Exercise for overweight or obesity.

The Cochrane database of systematic reviews. 2006;(4):CD003817

Plain language summary

Overweight and obesity are important public health problems and are associated with many serious health conditions. The risk of developing overweight and obesity depends on lifestyle factors such as food intake and physical activity. Treatment for these conditions therefore commonly involves diet and exercise. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the efficacy of exercise as a means of achieving weight loss in overweight or obese people. While the primary measure was weight loss, this review also assessed the effectiveness of exercise on cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors. The study included nearly 3,500 participants and participants were followed for at least 3 months. The findings of this review showed that exercise has a positive effect on body weight, as well as improvements on a range of CVD risk factors even when weight loss does not occur. When combined with dietary interventions, the amount of weight loss achieved with exercise increased significantly. Based on this review, the authors’ suggest that exercise is an effective weight loss intervention especially when combined with dietary interventions.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Clinical trials have shown that exercise in adults with overweight or obesity can reduce bodyweight. There has been no quantitative systematic review of this in The Cochrane Library. OBJECTIVES To assess exercise as a means of achieving weight loss in people with overweight or obesity, using randomised controlled clinical trials. SEARCH STRATEGY Studies were obtained from computerised searches of multiple electronic bibliographic databases. The last search was conducted in January 2006. SELECTION CRITERIA Studies were included if they were randomised controlled trials that examined body weight change using one or more physical activity intervention in adults with overweight or obesity at baseline and loss to follow-up of participants of less than 15%. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS Two authors independently assessed trial quality and extracted data. MAIN RESULTS The 43 studies included 3476 participants. Although significant heterogeneity in some of the main effects' analyses limited ability to pool effect sizes across some studies, a number of pooled effect sizes were calculated. When compared with no treatment, exercise resulted in small weight losses across studies. Exercise combined with diet resulted in a greater weight reduction than diet alone (WMD -1.1 kg; 95% confidence interval (CI) -1.5 to -0.6). Increasing exercise intensity increased the magnitude of weight loss (WMD -1.5 kg; 95% CI -2.3 to -0.7). There were significant differences in other outcome measures such as serum lipids, blood pressure and fasting plasma glucose. Exercise as a sole weight loss intervention resulted in significant reductions in diastolic blood pressure (WMD -2 mmHg; 95% CI -4 to -1), triglycerides (WMD -0.2 mmol/L; 95% CI -0.3 to -0.1) and fasting glucose (WMD -0.2 mmol/L; 95% CI -0.3 to -0.1). Higher intensity exercise resulted in greater reduction in fasting serum glucose than lower intensity exercise (WMD -0.3 mmol/L; 95% CI -0.5 to -0.2). No data were identified on adverse events, quality of life, morbidity, costs or on mortality. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS The results of this review support the use of exercise as a weight loss intervention, particularly when combined with dietary change. Exercise is associated with improved cardiovascular disease risk factors even if no weight is lost.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Hormonal
Patient Centred Factors : Mediators/Sedentary lifestyle
Environmental Inputs : Physical exercise
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Exercise and movement

Methodological quality

Allocation concealment : Not applicable

Metadata

Nutrition Evidence keywords : Physical activity ; Cardiovascular disease ; CVD