| Literature DB >> 30012142 |
Elizabeth Aylett1, Nicola Small2, Peter Bower2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anxiety disorders are common, yet treatment options in general practice are often limited to medication or CBT. There is a lack of evidence for the effectiveness of exercise in the treatment of anxiety in patients who present to general practice and also about the intensity of exercise required to lead to improvement. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the use of exercise versus waiting list control groups in the treatment of anxiety and also to assess the benefit of high intensity exercise vs low intensity exercise. Long term follow up scores were also analysed. We included patients who met diagnostic criteria for anxiety disorders or had clinically raised anxiety levels on a validated rating scale and performed a subgroup analysis of the outcomes between the two groups. The intervention was any aerobic exercise programme carried out for at least two weeks, or exercise carried out at high intensity for at least two weeks. The comparison groups were either a waiting list control group or low intensity exercise.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Exercise; General practice; Jogging; Meta-analysis; Mood; Panic; Physical activity; Randomised controlled trials; Review; Social phobia; Treatment; Walking
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30012142 PMCID: PMC6048763 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3313-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart outlining the process of study selection
Characteristics of Studies; Exercise Group vs Waiting list Control Group
| Author | Study Size | Diagnostic criteria | Intervention | Control Group | Were groups matched for time spent with the trainer? | Long Term Follow up | Outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients meeting DSM IV criteria for Generalised Anxiety Disorder. | Supervised aerobic exercise, twice per week for 8 weeks. | Untreated waiting list group.. | No | No | Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) | ||
|
| Patients meeting DSM IV criteria for Generalised Anxiety Disorder | Resistance Exercise. | Untreated Waiting list control group | No | No | Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) | |
| Patients with DSM IV social anxiety disorder as measured on the ADIS-IV-L scale | 3 sessions of aerobic exercise per week over two months. 2 individual and 1 group. Intensity and Heart rate not measured. Duration 10 weeks | Untreated SAD group | No | No | Liebowitz Social anxiety self-report scale (LSAS-SR), Social Interaction Anxiety Scale (SIAS-S) | ||
| Elevated Anxiety Sensitivity > 25 on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index | Six 20 min aerobic exercise sessions over two weeks on a treadmill. | Untreated waiting list control group. | No | Follow up at 3 weeks | Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI) Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) | ||
| Patients meeting DSM IV criteria for Generalised Anxiety Disorder, Panic Disorder or Social Phobia | 8 week programme of 30 min walking sessions, measured with pedometer, increasing to 5 sessions per week. Intensity not measured. Also had CBT and education | CBT and education | Yes, sessions with the exercise trainer were matched with CBT educational sessions in control group. | The Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS 21) | |||
| Students with clinically raised anxiety levels | Internet delivered programme, over a 10 week time period. Activity measured with an accelerometer. Counselling. | Counselling | No | No | State trait anxiety Inventory (STAI trait) | ||
| Score higher than non-clinical mean on Anxiety sensitivity score | Aerobic exercise 6 twenty min. Sessions over a 2 week time period. Subjects fitted with polaris monitor. HR 60–90% maximum | waiting list control | No, controls attended to fill in the ASR-I only. | No | Anxiety Sensitivy Index (ASI) | ||
| DSM IV criteria for panic disorder with or without agoraphobia. | Exercise for 45 mins 3 times per week, initially walking increasing to running. Duration was 10 weeks. | Relaxation plus placebo | No | No | Clnical Global Impression Scale (CGI) | ||
| Patients meeting the DSM III criteria for panic disorder and Agoraphobia | A four mile route to be walked, progressing to running 3 times per week for 10 weeks. Also one training session per week. | Placebo group | No | No | HADS, Panic and Agorsphobia scale (P&A) | ||
| Menopausal women with clinically raised anxiety according to the HRSA scale | Six month programme of 6o min sessions 3 times per weeks including aerobic and resistance exercise performed to 60–80% HR max. | Waiting list control group | No | No | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) | ||
