| Literature DB >> 28212648 |
Kathleen A Martin Ginis1, Jennifer Heisz2, John C Spence3, Ilana B Clark2, Jordan Antflick4, Chris I Ardern5, Christa Costas-Bradstreet6, Mary Duggan7, Audrey L Hicks2, Amy E Latimer-Cheung8, Laura Middleton9, Kirk Nylen4, Donald H Paterson10, Chelsea Pelletier11, Michael A Rotondi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The impending public health impact of Alzheimer's disease is tremendous. Physical activity is a promising intervention for preventing and managing Alzheimer's disease. However, there is a lack of evidence-based public health messaging to support this position. This paper describes the application of the Appraisal of Guidelines Research and Evaluation II (AGREE-II) principles to formulate an evidence-based message to promote physical activity for the purposes of preventing and managing Alzheimer's disease.Entities:
Keywords: Activities of daily living; Aging; Cognition; Dementia; Exercise; Fitness; Health promotion; Messaging
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28212648 PMCID: PMC5316179 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4090-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Expert panel
| Name | Expertise and Institution | Role(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Jordan Antflick (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Knowledge Translation, Dissemination: | Knowledge Broker |
| Chris Ardern (PhD) | Guideline Development, Content (exercise, epidemiology): | Content Expert-Physical Activity Epidemiology |
| Christa Costas-Bradstreet | Dissemination: | Stakeholder, Dissemination |
| Mary Duggan | Knowledge Synthesis, Guideline Development and Dissemination: | Stakeholder, Dissemination |
| Jennifer Heisz (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Content (Alzheimer’s disease, exercise, aging): | Content Expert- Alzheimer’s disease, Aging, Exercise, Cognitive Neuroscience |
| Audrey Hicks (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Guideline Development, Content (exercise, aging, practice): | Content Expert-Physiology |
| Amy Latimer-Cheung (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Guideline Development, Content (disability, behavior change), Knowledge Translation: | Content Expert-Exercise Behavior Change |
| Hans Messersmith | Knowledge Synthesis, AGREE, Guideline Development: | Panel Chair, Process Advisor |
| Kathleen Martin Ginis (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Guideline Development, Content (disability, behavior change), Knowledge Translation: | Leadership, Project Direction |
| Laura Middleton (PhD) | Content (exercise, cognition, Alzheimer’s disease, dementia: | Content Expert-Exercise, Cognitive Aging and Alzheimer’s disease |
| Kirk Nylen (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Knowledge Translation, Dissemination: | Knowledge Broker |
| Don Paterson (PhD) | Content (exercise, aging): | Content Expert-Physiology, Aging |
| Katherine Rankin (BA) | Dissemination: | Content Expert – Alzheimer’s disease |
| Michael Rotondi (PhD) | Evidence Synthesis, Meta-analysis models: | Content Expert-Biostatistics |
| John Spence (PhD) | Knowledge Synthesis, Guideline Development, Content (physical activity, behavior change): | Content Expert-Exercise Behavior Change |
Ratings of the statement and informational resource (i.e., “the toolkit”) obtained from health care providers and older adults
| Health care providers | ||||||
| n | M (SD) | Range of responses | ||||
| In your opinion, is the toolkit appropriate for all community-dwelling individuals with Alzheimer’s disease? | 5 | 4.40 (.55) | 4–5 | |||
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide useful information for people with Alzheimer’s disease? | 5 | 4.80 (.45) | 4–5 | |||
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide useful information for health care practitioners? | 5 | 4.40 (.55) | 4–5 | |||
| How confident are you that a client with Alzheimer’s disease could engage in enough physical activity each week to meet the current physical activity guidelines? | 5 | 3.00 (.71) | 2–4 | |||
| If given the opportunity, would you use this statement to recommend physical activity in your practice? | 5 | 4.00 (.71) | 3–5 | |||
| Older adults | Caregivers | |||||
| n | M (SD) | Range of responses | n | M (SD) | Range of responses | |
| Does the statement provide useful information for older adults? | 15 | 4.47 (.52) | 4–5 | 5 | 4.20 (.45) | 4–5 |
