Exercise and Pharmacotherapy in the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder
Duke Medical Center · Duke University
Abstract
To assess whether patients receiving aerobic exercise training performed either at home or in a supervised group setting achieve reductions in depression comparable to standard antidepressant medication (sertraline) and greater reductions in depression compared to placebo controls.
Between October 2000 and November 2005, we performed a prospective, randomized controlled trial (SMILE study) with allocation concealment and blinded outcome assessment in a tertiary care teaching hospital. A total of 202 adults (153 women; 49 men) diagnosed with major depression were assigned randomly to one of four conditions: supervised exercise in a group setting; home-based exercise; antidepressant medication (sertraline, 50-200 mg daily); or placebo pill for 16 weeks. Patients underwent the structured clinical interview for depression and completed the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
12Topics & keywords
- Sertraline
- Placebo
- Depression (economics)
- Major depressive disorder
- Medicine
- Physical therapy
- Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression
- Antidepressant
- Good health and well-being