| Literature DB >> 28555108 |
Abstract
Major depression disorder is most commonly treated with antidepressants. However, due to their side effects clinicians seek non-pharmacologic options, and one of these is exercise. The literature on the benefits of exercise for depression is extensive. Nevertheless, two recent reviews focusing on antidepressants vs. other therapies as a basis for clinical practice guidelines recommended mainly antidepressants, excluding exercise as a viable choice for treatment of depression. The aim of this perspective is to analyze the literature exploring the reasons for this discrepancy. Two categories of publications were examined: randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and meta-analyses or systematic reviews. Based on this reassessment, RCTs comparing exercise to antidepressants reported that exercise and antidepressants were equally effective. RCTs comparing exercise combined with antidepressants to antidepressants only reported a significant improvement in depression following exercise as an adjunctive treatment. Almost all the reviews examining exercise vs. other treatments of depression, including antidepressants, support the use of exercise in the treatment of depression, at least as an adjunctive therapy. The two reviews examining pharmacologic vs. non-pharmacologic therapies as a basis for clinical practice guidelines examined limited evidence on exercise vs. antidepressants. In addition, it is possible that academics and health care practitioners are skeptical of viewing exercise as medicine. Maybe, there is a reluctance to accept that changes in lifestyle as opposed to pharmacological treatment can alter biological mechanisms. Longitudinal studies are needed for assessing the effectiveness of exercise in real clinical settings, as well as studies exploring dose-response relationship between exercise and depression.Entities:
Keywords: adjunctive therapy; antidepressants; combination therapy; exercise therapy; monotherapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28555108 PMCID: PMC5430071 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing exercise to antidepressants in the treatment of depression.
| Study | Participants | Treatment groups | Exercise | Duration | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDD Older adults, | 1.Group exercise | Three times/week Walking or jogging | 4 months | Exercise and antidepressants equally effective | |
| MDD Adults, | 1. Group exercise | Three times/week | 4 months | Participants in either exercise or antidepressants groups tended to show greater improvement in comparison with placebo participants | |
| MDD Adults | 1 year follow-up | No differences between treatment groups. Those who reported regular exercise following the intervention - the least likely to be depressed at follow-up | |||
| Minor depression Older adults | 1.Group exercise | Three times/week Aerobic and resistance | 4 months | Both antidepressants and exercise led to improvements as compared to the usual care. Individuals in the exercise condition also improved in physical functioning | |
| MDD Adults, inpatients | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants | 1. Individually treadmill walking | 10 days Every day | Aerobic exercise as add-on therapy significantly improved depression. The proportion of patients with a clinical response was larger for the aerobic exercise group | |
| MDD Treatment-resistant women | 1. Physiological strengthening + antidepressants | Group cardio-fitness machines – aerobics and strengthening Two times/week | 8 months | Exercise group showed a significant depression improvement | |
| MDD Treatment-resistant adults | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants. | Home-based, five times/week (1 day/week supervised | 12 weeks | In exercise group, 21% showed response and 26% remission. None in control showed response or remission | |
| MDD Adults inpatients | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants. | Stationary bike, or treadmill or an elliptic, on individual basis, Three times/week | Through-out hospitalization | At 2 weeks, – both groups achieved improvements in depressive symptoms and quality of life, but difference favorable to exercise group at discharge. | |
| MDD Adults | 1. Facilitated physical activity + usual care (58% antidepressants) | Three face to face sessions and 10 telephone calls with a trained physical activity facilitator | 8 months. | Facilitated physical activity did not improve depression or reduce use of antidepressants compared with usual care alone, after 4, 8, and 12 months | |
| MDD Adults inpatients | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants. | Treadmill or bike or transport machine, on individual basis, Three times/week | Through-out hospitalization | Exercise group improved significantly more than control group on depressive symptoms and quality of life, as noticed at the second week of hospitalization and at discharge | |
| MDD Adult women | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants | Traditional games, natural circuit workouts with resistance bands, jump ropes, fitness balls, brisk walking, and dancing, Three times/week | 4 months | Exercise group decreased in depression, in anxiety and in stress and improved in physical functioning as compared to the control group | |
| MDD Adults inpatients | 1. Aerobic exercise + CBT + antidepressants (only 77% antidepressants) | Bicycle ergometer followed by personal preference for cross trainer, stepper, arm ergometry, treadmill, recumbent, or a rowing ergometry Three times/week | 6 weeks | Decline in depressive symptoms in both groups. Significantly more in exercise group classified as responders - at least 50% reduction in depression. Exercise group improved in physiological measures | |
| MDD Older adults | 1. High-intensity aerobic exercise + antidepressants | 1. High-intensity, progressive, mainly bicycles | 24 weeks | Remission occurred in 81% of high-intensity 73% of low-intensity 45% of antidepressants only | |
| MDD Adult inpatients | 1. Aerobic exercise + antidepressants | 1. Walking or running mostly on individual basis | 10 days upon hospitalization, Every day | Both aerobic and stretching improved. A larger effect size in aerobic exercise. No change in depressive symptoms in control group | |
| Minor depression, Older adults poorly responsive to depressive symptoms | 1. Exercise + antidepressants | Endurance, strength and stretching Two times/week | 10 weeks | Significant higher proportion - 55% – of exercise group than control – 33% experienced a greater than 30% decline in depression | |
A map of RCTs in reviews comparing exercise to antidepressants in the treatment of depression, and the conclusions regarding the effect size of exercise.
| Reviews | Reviews comparing the effect size of exercise vs. antidepressants in a specific sub-analysis | Reviews assessing a general effect size of exercise | Conclusion | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCTs included in monotherapy comparison | RCTs included in combination comparison | RCTs together in mono and combination | All RCTs comparing exercise to other treatments including antidepressants | ||
| 2 unpublished papers, 1 irrelevant | A significant overall effect size of exercise. | ||||
| Generally, exercise reduced depression. | |||||
| The | |||||
| Exercise is an efficient alternative treatment for depression ( | |||||