This preliminary study on essentially HIIT and cardio interval training was published by the prestigious journal Lancet. Note that this is a "preprint" study, in that it is not yet peer-reviewed, but they felt the findings were strong enough to publicize early. I agree. -D
LANCET PREPRINT [see below]
Efficacy of High-Intensity Progressive Aerobic Exercise on Brain Atrophy Measures in Multiple Sclerosis: A Randomized, Controlled, Cross-Over, Phase-2 Trial
37 Pages Posted: 15 Apr 2019
Martin Langeskov-Christensen
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Lars Grøndahl Hvid
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Mikkel Karl Emil Nygaard
Aarhus University - Department of Clinical Medicine
Steffen Ringgaard
Aarhus University - Aarhus University Hospital
Henrik Boye Jensen
Lillebaelt Hospital
Helle Hvilsted Nielsen
University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Molecular Medicine
Thor Petersen
Aarhus University - Aarhus University Hospital
Egon Stenager
University of Southern Denmark - Department of Regional Health Research
Simon Fristed Eskildsen
Aarhus University - Department of Clinical Medicine
Ulrik Dalgas
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Abstract
Background: Accelerated brain atrophy is a main determinant of the progressing disabilities clinically characterizing people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Preliminary data from animal studies and human phase 1 studies indicate a possible disease-modifying effect of physical exercise. We therefore assessed whether high-intensity progressive aerobic exercise (PAE) affects brain atrophy in MS.
Methods: We conducted a 24-week randomized, controlled, cross-over, phase 2 trial, including an exercise group (24 weeks of supervised PAE followed by self-guided physical activity) and a waitlist group (24 weeks of habitual lifestyle followed by supervised PAE). Participants were recruited at four Danish hospitals. MS patients aged 18-65 years with an Expanded Disability Status Scale score of 0-6 willing to travel to the trial and training facility were randomly assigned (1:1) by the sealed envelope principle, stratified by sex. The primary outcome was percentage brain volume change (PBVC) after 24 weeks, analyzed using an intention-to-treat linear mixed effects model.
Findings: A total of 86 participants were recruited from 28 April 2016 to 10 October 2017 (43 patients were assigned to each group). PBVC was -0·29% (SD 0·63) in the exercise group; -0·17% (0·99) in the placebo group (between-group change +0·12%, 95% CI -0·27-0·51; p=0·545). We observed higher grey matter parenchymal fraction (+1·13 percentage points, 0·00-2·26; p=0·05) and cardiorespiratory fitness (+3·5 mL O2/min/kg, 2·0-5·1; p<0·0001) and lower annualized relapse rate (p=0·0023) in the exercise group. No serious adverse events were observed.
Interpretation: These findings do not support a ‘whole brain’ neuroprotective effect of PAE (i.e. total brain atrophy) in people with MS. Oppositely, improved cardiorespiratory fitness was accompanied by a ‘regional brain’ neuroprotective effect (i.e. grey matter parenchymal fraction) and a relapse rate of zero. These findings justify recommending PAE as a possible adjunct disease-modifying treatment in MS and warrant further long-term, large-scale phase 3 investigations.
Trial Registration Number: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02661555.
LANCET PREPRINT [see below]
Efficacy of High-Intensity Progressive Aerobic Exercise on Brain Atrophy Measures in Multiple Sclerosis: A Randomized, Controlled, Cross-Over, Phase-2 Trial
37 Pages Posted: 15 Apr 2019
Martin Langeskov-Christensen
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Lars Grøndahl Hvid
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Mikkel Karl Emil Nygaard
Aarhus University - Department of Clinical Medicine
Steffen Ringgaard
Aarhus University - Aarhus University Hospital
Henrik Boye Jensen
Lillebaelt Hospital
Helle Hvilsted Nielsen
University of Southern Denmark - Institute of Molecular Medicine
Thor Petersen
Aarhus University - Aarhus University Hospital
Egon Stenager
University of Southern Denmark - Department of Regional Health Research
Simon Fristed Eskildsen
Aarhus University - Department of Clinical Medicine
Ulrik Dalgas
Aarhus University - Section for Sport Science
Abstract
Background: Accelerated brain atrophy is a main determinant of the progressing disabilities clinically characterizing people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Preliminary data from animal studies and human phase 1 studies indicate a possible disease-modifying effect of physical exercise. We therefore assessed whether high-intensity progressive aerobic exercise (PAE) affects brain atrophy in MS.
Methods: We conducted a 24-week randomized, controlled, cross-over, phase 2 trial, including an exercise group (24 weeks of supervised PAE followed by self-guided physical activity) and a waitlist group (24 weeks of habitual lifestyle followed by supervised PAE). Participants were recruited at four Danish hospitals. MS patients aged 18-65 years with an Expanded Disability Status Scale score of 0-6 willing to travel to the trial and training facility were randomly assigned (1:1) by the sealed envelope principle, stratified by sex. The primary outcome was percentage brain volume change (PBVC) after 24 weeks, analyzed using an intention-to-treat linear mixed effects model.
Findings: A total of 86 participants were recruited from 28 April 2016 to 10 October 2017 (43 patients were assigned to each group). PBVC was -0·29% (SD 0·63) in the exercise group; -0·17% (0·99) in the placebo group (between-group change +0·12%, 95% CI -0·27-0·51; p=0·545). We observed higher grey matter parenchymal fraction (+1·13 percentage points, 0·00-2·26; p=0·05) and cardiorespiratory fitness (+3·5 mL O2/min/kg, 2·0-5·1; p<0·0001) and lower annualized relapse rate (p=0·0023) in the exercise group. No serious adverse events were observed.
Interpretation: These findings do not support a ‘whole brain’ neuroprotective effect of PAE (i.e. total brain atrophy) in people with MS. Oppositely, improved cardiorespiratory fitness was accompanied by a ‘regional brain’ neuroprotective effect (i.e. grey matter parenchymal fraction) and a relapse rate of zero. These findings justify recommending PAE as a possible adjunct disease-modifying treatment in MS and warrant further long-term, large-scale phase 3 investigations.
Trial Registration Number: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02661555.
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