The purpose of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of a structured aerobic exercise intervention for adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) with and without medication and compare it to medication alone. Participants will be randomly assigned to medication only + education, aerobic exercise intervention only, and combined aerobic exercise and medication groups. Participants will be evaluated at baseline, following medication optimization (for medicated groups), following 8 weeks of intervention, after 3 months of follow-up, and after 6 months of follow-up. The investigators hypothesize that the combined group will have the best outcome at all evaluation points and that treatment gains will be maintained throughout the follow-up period if the assigned treatments are continued.
Background: Several interventional studies have shown improvement in core symptoms of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) with aerobic exercise as an add-on therapy for children with ADHD treated with stimulants. Studies in the general population have shown that aerobic exercise in adults may improve cognitive function in general and executive function in particular. Although non-medication treatment for ADHD has focused on cognitive training in addition to medication, some evidence indicate that intense aerobic exercise impacts brain structure, improves brain function, and has effects similar to stimulant medication. Objectives: To assess the effectiveness, regarding ADHD symptoms, of an eight week aerobic exercise intervention, medication, and the combination of both aerobic exercise and medication treatments for adults with ADHD. The secondary objectives are to determine the effectiveness of these treatments on social skills, as measured by functioning in work, social, and family situations; anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; self-esteem; and the effect of motivation for exercise on adherence to exercise treatment. Hypothesis: Investigators hypothesize that the combined group which receives aerobic exercise and medication intervention will have the greatest improvement in both primary and secondary outcome measures; that treatment gains will be maintained at follow-up only if treatments are continued. Methods: Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: 1. Aerobic exercise intervention only. Participants of this group will meet twice a week for 8 consecutive weeks. Each meeting will involve 1 hour of moderate-vigorous intensity aerobic exercise. 2. Medication treatment only. Participants of this group will receive optimal medication for them and will gradually be titrated up to their optimal dose. Once they are optimally titrated, they will attend 8 weekly sessions of an education class, which will focus on different topics of adult ADHD. These meetings will last 1 hour each week. Educational meetings are meant to control for group effects of the exercise group intervention. 3. Medication combined with aerobic-exercise intervention. Participants of this group will receive optimal medication for them and will gradually be titrated up to their optimal dose. When the participants of this group will be at their optimal medication dose, they will begin the aerobic exercise classes twice a week for 8 weeks. They will not receive the educational sessions. Randomization will be stratified by sex, age and the degree of physical activity per week. Power analyses indicate that 23 participants are needed per each treatment arm, accounting for a dropout rate of 20%. Therefore initial enrollments should be at minimum 69 patients for all three arms, at least 23 patients per arm. There will 2 groups in each arm of the study, accounting for 10-15 participants per group at any one time.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
70
Medication is titrated over a 4-week period with stepwise increments each week. Participants and their significant others will complete ADHD symptom scales at baseline and before each medication visit. Participants also complete a side effects scale at baseline and before each medication visit. The gradual increase will continue until there is no further improvement in symptoms and in the Clinical Global Improvement Scale or side effects are such that further increases are not indicated. Once the optimal dose is reached, the participant will remain on this dose for the remainder of the study. Additionally, once the optimal dose is reached participants will attend 8 weekly educational sessions about ADHD in adulthood.
Participants will attend a structured aerobic exercise class twice a week for 8 weeks. Each class will last 60 minutes.
Montreal Children's Hospital
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Self-reported ADHD symptoms (measured via Barkley's Current ADHD Symptoms Scale) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Depression symptoms (via the Beck Depression Inventory) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Anxiety Symptoms (measured via the Beck Anxiety Inventory) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Global functional impairment (measured via the Sheehan Disability Scale) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Self-esteem (measured via the Index of Self-Esteem) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Dyadic adjustment (for those married or cohabiting, measured via the Dyadic Adjustment Scale) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Motivation to exercise (measured via the Physical Activity and Leisure Motivation Scale) - Change from baseline
Time frame: At baseline; once optimally titrated (about 5 weeks to reach this dose for medication groups); after 8 weeks of intervention (aerobic exercise or educational sessions); 3 months after the end of intervention; 6 months after the end of intervention
Stimulant medication side effects (measured via the Canadian ADHD Resource Alliance (CADDRA) Patient ADHD Medication Form)
Time frame: Completed before each medication visit, every 1 - 2 weeks up to 6 weeks.
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