| Literature DB >> 34305729 |
David T Lardier1,2, Kathryn E Coakley1, Kelley R Holladay3,4, Fabiano T Amorim5, Micah N Zuhl6.
Abstract
Objective: This meta-analysis and systematic review examined the effects of exercise interventions on alcohol consumption and binge drinking in individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Data sources: PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, SPORTDiscus, and ERIC databases. Study Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria: Peer-reviewed randomized controlled trials published in English between 1970 and 2021. All studies compared exercise (Ex) and treatment as usual (TAU) to TAU in adults with an alcohol-related diagnosis. All forms of exercise interventions were included (e.g., aerobic exercise, yoga, resistance exercise, etc.). Data Extraction: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocols standard and the Meta-Analyses and Systematic Reviews of Observational Studies guidelines were followed. Risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool as described by the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews and Interventions.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol dependence; alcohol use disorder; binge drinking; exercise; physical activity; randomized controlled trials
Year: 2021 PMID: 34305729 PMCID: PMC8292965 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.675285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of included studies and results.
| Jensen et al. ( | Physical exercise in the treatment of alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients affects their drinking habits: A randomized controlled trial | AUD or alcohol abuse or dependence (DSM criteria) | 105 | 71.4 | Women ( | Group or individual walking/running for two 60-min sessions per week over 24 weeks. | Number of standard drinks (30 days) | Significant reduction in standard drinks (30 days) in all groups: 221 ± 219 at baseline to 43 ± 87 6-months post-intervention ( | Including physical exercise in the treatment of alcohol disorder patients will affect drinking habits. |
| Weinstock et al. ( | Randomized Clinical Trial of Exercise for Non-treatment seeking adults with alcohol use disorder | AUD | 66 | 39.4 | MO ( | Weekly contingency management (CM) exercise contracting sessions and motivational interviewing for 16 weeks; 4-month YMCA membership. | Number of standard drinks (7 days) Number of binge drinking episodes (7 days) | Significant reduction in weekly total standard drinks and binge episodes from baseline to mid-treatment and post-treatment in both groups. | All participants, regardless of group assignment, reduced their drinking by about 50% at mid-treatment and maintained reductions at post-treatment including reduction of binge drinking episodes from an average of 2–3 to 1 per week. |
| Roessler et al. ( | Exercise as adjunctive treatment for alcohol use disorder: A randomized controlled trial | Harmful use of or dependence on alcohol (ICD-10) | 175 | 68.6 | 45 ± 11.3; range 21-70 | Group or individual walking/running for two 60-min sessions per week over 24 weeks. | Number of standard drinks (30 days) | Moderate physical activity level had a protective effect on drinking behavior compared to low PA levels. No significant differences between treatment groups. | This study supports existing evidence that physical activity may be effective as adjunctive treatment for AUD. |
| Brown et al. ( | A preliminary, randomized trial of aerobic exercise for alcohol dependence | Alcohol dependence (DSM-IV) | 49 | 55 | 44.37 ± 10.75 | 12 weekly supervised moderate intensity group aerobic exercise sessions. | Number of standard drinks/day (90 days) Percent heavy drinking days (90 days) | Significant decrease in drinking days and heavy drinking days in exercise group vs control group during treatment; not maintained at 12-week follow-up. | Group aerobic exercise intervention reduced alcohol use compared to brief advice to exercise. Amount of moderate-intensity exercise did not fully account for decreases. |
| Hallgren et al. ( | Yoga as an adjunct treatment for alcohol dependence: a pilot study | Alcohol dependence (DSM-IV) | 18 | Not reported | Not reported | Weekly yoga session (1.5 h) for 10 weeks. | Number of standard drinks (7 days) | Significant decrease in weekly alcohol consumption in both groups but not statistically different between groups. | Yoga intervention resulted in a larger (but not significantly so) reduction in weekly drinks compared to treatment as usual. |
| Weinstock et al. ( | Exercise as an intervention for sedentary hazardous drinking college students: A pilot study | Hazardous drinking (AUDIT | 31 | 35.5 | MET ( | One 50-min Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET) session focused on exercise + 8 weeks of contingency management (CM) for adhering to specific exercise activities. | Number of standard drinks (7 days) Number of heavy drinking days (60 days) | No changes in total drinks per week or heavy drinking days in either group. No significant difference between groups. | No significant changes or differences in drinking behavior over time or by treatment condition over time. |
| Murphy et al. ( | Lifestyle modification with heavy alcohol drinkers: effects of aerobic exercise and meditation | Male college students identified as high volume drinkers (>1.5 drinks/days or 45 drinks/month) | 48 | 100 | Runners ( | Running group - 70 min supervised group running sessions 3 times/week for 8 weeks Meditation group—supervised group meditation session 3 times/week + 20 min of meditation twice a day, every day on own for 8 weeks | Mean weekly ethanol consumption | At weeks 3–10, mean ethanol consumption was lower in the running group vs. control group. Subjects in running group reduced consumption by 60% from baseline. | A regular program of aerobic running leads to a significant reduction in alcohol consumption for subjects who are heavy social drinkers (~14 fewer drinks per week). |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. PRISMA, preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses. This PRISMA diagram contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. (Adapted From: Moher et al., 2009).
Figure 2The forest plot about the effect of exercise on drinking volume.
Figure 3The forest plot about the effect of exercise on binge drinking.
Figure 4The forest plot about the effect of exercise on physical fitness.