Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02136953

Physical Exercise in OCD: Treatment Efficacy, Additive Benefits to CBT, and Cognitive Correlates of Change

An Examination of Structured Physical Exercise in OCD: Treatment Efficacy, Additive Benefits to CBT, and Cognitive Correlates of Change

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
125 (actual)
Sponsor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a severe and debilitating anxiety disorder afflicting 2% of the population. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is considered first line psychological treatment for OCD, but there are a large number of treatment non-responders, and the majority of responders have residual symptoms. Aerobic exercise has shown potential benefit for general mood and anxiety disorders, but has not been widely tested in OCD. This study will examine the additive benefits of a standard 12-week aerobic exercise program to a standard 12-week CBT protocol in the treatment of OCD. The study will test if Exercise+CBT results in significantly better clinical outcomes compared to either treatment alone or no treatment at all. Treatment outcomes will be assessed in relation to symptom and cognitive measures of clinical improvement.

Detailed description

This study aims to determine if a standard, evidence-based 12-week aerobic exercise program results in significant reduction of obsessive-compulsive symptom severity and associated cognitive dysfunction as a stand-alone intervention and when combined with the first-line psychological treatment, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). There are 3 broad aims to this study: 1) to compare the relative efficacy of Exercise, CBT, and their combination (CBT+Ex) versus a non-treatment waitlist control (WL), 2) to examine the extent to which neuropsychological features of OCD improve following treatments, and 3) to determine the extent to which the BDNF gene and protein are a) associated with learning and cognitive factors, and b) moderate symptom and cognitive change across treatments. The study design allows for a novel, well-powered and potentially landmark study on the impact of exercise on obsessive-compulsive symptom severity and cognitive functioning in OCD, both as a stand-alone treatment and when augmenting CBT. If this study can demonstrate that a short aerobic exercise program of 12 weeks duration can confer significant clinical gains for those suffering with OCD, then it could easily be translated into highly accessible, routine clinical care. Further, demonstration of improvement in OCD-associated cognitive dysfunction, given the refractory nature of the illness, would provide another avenue into the long-term enhancement of outcomes for this chronically affected population.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALExercise12 weeks of structured aerobic exercise, 3 times a week, following a two-stage graduated regimen: 1) Initial stage (weeks 1-4): 40-60% intensity, 15-30 min duration (+ 5 min warm-up/cool-down), and 2) Improvement stage (weeks 5-12): 60-80% intensity, 30-45 min duration. Adherence measures include self-reported exercise session logs and weekly phone checks by research assistants.
BEHAVIORALCognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)CBT will be delivered in group format, 2 hours per week, for 12 consecutive weeks with 8-10 participants per group and will be conducted according to a session-by-session treatment manual that incorporates Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) in the early phases of treatment and then increases emphasis on cognitive approaches for obsessions and compulsions outlined in step-by-step strategies.

Timeline

Start date
2014-05-01
Primary completion
2017-10-01
Completion
2019-08-30
First posted
2014-05-13
Last updated
2019-10-04

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02136953. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.