TY - JOUR
T1 - IMPROVEMENTS IN PSYCHOSOCIAL FUNCTIONING AND HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE FOLLOWING EXERCISE AUGMENTATION IN PATIENTS WITH TREATMENT RESPONSE BUT NONREMITTED MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER
T2 - RESULTS FROM THE TREAD STUDY
AU - Greer, Tracy L.
AU - Trombello, Joseph M.
AU - Rethorst, Chad D.
AU - Carmody, Thomas J.
AU - Jha, Manish K.
AU - Liao, Allen
AU - Grannemann, Bruce D.
AU - Chambliss, Heather O.
AU - Church, Timothy S.
AU - Trivedi, Madhukar H.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Mariam Andersen, M.A., Tyson Bain, M.S., Elizabeth Darr, B.A., Erica Dickson, M.S., Andrea Dunn, Ph.D., Natalie Dufresne, R.N., Carrie Finley, M.S., Ariell Flood, M.A., Daniel I. Galper, Ph.D., Shailesh Jain, M.D., Shaily Jain, M.D., Alex Jordan, M.S., Dino Jurca, Ph.D., Heather Kitzman-Ulrich, Ph.D., Beverly Kleiber, Ph.D., Benji Kurian, M.D., Jennifer Kupper, M.S., Lucille Marcoux, R.N., Britney McGill, B.A., David W. Morris, Ph.D., Anne Marie Preston, M.A., A. John Rush, M.D., Jennifer Schroeder, B.A., Robin Selman, B.A., Erin Sinclair, B.A., Julie Smith, B.A., Prabha Sunderajan, M.D., Mei Sui, M.D., MPH, Kim Warren, B.A., Paul Watson, Bradley Witte, B.S., and Beth Wright, M.S., for assisting with this project. We thank Daniel I. Galper, now deceased, for his commitment and leadership on the TREAD project. We also recognize, with great appreciation, all of the study participants who contributed to this project. We thank Carol A. Tamminga, M.D., Lou and Ellen McGinley Distinguished Chair and the McKenzie Chair in Psychiatry and Chair, Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and Savitha Kalidas, Ph.D., for administrative support. This work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (1-R01-MH067692; PI: Madhukar H. Trivedi) and in part by a National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD) Independent Investigator Award (MHT) and Young Investigator Award (TLG) and a fellowship award (JMT) under 5 T32 MH067543 (PI: Madhukar H. Trivedi). Chad D. Rethorst is supported by the National Institute of Mental Health under award number K01MH097847.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
PY - 2016/9/1
Y1 - 2016/9/1
N2 - Background: Functional impairments often remain despite symptomatic improvement with antidepressant treatment, supporting the need for novel treatment approaches. The present study examined the extent to which exercise augmentation improved several domains of psychosocial functioning and quality of life (QoL) among depressed participants. Methods: Data were collected from 122 partial responders to antidepressant medication. Participants were randomized to either high- (16 kcal/kg of weight/week [KKW]) or low-dose (4-KKW) exercise. Participants completed a combination of supervised and home-based exercise for 12 weeks. The Short-Form Health Survey, Work and Social Adjustment Scale, Social Adjustment Scale, Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire, and Satisfaction with Life Scale were collected at 6 and 12 weeks. Participants with data for at least one of the two follow-up time points (n = 106) were analyzed using a linear mixed model to assess change from baseline within groups and the difference between groups for each psychosocial outcome measure. All analyses controlled for covariates, including baseline depressive symptomatology. Results: Participants experienced significant improvements in functioning across tested domains, and generally fell within a healthy range of functioning on all measures at Weeks 6 and 12. Although no differences were found between exercise groups, improvements were observed across a variety of psychosocial and QoL domains, even in the low-dose exercise group. Conclusions: These findings support exercise augmentation of antidepressant treatment as a viable intervention for treatment-resistant depression to improve function in addition to symptoms.
AB - Background: Functional impairments often remain despite symptomatic improvement with antidepressant treatment, supporting the need for novel treatment approaches. The present study examined the extent to which exercise augmentation improved several domains of psychosocial functioning and quality of life (QoL) among depressed participants. Methods: Data were collected from 122 partial responders to antidepressant medication. Participants were randomized to either high- (16 kcal/kg of weight/week [KKW]) or low-dose (4-KKW) exercise. Participants completed a combination of supervised and home-based exercise for 12 weeks. The Short-Form Health Survey, Work and Social Adjustment Scale, Social Adjustment Scale, Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire, and Satisfaction with Life Scale were collected at 6 and 12 weeks. Participants with data for at least one of the two follow-up time points (n = 106) were analyzed using a linear mixed model to assess change from baseline within groups and the difference between groups for each psychosocial outcome measure. All analyses controlled for covariates, including baseline depressive symptomatology. Results: Participants experienced significant improvements in functioning across tested domains, and generally fell within a healthy range of functioning on all measures at Weeks 6 and 12. Although no differences were found between exercise groups, improvements were observed across a variety of psychosocial and QoL domains, even in the low-dose exercise group. Conclusions: These findings support exercise augmentation of antidepressant treatment as a viable intervention for treatment-resistant depression to improve function in addition to symptoms.
KW - adjunct treatments
KW - behavioral interventions
KW - depression
KW - functional improvement
KW - physical activity
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U2 - 10.1002/da.22521
DO - 10.1002/da.22521
M3 - Article
C2 - 27164293
AN - SCOPUS:84985911885
SN - 1091-4269
VL - 33
SP - 870
EP - 881
JO - Depression and anxiety
JF - Depression and anxiety
IS - 9
ER -