| Literature DB >> 23570655 |
Paul J Orrock1, Stephen P Myers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic Non Specific Low Back Pain (CNSLBP) is a common, complex and disabling condition that has been present for longer than three months and is not caused by a serious pathology. Osteopaths are health practitioners who commonly diagnose and treat CNSLBP patients using a complex set of interventions that includes manual therapy. The study aimed to complete a Systematic Review of clinical research into osteopathic intervention in CNSLBP using a rigorous assessment of study quality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23570655 PMCID: PMC3623881 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-14-129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Assessment for sources of risk of bias [13]
| 1 | Randomisation adequate? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 2 | Concealed treatment allocation? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 3 | Patient blinded? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 4 | Care provider blinded? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 5 | Outcome assessor blinded? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 6 | Drop out rate described? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 7 | Participants analysed within group? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 8 | Free of selective outcome reporting? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 9 | Groups similar at baseline? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 10 | Co-interventions avoided/similar? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 11 | Compliance acceptable? | Yes/No/Unsure |
| 12 | Timing of outcome similar? | Yes/No/Unsure |
Figure 1Flowchart of paper selection.
Characteristics and risk of bias assessment of included trials
| Participants | N=91, 21-69yo | N=239, 18-65yo |
| Randomised | Yes | Yes |
| Blinding | Patients | Patients and Assessors |
| Inclusion | NSLBP for 3 months | NSLBP for 3 months |
| Exclusion | Red flags, neurological signs, surgery, workers comp, pregnancy, recent manipulation | Red flags, radiculopathy, surgery, anti-coagulants |
| Intervention detail | Senior osteopathic students | One osteopath |
| Choice of soft tissue, MET, Art, HVT, SCS, cranio-sacral, myofascial technique | Choice of soft tissue, MET, Art, HVT, functional, exercise, education, psychosocial, nutritional advice | |
| Seven sessions over 5 months | Five sessions over 3 months | |
| Follow up at 1, 3 and 6 months | Follow up 6 weeks and 12 months | |
| Control | Sham or no treatment | Manipulative PT or group exercise |
| Outcome measures | SF-36, VAS, RM, ODI, satisfaction questionnaire | ODI, EuroQoL, Shuttle walk test, satisfaction questionnaire |
| Main results | SF-36: | (For osteopathy only) |
| 1 month OMT >control (p=0.03) | ODI - 5.0 (95% CI 1.6 – 8.4; SD 10.5; p<0.01): | |
| 3 months Sham > OMT/control (p=0.01) | EQ-5D 0.11 (CI 0.02 to 0.19; SD 0.24; p<0.05): | |
| 6 months Sham > OMT/control (p=0.03) | Group comparison not done | |
| VAS pain: | ||
| 1 month OMT/Sham >control (p=0.01/0.003) | ||
| 3 months OMT/Sham >control (p=0.001/0.001) | ||
| 6 months OMT/Sham >control (p=0.02/0.02) | ||
| RM no differences | ||
| OMT less co-treatments (p=0.03) | ||
| Risk of Bias score /12 Detail of point loss | 7 | 9 |
| Randomisation process not fully described | Patients not blinded | |
| Care provider not blinded | Care provider not blinded | |
| Drop out rate not fully described | Compliance not acceptable | |
| Co-interventions not avoided | ||
| Compliance not acceptable | ||
| Quality Issues | Confounders in sham techniques, co-treatments | Sample size reduced |
| Statistical analysis incomplete |