- Exercise plus ibuprofen boosted focus in cancer patients on chemo
- Helps those struggling with “chemo brain” during treatment
- Still experimental — not ready for routine use
This simple combo could help cancer patients think more clearly during therapy.
You’re in the middle of chemotherapy. You love your family, your work, your life. But you can’t remember simple words. You walk into a room and forget why. You read the same sentence over and over.
This is “chemo brain” — and it’s more than just a bad day. For many, it’s a daily struggle that doesn’t show up on scans but feels very real.
Millions of people get chemotherapy each year. Up to 75% say they have thinking problems during or after treatment.
They call it mental fog. Trouble focusing. Forgetting names, tasks, or conversations.
Doctors know it’s real. But until now, there’s been little to offer. No pills. No proven routines. Most advice has been: “Rest more” or “It might pass.”
That leaves patients feeling stuck — and often alone.
The surprising shift
For years, scientists thought cognitive issues after chemo were mostly emotional — caused by stress, anxiety, or depression.
But newer research shows real changes in the brain. Inflammation may be one key driver.
Now, a small but important study suggests two everyday tools — walking and a common pain reliever — may help protect thinking skills during chemotherapy.
What scientists didn’t expect
The study tested four groups:
- Exercise + ibuprofen
- Exercise + dummy pill
- Ibuprofen only
- Dummy pill only
All patients had cancer and were on chemo. All reported thinking problems.
They were followed for just 6 weeks.
The biggest gains? In attention and processing speed — the ability to focus and react quickly.
Exercise wins — even without ibuprofen
Patients who walked regularly and did light resistance moves at home improved the most.
On a key test called the Trail Making Test, they finished 21.5 seconds faster than those doing nothing. That’s a big jump in brain performance.
Think of your brain like traffic. Chemo can cause a gridlock — signals slow down, thoughts stall.
Exercise may help clear the roads. It boosts blood flow, reduces inflammation, and supports brain cell health — like sending a cleanup crew through a jammed highway.
Ibuprofen helps — but not everywhere
Low-dose ibuprofen also helped attention — but only slightly.
The surprise? In one memory test, people taking ibuprofen actually did worse than those on placebo.
That’s a red flag. It suggests the drug might help some brain functions but hurt others.
Not all inflammation is bad. Some of it helps brain cells adapt and learn. Blocking it completely might do more harm than good.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
The real winner? Patient effort
The exercise program — called EXCAP — was simple.
It started with short walks. Then slowly increased in time and intensity. Patients also did light resistance bands or bodyweight moves like squats.
They did it at home. No gym. No trainer.
And they stuck with it — most completed over 80% of planned sessions.
That’s rare in cancer trials. When patients engage, results follow.
Why this combo made sense
Researchers picked ibuprofen because it fights inflammation — a known side effect of both cancer and chemo.
They picked exercise because it’s safe, low-cost, and already helps fatigue, mood, and sleep.
Could these two work together to protect the brain?
The study says: possibly. But not in every way.
Small but telling results
The trial included 86 people. Most were women with breast cancer. Average age: 54.
They were split into the four groups. Tests measured thinking skills before and after 6 weeks.
The clearest win? Attention. Both exercise and ibuprofen helped — but exercise alone worked best.
But there’s a catch
Ibuprofen’s mixed results raise concerns.
It’s an NSAID — a common pain reliever. But long-term use can harm kidneys, raise blood pressure, or cause stomach bleeding.
For cancer patients, already weakened by treatment, that risk matters.
And since ibuprofen didn’t clearly beat placebo in most areas, it may not be worth the danger.
What patients are saying
Many in the exercise groups said they felt sharper. More present.
One described it like “turning on a dim light.”
Others said they remembered conversations better. Could follow TV plots. Finish emails without losing focus.
Not a fix — but a step forward
Experts say this study doesn’t prove a cure. But it shows a path.
“We’re finally testing real tools for a real problem,” said one researcher not involved in the trial.
For too long, cognitive issues were brushed off. Now, they’re being taken seriously.
If you’re in chemo and struggling to think clearly, talk to your care team.
Start walking — even 10 minutes a day. Add light movement if you can.
Do not start taking ibuprofen daily without medical advice.
This study used low doses, but only under close watch. Self-medicating could be risky.
The full picture isn’t clear yet
The study was small. Short. And only included people well enough to exercise.
It didn’t test long-term effects. Or whether gains last after chemo ends.
And it didn’t include people with advanced cancer or major health issues — those who may need help most.
A larger phase 3 trial is needed. That means hundreds of patients, multiple centers, longer follow-up.
Researchers will likely focus on exercise first — since it showed the clearest benefit.
For now, this isn’t a new standard of care.
But it’s one of the first solid signs that patients can do something — safe, simple, and in their control — to fight back against chemo brain.