| Does the statement provide useful information for families and caregivers of people with Alzheimer’s disease? | 15 | 4.47 (.52) | 4–5 | 5 | 4.20 (.45) | 4–5 |
| Is the statement clear regarding the benefits of physical activity? | 15 | 4.40 (.63) | 3–5 | 5 | 4.20 (.45) | 4–5 |
| In your opinion, is the toolkit appropriate for older adults with Alzheimer’s disease or those who want to prevent Alzheimer’s disease? | 14 | 4.21 (.58) | 3–5 | 5 | 4.20 (.45) | 4–5 |
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide useful information for people with Alzheimer’s disease or those who want to prevent Alzheimer’s disease? | 14 | 4.14 (.53) | 3–5 | 5 | 3.80 (.87) | 3–5 |
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide appropriate information to help older adults become more physically active? | 14 | 4.21 (.43) | 4–5 | 5 | 4.00 (.00) | 4–4 |
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide clear information on the benefits of physical activity for preventing Alzheimer’s disease? | 15 | 4.00 (.65) | 3–5 | 5 | 4.00 (.00) | 4–4 |
| In your opinion, does the toolkit provide clear information on the benefits of physical activity for managing Alzheimer’s disease? | 15 | 3.93 (.59) | 3–5 | 5 | 4.20 (.45) | 4–5 |
Note. All responses were made on a scale ranging from 1 to 5, with higher scores indicating more favourable ratings
Summary of reviews examining the effects of exercise interventions on symptoms associated with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias
| Review | Quality score | # Studies in reviewa | Type | Characteristics | Outcomes | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | Design | Interventions | Physical | Psycho-logical | ADL and quality of life | ||||
| Blankevoort et al., 2010b [ | 9 | 16 | NR/MA | Elderly (mean age >70 years) with dementia | 10 RCT, 6 case series | Various structured exercise programs |
| ↑ ADL (k = 4) | |
| Boote et al., 2006 [ | 8 | 1 | NR | Mod-severe AD | RCT | Group exercise |
| ||
| Brett et al., 2015 [ | 9 | 12 | SR | Dementia living in nursing home | RCT | Any PA |
|
| ↑ ADL (3/5) |
| Burton et al., 2015 [ | 11 | 4 | SR/MA | Dementia living in the community | 3 RCT and 1 quasi-experi-mental | Strength, balance and mobility exercises |
| ||
| Cooper et al., 2012 [ | 10 | 1 | NR | Dementia | RCT | Comprehensive exercise program | <>QOL (1/1) | ||
| de Souto Barreto et al., 2015 [ | 8 | 20 | SR/MA | Dementia | RCT | Any exercise |
| ||
| Farina et al., 2014 [ | 10 | 3 | MA | AD | RCT | Any exercise (min. 4 weeks) |
| ||
| Forbes et al, 2013 [ | 11 | 16 | CR | Older adults (>65 years old) with dementia | RCT | Any exercise |
| ↑ ADL (k = 6) | |
| Forbes et al, 2015 [ | 11 | 17 | CR | Older adults (>65 years old) with dementia | RCT | Any exercise |
| ↑ ADL (k = 6) | |
| Groot et al., 2016 [ | 9 | 18 | MA | All dementia except those that affect motor system (e.g., Huntington’s, Parkinson’s) | RCT | Any physical activity |
| ↑ ADL (k = 4) | |
| Hermans et al., 2007 [ | 9 | 0 | CR | Dementia living in domestic setting | RCT | Walking and exercise therapy |
| ||
| Heyn et al., 2004 [ | 10 | 30 | MA | Older adults (≥65 years) with cognitive impairment (MMSE <26) | RCT | Any exercise |
|
| |
| Jensen and Padilla, 2011 [ | 6 | 6 | NR | Dementia | Mixed | Exercise and motor-based interventions for falls prevention (2 group-based; 4 individual) |
| ||
| Littbrand et al., 2011 [ | 9 | 10; results from 6 low quality studies not reported | NR | Dementia | RCT | Walking and combined exercise |
| ↑ ADL (1/1) | |
| O’Connor et al., 2009 [ | 8 | 1 | NR | Dementia | RCT, RM | Any PA or exercise |
| ||
| Pitkala et al., 2013 [ | 8 | 20 | NR | Dementia | RCT | Any PA |
| ||
| Rao et al., 2014 [ | 5 | 6 | SR | Ambulatory older adults (>65 years) with AD | RCT with sample size >15 | Aerobic, strength, and balanced or any combination of the three |
| ↑ ADL (k = 6) ES = 0.80* | |
| Thuné-Boyle et al., 2012 [ | 6 | 16 | RCIA | Dementia | Exercise inter-vention studies (6) and reviews (10) | Any exercise |
| ||
| Yu, 2011 [ | 6 | 12 | NR | AD | Experi-mental or quasi-experi-mental | Aerobic exercise (alone or combination; >2weeks) |
|
| ↓ ADL |
| Yu et al., 2006 [ | 8 | 18 | NR | AD | Any | Aerobic exercise |
| ||
Note: AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADL activities of daily living, CR Cochrane review, MA meta analysis, NR narrative review, PA physical activity, QOL quality of life, RCT randomized controlled trial, RCIA rapid critical interpretive approach, SMD standard mean difference, MD mean difference, ES effect size; k number of studies
