Abstract

BackgroundExercise can efficiently reduce the symptoms of major depression disorder (MDD). This study aims to examine the efficacy and acceptability of supervised group exercise intervention among patients in an acute phase of mild to moderate MDD. MethodsWe enrolled patients in the psychiatric clinic of Beijing Anding Hospital affiliated to Capital Medical University in a prospective, single-arm objective performance criteria (OPC) trial. A total of 40 adults aged 18–50 who had a diagnosis of an episode of depression and the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD-17) score of 7–20 were recruited. Supervised exercise group intervention was applied on participants with a new episode of mild to moderate depression 3 times a week for 8 weeks without any other treatment. Every exercise session should meet the standard of moderate intensity, defined as approximately equal to 50 %–80 % of the maximal heart rate for 150 min every week. The primary end point was the clinical response at week 8, defined as a 50 % reduction in the baseline HRSD-17 score. Meanwhile, the secondary end points included the acceptability of the supervised group exercise intervention for both patients and investigators, remission rate (defined as an HRSD-17 score of 7 or less), the change of Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and the Quality of Life, Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire-Short Form (Q-LES-Q-SF). ResultsAmong the 46 screened patients, 40 were enrolled. Of them, 4 people dropped out, while 36 received all the planned sessions of the supervised group exercise therapy and completed the week-8 assessment. At week 8, the response rate was 89 % (95 % confidence interval [CI] 74 % to 97 %) and the remission rate was 83 % (95%CI 67 % to 94 %). The overall acceptance of the supervised group exercise based on the VAS score (range 0–10) was 9.19 ± 1.27 for patients and 9.67 ± 0.62 for investigators. The least-squares mean (±SE) change from baseline at week 8 was-9.99 in the PHQ-9 score and 25.15 in the Q-LES-Q-SF score. No serious adverse events were reported during this trial. The percentage of any adverse event was 5 %. ConclusionSupervised group exercise intervention is effective in patients with acute mild to moderate MDD and has good acceptance rate among both patients and investigators.

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