| Elevated Anxiety Sensitivity > 25 on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index | Six 20-min moderate intensity aerobic exercise sessions over two weeks (three sessions per week), | Untreated waiting list control group. | No | No | Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI) Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) |
Characteristics of Studies comparing High Intensity to Low Intensity Exercise
| Author | Study Size | Diagnostic criteria | Intervention | Control group | Were groups matched for time spent with the trainer? | Long term follow up | Outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students with a score of 25 or more (0.75 SD over the mean) on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index | Six 20 min treadmill sessions at high intensity for 2 weeks. Polaris heart monitor to assess HR. 60–90% HR max. | Six 20 min walking at low intensity over two weeks. | Yes | Measurements repeated one week later | Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI), and State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI trait) | ||
| Non-psychotic Inpatients with anxiety disorders | Jogging, 30 mins 3 or 4 times per week for 8 weeks at 70% HR max | Walking for 3 or 4 times per week over 8 weeks at a comfortable speed. | Yes | Yes, 6 months later | State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI trait) | ||
| Volunteers with anxiety levels in the “borderline” or “definite” range on HADS scale and/or raised score on the Profile of Moods States. | 10 weeks of one supervise and three unsupervised sessions. 20 mins of continuous walking at 60–65% HR max. | 10 weeks of one supervise and three unsupervised sessions. Strength, mobility and flexibility not above 50% HR max. | Yes | Yes at 3 months | State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI trait) | ||
| Participants had Panic Disorder according to DSMIV criteria | 30 mins on treadmill 3 times per week for 8 weeks to 70% VO2 max. | Low intensity stretching exercises for 30 mins 3 times per week for 8 weeks | Yes | Yes at 7 months | Hamilton Anxiety Scale (Ham-A), BAI | ||
| Patients meeting DSM III criteria for panic disorder with or without agoraphobia, Generalised anxiety disorder or social phobia. | Brisk walking or jogging to 70% VO2 max, Trained 3 times per week for 8 weeks. | Anaerobic training - strength, flexibility and relaxation - low intensity. | Yes | No | Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Scale (CPRS), Phobic Avoidance Rating Scale (PARS) |
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary: Overall risks of bias items for included studies
Risk of Bias in each trial
| Study | Random Sequence | Allocation Concealment | Blinding Participants | Blinding Outcome | Incomplete Outcome | Selective Reporting | Attention Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herring et al., 2012 [ | Blocked randomisation stratified according to medication use. | Clinicians performing the initial assessment blinded to allocation | Participants not blinded X | Not blinded. X | All allocated subjects completed the study. | All outcomes were reported. | Low intensity and high intensity groups matched for therapist time but not waiting list control group. |
| Jazaieri et al., 2012 [ | Randomised using Efrons randomisation procedure | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | No information regarding assessor blinding (?) | No difference in attrition between groups. | Patients self-reported the quantity of exercise performed. (?) | patients were not matched for time spent with an instructor. (X) |
| Smits et al. 2008 [ | Computer Generated Random Sequence | No allocation concealment (X) | Participants were not blinded (X) | . Not blinded. (X) | No difference in attrition between groups. | All outcomes were reported. | Attention bias, patients were not matched for the spent with an instructor. (X) |
| Merom et al. 2007 [ | Computer Generated Randomisation | Performed by independent research centre | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | No difference in attrition between groups. | All outcomes were reported. | Groups had matched time with therapist. |
| Mailey et al., 2010 [ | No information about method of randomisation (?) | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not blinded (?) | Very little attrition in both groups. | All outcomes were reported. | Intervention and control groups not matched for time (X) |