Values in parentheses indicate the number of studies or effect sizes in a review that addressed that outcome (denominator) and the number that indicated significant improvements (numerator)
*Significant effect size, p < .05
aFor meta-analyses, ‘# of studies’ refers to the number of unique studies included in the reported meta-analyses
bBlankevoort et al. did not report the statistical significance of effect sizes nor did they report confidence intervals
Summary of reviews examining whether physical activity in healthy older adults is associated with a reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias
| Reference | Quality score | Type | Characteristics of included reviews | Conclusions | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # of studiesa | Design | Participants | PA | ||||
| Beckett et al. 2015 [ | 7 | MA | 9 | Prospective cohort studies | Cognitively healthy older adults, ≥65 years | Any PA | PA is associated with a ↓ risk of developing AD in adults 65 years and older. RR of .61, 95% CI 0.52-0.73 for physically active older adults compared to non-active counterparts. |
| Barnes et al., 2011 [ | 4 | NR | 2 | Prospective cohort studies | No dementia diagnosis at baseline | Any PA | Of seven potentially modifiable risk factors examined, physical inactivity contributed to the largest proportion of AD cases in the US and a substantial proportion of cases globally. |
| Beydoun et al., 2014 [ | 7 | MA | 8 | Cohort studies with sample size > 300 | Generally healthy older adults | Any PA | RR of AD = 0.58 (0.49,0.70) for the group reporting the highest PA versus the lowest PA. PAR% = 31.9%, 95% CI 22.7–41.2%. |
| Daviglus et al., 2011 [ | 9 | NR & MA | 12 | Cohort studies with sample size ≥ 300 | General population in developed countries, ≥50 year | Self-reported PA. | NR: 8/12 studies reported a protective effect of moderate to high levels of PA on risk of AD; however, the associations were not always significant after adjusting for confounding factors or when looking across high and moderate activity levels. |
| Hamer et al., 2009 [ | 11 | MA | 5 | Prospective cohort studies | Diagnosis of dementia/AD | Any PA | PA ↓risk of AD by 45%. RR of AD = 0.55 for the group reporting the highest PA versus the lowest PA |
| Patterson et al., 2007 [ | 6 | NR | 3 | Longitudinal cohort studies | Representative of Canadian demographic, exclusion of dementia at baseline | Any PA or energy expenditure | 3/3 studies provided evidence that regular physical activity is associated with a reduced risk for AD. |
| Rolland et al., 2008 [ | 5 | NR | 24 | Longitudinal epidemiological studies | No dementia diagnosis at baseline, ≥60 year | Any PA or energy expenditure | 20/24 studies suggested a significant and independent preventive effect of physical activity on cognitive decline, or dementia, or AD risk. Physical activity could reduce the incidence of AD. |
Note. aFor meta-analyses, ‘# of studies’ refers to the number of unique studies included in the reported meta-analyses
AD Alzheimer’s disease, HR hazard ration, MA meta-analysis, NR narrative review, OR odds ratio, PA physical activity, PAR% population attributable risk percent, RR relative risk
The messaging statement
| “ |
AGREE-II domains, scores, areas for improvement, and responses/actions taken
| Domain | Score | Areas for improvement in the report | Response/Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Scope and Purpose | 18/21 | • Include specific outcomes of interest and setting to the clinical question | • These details were added |
| 2. Stakeholder Involvement | 19/21 | None | |
| 3. Rigour of Development | 47/56 | • Provide further details on the search for evidence (e.g., time periods searched, outcomes of interest, etc.) | • Additional details have been added |
| 4. Clarity of Presentation | 18/21 | • The inclusion of a section or an appendix with the final consensus statement would make the statement more easily identifiable in the report | • A table/box was added to highlight the final statement |
| 5. Applicability | 21/28 | • No explicit comments were included in the report concerning potential resource implications of applying the recommendations, nor was a formal assessment undertaken/reported | • Notes from the panel’s discussion of resource implications have been added |
| 6. Editorial Independence | 8/14 | • An explicit statement regarding the funder was not included, nor was an explicit statement to indicate the views or interests of the funding body did not influence the final consensus statement | • An explicit statement has been added |