Cognitive impairment is a major determinant of disability in schizophrenia. Aerobic exercise improves global cognition in schizophrenia, particularly working memory and attention/vigilance. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) targeting frontal regions has shown promise for cognitive deficits, including working memory improvements in some studies. This randomized 2×2 factorial trial will test the independent and combined effects of supervised aerobic exercise and prefrontal tDCS on cognition in treatment resistant schizophrenia, measured using the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB).
This is an individually randomized, sham controlled (tDCS), assessor blinded 2×2 factorial clinical trial comparing: (1) aerobic exercise vs stretching/education control and (2) active vs sham prefrontal tDCS. The factorial design enables estimation of the main effects of exercise and tDCS and their interaction (synergy/antagonism) in one trial. Participants with treatment resistant schizophrenia (TRS) will complete 18 sessions over 6 weeks (3 sessions/week). Each session includes tDCS (active or sham) during the physical activity condition (aerobic exercise or stretching/education) to standardize timing and contact. Evidence suggests exercise associated cognitive gains relate to intervention dose and supervision. Noninvasive brain stimulation outcomes may vary with stimulation dose parameters, supporting a standardized protocol. Cognition will be assessed using the MCCB, which evaluates seven cognitive domains relevant to schizophrenia and yields an Overall Composite T score. The primary endpoint is Week 6 (end of intervention), with durability assessed at 3 months post intervention (Week 18).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
160
* Dose: 18 sessions over 6 weeks (3/week) * Session duration: 45-60 minutes including warm up/cool down * Intensity: Moderate (target 60-75% HRR or RPE 12-15) * Mode: Aerobic dance * Delivery: Supervised by qualified staff; HR/RPE logged each session * Rationale: Exercise improves global cognition and domains such as working memory and attention/vigilance in schizophrenia; supervision/dose relate to effect size.
* Dose: 18 sessions over 6 weeks (3/week) * Session duration: 45-60 minutes * Intensity: Low (HR \<40% HRR; RPE \<10) * Components: Stretching + standardized health education modules * Purpose: Attention matched control to reduce contact/expectancy bias in non pharmacological trials.
* Montage: Anode F3 (left DLPFC), cathode Fp2 (right supraorbital) * Intensity: 2.0 mA * Duration: 20 minutes (30 s ramp up/down) * Schedule: 18 sessions (one per visit) * Rationale: Frontal tDCS protocols have shown promise for cognitive deficits and working memory in schizophrenia
• Same montage; ramp up then off (device standard sham) to mimic cutaneous sensations.
The University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
MCCB Overall Composite T score change from baseline (Week 0) to end of intervention (Week 6).
MCCB provides standardized domain and composite T scores for schizophrenia cognition research.
Time frame: 6 weeks
MCCB Working Memory Domain change (LNS + WMS III Spatial Span domain T score) baseline to Week 6.
Working memory is responsive to exercise in schizophrenia meta-analysis and frequently targeted in frontal tDCS studies.
Time frame: 6 weeks
MCCB Attention/Vigilance Domain change (CPT IP domain T score) baseline to Week 6.
Attention/vigilance improves with exercise in schizophrenia meta analysis; attention demanding performance may improve in some tDCS protocols.
Time frame: 6 weeks
Changes of negative symptoms measured with SANS from baseline to week 6
Studies have shown effectiveness of exercise and tDCS on improvement of negative symptoms in patients with schizophrenia
Time frame: 6 weeks
Durability of changes of negative symptoms relative to baseline and week 6
Evaluates the persistence of the improvement of negative symptoms
Time frame: 18 weeks
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