected, monitored, and managed longitudinally. Rather than waiting for survivorship complications to escalate into disability, a proactive surveillance model identifies emerging microcirculatory compromise and neuropathic stress earlier in recovery. Positioned within oncology survivorship care, PodiatryScan supports preventive foot monitoring, rehabilitation planning, protective strategies, and timely referral—elevating post-cancer care from reactive management to function-preserving, anticipatory medicine.


 

1) Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy (CIPN) and the Feet

CIPN is among the most prevalent and functionally limiting toxicities of cancer therapy. Agents such as taxanes, platinum compounds, vinca alkaloids, and proteasome inhibitors damage sensory axons and small fibers that innervate the feet, producing numbness, paresthesia, burning pain, and proprioceptive loss. The feet—being distal—are affected earliest and often most severely. Sensory loss increases fall risk, impairs balance, and predisposes to unnoticed trauma. Persistent neuropathy can outlast treatment by years, reshaping gait mechanics and loading patterns across the foot and ankle. Surveillance that tracks sensory thresholds, skin integrity, and functional stability helps clinicians intervene with protective footwear, balance training, and timely referrals to neurology or rehab before secondary injuries accrue.

 

2) Microvascular Injury and Ischemic Stress

Many cytotoxic agents injure endothelial cells and disrupt nitric-oxide–mediated vasodilation, diminishing capillary perfusion in distal tissues. Reduced microcirculation compromises oxygen delivery to the toes and plantar skin, delaying healing after minor cuts or pressure points. In patients with pre-existing vascular disease, diabetes, or smoking history, treatment-related microangiopathy compounds ischemic risk. The feet, as terminal vascular territories, often reveal early signs of perfusion stress—color changes, temperature asymmetry, and delayed capillary refill—making them an ideal surveillance target for circulatory compromise during survivorship.

 

3) Radiation Effects on Vascular Regulation and Autonomic Control

Radiation therapy can induce long-lasting endothelial injury, fibrosis, and autonomic dysregulation within treated fields and along neurovascular pathways. Although the feet are rarely irradiated directly, autonomic disturbances and systemic inflammatory responses can alter distal vascular tone and sweat gland function. Patients may report cold intolerance, color changes, edema, or brittle skin and nails in the lower extremities. These changes increase susceptibility to fissures, infection, and pressure injury—particularly in older adults or those with limited mobility. Monitoring distal tissue resilience becomes part of comprehensive survivorship care.

 

4) Hand–Foot Syndrome (Palmar-Plantar Erythrodysesthesia)

Certain chemotherapies and targeted agents precipitate hand–foot syndrome, characterized by erythema, pain, swelling, desquamation, and blistering on palms and soles. Plantar involvement threatens ambulation and adherence to therapy. Early identification of plantar skin stress enables dose adjustments, topical protection, and offloading strategies that preserve function and reduce treatment interruptions.

 

5) Lymphedema, Edema, and Tissue Vulnerability

Cancer-related lymphatic injury—whether from surgery, radiation, or systemic inflammation—can manifest as lower-extremity edema. Chronic swelling increases skin tension, reduces microcirculatory exchange, and raises infection risk. The feet, constrained by footwear and dependent positioning, are particularly vulnerable to maceration and fissuring. Longitudinal surveillance guides compression strategies, footwear modification, skin care, and referral to lymphedema therapy to prevent recurrent cellulitis and mobility decline.

 

6) Immunotherapy and Inflammatory Dermatoses

Checkpoint inhibitors and other immunotherapies introduce novel inflammatory toxicities affecting skin and small vessels. Acral dermatitis, vasculitic changes, and microvascular inflammation may present on the feet as painful erythema, purpura, or ulceration. Differentiating immune-mediated dermatoses from ischemic or infectious etiologies is critical to avoid mismanagement and unnecessary treatment interruptions. Structured foot surveillance supports earlier triage and targeted management.

 

7) Nail and Skin Barrier Disruption

Onycholysis, brittle nails, paronychia, xerosis, and fissuring are common during systemic therapy. On the feet, nail dystrophy alters pressure distribution in footwear, while skin barrier breakdown invites fungal and bacterial infection. Preventive foot care—routine inspection, nail management, moisturization, and footwear assessment—reduces secondary complications that disproportionately burden survivors with neuropathy or edema.

 

8) Musculoskeletal Deconditioning and Gait Changes

Pain, fatigue, and neuropathy alter loading patterns across the forefoot and heel, precipitating callus formation, plantar fasciopathy, and stress reactions. Deconditioning compounds these biomechanical shifts, increasing fall risk. Integrating podiatric assessment with rehabilitation planning preserves mobility and helps survivors return to activity safely.

 

9) Infection Risk in an Immunocompromised Host

Neutropenia and mucocutaneous barrier injury elevate the risk of tinea pedis, cellulitis, and wound infection in the feet. Minor interdigital fissures can escalate rapidly in immunocompromised patients. Proactive surveillance, patient education on daily foot checks, and rapid response pathways for early infection signs are essential.

 

10) Why the Feet Are a Sentinel in Survivorship

The feet concentrate the downstream effects of vascular, neurologic, inflammatory, and mechanical stressors introduced by cancer therapies. Because they are distal, load-bearing, and richly innervated, early dysfunction becomes clinically apparent there first. PodiatryScan operationalizes this insight through structured, longitudinal foot monitoring—integrating perfusion cues, sensory status, skin integrity, and functional mobility into survivorship workflows. The result is earlier detection, smarter referrals, targeted protection, and function-preserving care that keeps survivors mobile and independent.

 


Clinical Takeaways

·        Screen early and often for sensory loss, perfusion stress, and skin barrier compromise in the feet during and after therapy.

·        Act preventively with footwear optimization, offloading, skin care, balance training, and timely specialty referral.

·        Coordinate care across oncology, podiatry, neurology, rehab, and wound services to prevent small problems from becoming disabling sequelae.


References

1.       American Cancer Society. (2023). Hand–foot syndrome (palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia).

2.       Argyriou, A. A., Bruna, J., Marmiroli, P., & Cavaletti, G. (2012). Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity (CIPN): An update. Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology, 82(1), 51–77.

3.       Cavaletti, G., & Marmiroli, P. (2010). Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neurotoxicity. Nature Reviews Neurology, 6(12), 657–666.

4.       Hershman, D. L., et al. (2014). Prevention and management of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy in survivors of adult cancers. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 32(18), 1941–1967.

5.       Lacouture, M. E., et al. (2011). Clinical practice guidelines for the prevention and treatment of EGFR inhibitor–associated dermatologic toxicities. Supportive Care in Cancer, 19(8), 1079–1095.

6.       National Cancer Institute. (2024). Peripheral neuropathy (PDQ®)–Health professional version.

7.       Rockson, S. G. (2018). Lymphedema. American Journal of Medicine, 131(3), 276–280.

8.       Siegel, R. L., Miller, K. D., & Jemal, A. (2024). Cancer statistics. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 74(1), 17–48.

9.       Smith, E. M. L., et al. (2013). The reliability and validity of a modified Total Neuropathy Score in patients with CIPN. Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System, 18(1), 45–51.

10.     Sonis, S. T. (2013). Pathobiology of mucositis. Nature Reviews Cancer, 4(4), 277–284.

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