# A 24-week multi-component exercise program improves cognition and body composition in older adults with mild cognitive impairment: a randomized controlled trial

**Authors:** Danming Xu, Xiaochu Wu, Junming Dai, Qing Li, Zhi Wang, Yimin Huang, Yu Zhang, Junjie Cao, Bingxue Li, Yirong Dong, Yanhao Tu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2025.1711554 · Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

A 24-week exercise program improved body composition but not cognitive scores in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that multicomponent exercise improves body composition in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.

## Key findings

- The exercise group showed significant increases in skeletal muscle mass and decreases in fat mass.
- No significant improvements in cognitive screening scores like MMSE or MoCA were observed.
- The program was safe and feasible in a community setting for older adults with MCI.

## Abstract

This study investigated whether a 24-week, community-based multicomponent exercise intervention (MCEI) can improve body composition and cognitive function in older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

In this single-center, parallel-group randomized controlled trial (RCT), 64 community-dwelling adults aged 65–75 years with MCI characterized by Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) ≥ 24, Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) ≤ 26, Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) = 0.5, low skeletal muscle mass were randomly allocated (1:1) to a MCEI (aerobic, resistance and balance training, 3 × 60 min/week) or to a usual-activity control (UAC) group receiving weekly health education. Primary outcomes were skeletal muscle mass (SMM), fat-mass index (FMI), MMSE and MoCA; secondary outcomes included skeletal muscle index (SMI), basal metabolic rate (BMR), Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) and Animal Fluency Test (AFT). Assessments were conducted at baseline and within 1 week post-intervention by trained, blinded assessors. Intervention effects were examined with a 2 (group) × 2 (time) repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA), reporting partial eta-squared (η2) as the effect-size estimate.

A significant Group × Time interaction was observed for SMM (p < 0.001, η2 = 0.195) and FMI (p = 0.003, η2 = 0.153), indicating differential changes between groups; with significant improvements observed only in the MCEI group. SMI showed no significant interaction effect (p = 0.270, η2 = 0.021), whereas no significant interactions were found for MMSE, MoCA, or AFT (p ≥ 0.18, η2 ≤ 0.03).

A 24-week community-based multicomponent exercise program safely increased skeletal muscle mass and reduced fat mass in older adults with MCI, but did not produce measurable improvements on screening-level cognitive measures. Future studies with longer duration, larger samples, and inclusion of cognitive challenges are warranted to clarify exercise–cognition interactions and establish dose–response relationships for both body composition and domain-specific cognition.

Identifier ChiCTR2000035012.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Dementia (MESH:D003704), low skeletal muscle mass (MESH:C536030), MCI (MESH:D060825), cognitive impairment (MESH:D003072)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832871/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12832871