Substance Abuse: Research and Treatment (May 2020)

Aerobic Exercise Interventions for Patients in Opioid Maintenance Treatment: A Systematic Review

  • Danielle E Jake-Schoffman,
  • Meredith S Berry,
  • Marissa L Donahue,
  • Demetra D Christou,
  • Jesse Dallery,
  • Jillian M Rung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1178221820918885
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

Read online

Background: Opioid maintenance treatment (OMT) is the standard for treatment of opioid use disorder, but some individuals on OMT experience disrupted sleep, heightened sensitivity to pain, and continued relapse to non-medical opioid use. An adjunctive treatment that has potential to address these shortcomings of OMT is aerobic exercise. Objective: The aim of the present review was to identify and evaluate components of aerobic exercise interventions targeting OMT patients. Methods: For this PROSPERO-registered review (ID CRD42020139626), studies were identified via electronic bibliographic databases, funded research ( NIH RePORTER ) and clinical trials databases ( ClinicalTrials.gov ), and reference sections of relevant manuscripts. Studies that evaluated the effects of an aerobic exercise intervention using a comparison condition or pretest-posttest design in adult OMT patients were included. Results: Of 2971 unique records, three primary studies and one supplemental manuscript comprised the final sample. All studies were randomized trials involving supervised exercise interventions enrolling small samples of middle-aged OMT patients. Exercise interventions included a variety of aerobic and non-aerobic activities (e.g. flexibility exercises), and none controlled the dose of aerobic exercise. Few studies used objective measures of physical activity or cardiorespiratory fitness and there were no significant effects of adjunctive exercise on substance use outcomes, but tests of the latter were likely underpowered. Conclusions: Though early in the accumulation of evidence, interventions targeting aerobic exercise for OMT patients appear feasible, acceptable to patients, and beneficial. Longer-term studies that employ larger samples, include assessments of behavioral and biological mechanisms of change, more rigorous measurement of physical activity, and controlled doses of aerobic activity are warranted.