Older adults with clinically relevant depressive symptoms have equal mobility benefit from a chronic physical activity intervention

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.mhpa.2023.100549
Emily J. Smail , Christopher N. Kaufmann , Stephen Anton , Todd M. Manini
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Abstract

Approximately 18% of older adults experience mild-to-severe depressive symptoms in the U.S., which in turn can negatively affect their physical and cognitive health. It is widely acknowledged that physical activity has a positive impact on mood and depression and is highly recommended for symptom management across all ages. Little is known, however, about whether elevated depressive symptoms interfere with the potential benefits of chronic exercise on physical outcomes such as mobility improvements in older adults. In this secondary data analysis of the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders (LIFE) study, we analyzed data from 1545 older adults (mean age = 78.8, 66.7% female) randomized to either a physical activity or health education intervention with an average of 2.2 years of follow-up. We evaluated whether the presence of clinically relevant depressive symptoms (defined as a rescaled score of ≥16 on the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression [CES-D]-11 scale) moderated the effect of a chronic physical activity intervention on incident major mobility disability (MMD), objectively measured as the ability to walk 400 m and assessed every 6 months. There were significant main effects of both the physical activity intervention (p = 0.018) and clinically relevant depression (p < 0.001) on incident MMD, but we found no evidence of moderation by depression status (interaction p-value = 0.989). Our findings suggest older adults with clinically relevant depressive symptoms derive similar benefits from participating in a comprehensive physical activity intervention in terms of reduced risk of mobility disability. These results support the inclusion of older adults with depressive symptoms in behavior-based clinical trials.

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患有临床相关抑郁症状的老年人从慢性体育活动干预中获得同等的行动能力
在美国,大约18%的老年人会出现轻度至重度抑郁症状,这反过来会对他们的身体和认知健康产生负面影响。人们普遍认为,体育活动对情绪和抑郁有积极影响,强烈建议所有年龄段的人进行症状管理。然而,关于抑郁症状的升高是否会干扰慢性运动对身体结果的潜在益处,如老年人行动能力的改善,目前知之甚少。在这项对老年人生活方式干预和独立性(LIFE)研究的二次数据分析中,我们分析了1545名老年人(平均年龄=78.8%,女性66.7%)的数据,这些老年人随机接受体育活动或健康教育干预,平均随访2.2年。我们评估了临床相关抑郁症状的存在(定义为流行病学研究中心抑郁量表[CES-D]-11的重新评分≥16)是否调节了慢性体育活动干预对突发严重行动障碍(MMD)的影响,客观测量为行走400米的能力,并每6个月进行一次评估。体力活动干预(p=0.018)和临床相关的抑郁症(p<0.001)对MMD事件都有显著的主要影响,但我们没有发现抑郁症状态的调节作用(交互作用p值=0.989)。我们的研究结果表明,有临床相关抑郁症状的老年人从参与全面的体育活动干预中获得了类似的好处,可以降低行动障碍的风险。这些结果支持将有抑郁症状的老年人纳入基于行为的临床试验。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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