| Broman-Fulks, 2008 [ | No information about the method of randomisation (?) | No information (?) | Participants were blinded as to the group they were in | Not Blinded (X) | All allocated subjects completed the study. | All outcomes were reported. | Attention bias, patients were not matched for the spent with an instructor. (X) |
| Wedekind 2010 [ | Blocked randomisation | Allocation performed by the hospital pharmacist | Participants not blinded (X) | Blind rater used to eliminate expectation differences (?) | No significant difference in drop outs between groups. | All outcomes were reported. | Subjects in the control group received time with a therapist doing relaxation training. |
| Brooks et al. 1998 [ | No information about method of randomisation (?) | No information (?) | Participants were blinded. | Investigators were blinded | Similar attrition rate | All outcomes were reported. | Time matched with therapist across groups |
| Villaverde et al. 2012 [ | Details given regarding the randomisation procedure | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | Similar attrition rate between groups. | All outcomes were reported. | No time matching between groups (X) |
| Medina et al. 2015 [ | Not mentioned in the method section. (X) | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | Similar attrition rate | All outcomes were reported. | No time matching between groups (X) |
| Broman-Fulks, 2004 [ | No information about method of randomisation (X) | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | No attrition in the groups | All outcomes were reported. | Matched for time |
| Sexton et al. 1989 [ | No information about the method of randomisation (?) | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | higher no. of dropout in the high intensity group (X) | All outcomes were reported. | Less risk of attention bias as both active interventions. |
| Steptoe et al. 1989 [ | No information about the method of randomisation (?) | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Not Blinded (X) | Similar attrition rate between groups. | Some outcomes were not reported (?) | Participants in both groups had similar time with therapists |
| Gaudlitz et al. 2015 [ | Randomised using block allocation | Assessment staff were blinded | Participants were blinded as to nature of the study | Study staff were blinded | Low attrition rate and all subjects accounted for | All outcomes were reported. | Time matched with therapist across groups |
| Martinsen et al., 1989 [ | Randomised using block allocation | No information (?) | Participants not blinded (X) | Assessors were not blinded | Low attrition rate | All outcomes were reported. | Groups were time matched |
Summary of Findings Table for Grade outcomes
| Aerobic Exercise compared to Placebo for the treatment of Anxiety | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient or population: Patients with raised anxiety levels on a validated rating scale or diagnosed with Anxiety disorders. Intervention: Aerobic exercise for anxiety, Comparison: Non exercise Control Groups. | ||||
| Outcomes | Risk with Aerobic exercise for anxiety | № of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments |
| Improvement in anxiety scores in patients who exercised compared to no exercise. Assessed with: Evidence based anxiety rating scales follow up: range 2 weeks to 10 weeks | 0.41 SMD lower (0.70 lower to 0.12 lower)* | 194 (6 RCTs) | ⨁⨁⨁◯MODERATE a, | The risk of bias noted is due to the lack of blinding of participants to the intervention in most of the studies. Also bias due to time spent with supervisor |
| High intensity exercise compared to low intensity exercise for Anxiety Disorders | ||||
| Patient or population: Anxiety Disorders Intervention: High intensity exercise Comparison: low intensity exercise | ||||
| Outcomes | Risk with High intensity exercise | № of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments |
| Results of groups who undertook high intensity exercise compared with those who undertook low intensity exercise. Assessed with: Evidence based anxiety rating scales follow up: range 2 weeks to 10 weeks | 0.38 lower (0.68 lower to 0.08 lower)* | 174 (4 RCTs) | ⨁⨁⨁◯MODERATE a | The risk of bias noted is due to the lack of blinding of participants to the intervention in most of the studies. Time with supervisor was matched in these trials |
| Long term High intensity exercise compared to Long term low intensity exercise for Anxiety Disorders | ||||
| Patient or population: Anxiety Disorders, Intervention: Long term High intensity exercise,Comparison: Long term low intensity exercise | ||||
| Outcomes | Risk with Long term High intensity exercise | № of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments |
