Adherence and dropout in exercise‐based interventions in childhood obesity: A systematic review of randomized trials

Author:

Guijo Jaddy Antunes1ORCID,do Prado Wagner Luiz2ORCID,de Araújo Rodrigo Cappato3,dos Santos Ellem Eduarda Pinheiro1,Malik Neal4,Lofrano‐Prado Mara C.2ORCID,Botero Joao Paulo5

Affiliation:

1. Post‐Graduate Program in Human Movement Sciences and Rehabilitation Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP) Campus Baixada Santista Santos Brazil

2. Department of Kinesiology California State University San Bernardino San Bernardino California USA

3. Department of Physical Therapy University of Pernambuco Petrolina Brazil

4. Department of Health Science and Human Ecology California State University San Bernardino San Bernardino California USA

5. Department of Human Movement Sciences and Rehabilitation Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP) Campus Baixada Santista Santos Brazil

Abstract

AbstractOur objective was to systematically examine the characteristics of exercise interventions on adherence and dropout in children and adolescents with obesity. PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, Lilacs, Scielo, and The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and reference lists of relevant articles were searched. We included randomized controlled trials with exercise interventions for pediatric patients with obesity presenting data on dropout and/or adherence. Two reviewers screened the records independently for eligibility with disagreements being resolved by a third reviewer. Twenty‐seven studies with 1268 participants were included. Because of high heterogeneity and poor reporting of adherence, it was not possible to perform a meta‐analysis. Dropout prevalence was calculated, and subgroup analyses comparing different types of exercise and a meta‐regression with potential moderators were performed. We found a dropout rate of 13%. Subgroup analyses did not identify significant differences. The duration of the exercise presented a moderating effect on dropout, suggesting that longer exercise sessions may lead to higher dropout in children and adolescents with obesity. Because of the poor adherence data, it is not clear which exercise characteristics may moderate adherence. To improve the quality of childhood obesity care, it is mandatory that future studies present adherence data. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO CRD42021290700.

Publisher

Wiley

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