Schuch F B, Dunn A L, Kanitz A C, Delevatti R S, Fleck M P
Programa de Pós-graduação em ciências médicas: Psiquiatria, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil; Departamento de Psiquiatria, Hospital de Clinicas de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, Brazil; Grupo de Pesquisa em Atividades Aquáticas e Terrestres, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Klein Buendel Inc., Denver, United States.
J Affect Disord. 2016 May;195:40-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2016.01.014. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
Exercise have antidepressant effects in people with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). However, about to half of patients do not respond to exercise. The identification of factors that moderates the antidepressant effects of exercise in people with MDD may help researchers and health professionals to identify sub-groups of patients that would benefit more from exercise.
A systematic review was carried out using Medline(PubMed), EMBASE and psycINFO up to April 2015. Individual and composite moderators were summarized and the strength of the evidence was assessed.
Eleven studies were included for review resulting in the identification of potential individual (two biological, three clinical, two psychological and two social individual) and two potential composite moderators (the interaction between BDNF and Body Mass Index (BMI) and between family history of mental illness and gender). Only the two biological features and the BDNF x BMI interaction provided confirmatory evidence.
Due the different statistical approaches used in the studies, it was not possible to perform meta-analyses. The small number of studies and the exploratory nature of the evidence limits a wider generalization of the findings.
Potential clinical, psychological, social or biological moderators were identified. However, the small number of studies and the limited strength of the evidence requires further studies before drawn definitive results. Further trials should consider the inclusion of moderators analysis using an a-priori, theoretical/evidence based hypothesis in order to provide high quality evidence for the use of personalized medicine in exercise for depression.
运动对重度抑郁症(MDD)患者具有抗抑郁作用。然而,约有一半的患者对运动无反应。识别影响MDD患者运动抗抑郁效果的调节因素,可能有助于研究人员和健康专业人员确定能从运动中更多获益的患者亚组。
截至2015年4月,使用Medline(PubMed)、EMBASE和psycINFO进行了一项系统综述。总结了个体和综合调节因素,并评估了证据的强度。
纳入11项研究进行综述,确定了潜在的个体调节因素(两个生物学因素、三个临床因素、两个心理因素和两个社会个体因素)以及两个潜在的综合调节因素(脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)与体重指数(BMI)之间的相互作用,以及精神疾病家族史与性别之间的相互作用)。只有两个生物学特征和BDNF与BMI的相互作用提供了确凿证据。
由于研究中使用的统计方法不同,无法进行荟萃分析。研究数量少以及证据的探索性质限制了研究结果的更广泛推广。
确定了潜在的临床、心理、社会或生物学调节因素。然而,研究数量少且证据力度有限,在得出明确结果之前需要进一步研究。进一步的试验应考虑纳入基于先验理论/证据假设的调节因素分析,以便为运动治疗抑郁症的个性化医疗应用提供高质量证据。