| Improvement in anxiety levels in high intensity groups compared to low intensity groups over a longer time period. Assessed with: Evidence based anxiety scores follow up: range 3 months to 7 months | - 0.33 SMD lower (0.74 lower to 0.08 lower)* | 96 (3 RCTs) | ⨁⨁⨁◯MODERATE a | The risk of bias noted is due to the lack of blinding of participants to the intervention in most of the studies. Time with supervisor was matched in these trials |
aGRADE Working Group grades of evidence High quality: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect, Moderate quality: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different, Low quality: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect, Very low quality: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect
*The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI)
CI Confidence interval; SMD Standardised mean difference
Fig. 3Exercise vs waiting list control group
Results for Exercise vs Waiting List Control Group
| Mean (SD) | Total | Mean (SD) | Total | SMD (95% CI) | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27.92 (15.36) | 12 | 41 (25.68) | 12 | − 0.60 (− 1.42, 0.22) | Exercise lead to significant reductions in exercise sensitivity compared to the untreated group | |
| 61.41 (28.64) | 25 | 65.42 (21.37) | 29 | −0.16 (− 0.69, 0.38) | Exercise lead to non-significant reductions in anxiety compared to the untreated group. | |
| 59.3 (7.38) | 10 | 65.5 (7.62) | 5 | −0.79 (− 1.71, 0.13) | Exercise lead to non-significant reductions in anxiety compared to the untreated group, | |
| 61.10 (10.01) | 10 | 65.5 (7.62) | 5 | −0.44(−1.53,0.65) | Resistance exercise lead to non-significant reductions in anxiety compared to the untreated group, | |
| 10.19 (6.54) | 16 | 18.26 (10.24) | 19 | −0.92(−1.62,-0.22) | Exercise and exercise + CBT both lead to statistically significant reductions in both the ASI and BAI | |
| Not Reported | 38 | Not Reported | 36 | −0.16 (− 0.77, 0.45) | CBT and exercise lead to a greater, non-significant improvement in DASS-21 scores compared to CBT and education. | |
| 44.05 (18.02) | 26 | 47.23 (9.29) | 25 | −0.22(− 0.77,0.33) | There was a small and non-significant improvement in anxiety and depression in the exercise group. | |
| Not Reported | 20 | Not Reported | 17 | Not Reported | Exercise and relaxation both lead to reductions in anxiety, not statistically significant. F value = 3.7 | |
| 11.5 | 16 | 22.8 | 15 | Not Reported | Exericise lead to significant improvement in symptoms but not as effective as Clomipramine F value = 13.4 | |
| 16.76 | 17 | 15.02 | 19 | Not Reported | There was a small non-significant improvement in the exercise group. | |
| Not Reported | Not Reported | Not Reported | Not Reported | Not Reported | There was greater but non-significant improvement in anxiety sensitivity for those in Exercise compared to Waiting List control F value = 26.7 |
Fig. 4High Intensity vs Low Intensity Exercise
Results for high intensity exercise vs low intensity exercise
| Mean (SD) | Total | Mean (SD) | Total | Std Mean Difference | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25.03 (9.71) | 29 | 28.56 (6.01) | 25 | −0.42(−0.96,0.12) | High intensity exercise led to more rapid reductions in anxiety sensitivity than low intensity exercise | |
| 41.2 (11.3) | 17 | 46.2 (12.0) | 23 | −0.42(−1.05,0.22) | Both jogging and walking led to a reduction in anxiety. Jogging led to a greater reduction than walking but this was not statistically significant. | |
| 42.3 (11.5) | 17 | 46.5 (9.1) | 16 | −0.39 [−1.08, 0.30] | The moderate exercise led to greater reductions in anxiety than the low intensity attention placebo group. | |
| 11.9 (7.1) | 24 | 14.3 (9.4) | 23 | −0.29 [− 0.86, 0.29] | Higher Intensity Exercise and Low Intensity exercise both led to a reduction in anxiety scores. There was further improvement of anxiety over time with a medium-sized effect in the endurance training group, but not in the control group. | |
| 36 | 43 | At the end of the study both groups had achieved significant reductions in scores compared with admission values The differences between groups were small and not statistically significant |
Results of long term follow up scores
| Length of follow up | High Intensity exercise Mean (SD) | Low Intensity exercise Mean (SD) | St Mean difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sexton, 1989 [ | 6 months | 43 (10.1) | 42 (16.8) | 0.07 (−0.55,0.70) |
| Steptoe, 1989 [ | 3 months | 39.9 (10.5) | 46.6 (10.8) | −0.60 (−1.56,0.36) |
| Gaudlitz, 2015 [ | 7 months | 8.5 (7.3) | 14.2 (9.8) | −0.66 (−1.31,0.00) |
| −0.30 (− 0.72,0.12) |
Fig. 5Results from Studies of patients with Raised Anxiety Levels and Studies of Patients with Anxiety Disorders