| Literature DB >> 23717154 |
Myung-Sunny Kim1, Hyun-Ja Lim, Hye Jeong Yang, Myeong Soo Lee, Byung-Cheul Shin, Edzard Ernst.
Abstract
The aim of this review was to assess the effectiveness of ginseng as a treatment option for managing menopause symptoms. We searched the literature using 11 databases from their inception to 26 September 2012 and included all randomized clinical trials (RCTs) that compared any type of ginseng to a placebo controls in postmenopausal women. The methodological quality of all studies was assessed using a Cochrane risk of bias tool. Four RCTs met our inclusion criteria. Most RCTs had high risk of bias. One RCT showed that Korean red ginseng (KRG) significantly improved sexual arousal and global health compared with placebo. Another RCT reported the superiority of KRG over placebo for treating menopause symptoms on Kupperman's index and menopausal rating score. The third RCT failed to show a significant effect of KRG on hot flash frequency compared to placebo. The fourth RCT found beneficial effects of ginseng compared to placebo on depression and well-being. In conclusion, the evidence on ginseng as an effective treatment for managing menopause symptoms is limited. Most of the RCTs are burdened with a high risk of bias. Thus firm conclusions cannot be drawn. Rigorous studies seem warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Complementary medicine; Menopause symptoms; Panax ginseng; randomized clinical trial; systematic review
Year: 2013 PMID: 23717154 PMCID: PMC3659624 DOI: 10.5142/jgr.2013.37.30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ginseng Res ISSN: 1226-8453 Impact factor: 6.060
Summary of randomized clinical trials of ginseng for menopause symptoms compared with placebo control
| First author (yr) [ref] | Design | Sample size conditions | Age range (yr) | Intervention | Dose (mg/d) | Treatment duration (wk) | Main outcome measures | Main results | AEs | Author’s conclusion (quoted) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||
| Oh (2010) | Cross-over, DB | 32 Menopausal women who had not menstruated naturally for at least 1 yr | 40-60 | KRG | 300 | 8 | 1) Female Sexual Function Index 2) Global Assessment Questionnaire | 1) Total: NS; desire: NS; arousal: P=0.006; lubrication: NS; orgasm: NS; satisfaction: NS; pain: NS 2) P=0.046 | 12 AEs - Probable (vaginal bleeding, KRG: 2, once during KRG period) - No relation (10, not reported in detail) | ‘…an 8 wk intake of KRG is associated with improvement of female sexual function…’ |
| Kim (2009) | Parallel, DB | 26 Postmenopausal women who had not menstruated for at least 6 months and had severe hot flashes | 45-55 | KRG | 900 | 8 | Hot flashes frequency | NS | None | ‘….both RG and placebo have remarkable effects on patients, but RG is not better than placebo’ |
| Kim (2012) | Parallel, DB | 72 Postmenopausal women | 45-60 | KRG | 3,000 (including 60 mg ginsenosides | 12 | 1) Kupperman’s Index 2) MRS | 1) P=0.032 in favour of KRG 2) P=0.035 in favour of KRG | Not assessed | ‘RG could be … relieving menopausal symptoms…’ |
| Wiklund (1999) | Parallel, DB | 384 Postmenopausal women who had not menstruated for at least 6 months and had hot flashes in at least 3 of the previous 7 d | 45-65 | Ginseng (Ginsana) | 200 (effective compound: G115) | 16 | 1) Women’s Health Questionnaire 2) Psychological General Well- Being Index | 1) NS 2) Total: NS; anxiety: NS; depression: P=0.04; well-being: P=0.05; Self-control: NS; health: P=0.03; vitality: NS | 1811) women reported but no significant difference between two groups - Severe (G: 7; C: 9) - Probable (G: 1; C: 4) - Possible AE (G:7; C:10) - Unknown (G:36; C:42) - No relation (G:80; C: 77) Influenza or cold (45); headache and migraine (18); diarrhoea and gastrointestinal (40) | ‘…ginseng extract may offer effective relief in QoL- related aspects…’ |
DB, double blind; NS, not significant; P, probability; AE, adverse event; KRG, Korean red ginseng; MRS, menopausal rating scale; RG, red ginseng; G, ginseng; C, control; QoL, quality of life.
1) Original author reported 181 participants reported adverse events. However, this figure can be wrong because the sum of the number in ginseng group is 131.
Fig. 1.Flowchart of trial selection process. UOS, uncontrolled observational study; RCT, randomized clinical trial.
Risk of bias in included trials
| First author (yr) [ref] | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Patient and practitioner blinding | Assessor blinding | Reporting drop-out or withdrawal | Intention-to-treat analysis | Selective outcome reporting | Other potential bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Oh (2010) | L | U | L | L | L | H | L | U |
| Kim (2009) | U | U | L | U | U | U | U | H |
| Kim (2012) | L | U | L | U | L | L | U | U |
| Wiklund (1999) | U | U | L | U | L | L | L | U |
L, low risk of bias; U, unclear; H, high risk of bias.
MEDLINE search strategy
| 1. Menopause [MeSH] |
| 2. Menopause, premature [MeSH] |
| 3. Climacteric [MeSH] |
| 4. Premenopause [MeSH] |
| 5. Perimenopause [MeSH] |
| 6. Postmenopause [MeSH] |
| 7. Vasomotor system [MeSH] |
| 8. Sweating [MeSH] |
| 9. Hot flashes [MeSH] |
| 10. Hot flush$ [tw] |
| 11. OR 1-10 |
| 12. Ginseng[MeSH] |
| 13. ( |
| 14. (red ginseng or american ginseng).tw. |
| 15. OR/12-14 |
| 16. randomized controlled trial [pt] |
| 17. controlled clinical trial [pt] |
| 18. placebo$ [tw] |
| 19. random$ [tw] |
| 20. single-blind method [MeSH] |
| 21. double-blind method [MeSH] |
| 22. prospective studies [MeSH] |
| 23. controlled clinical trial [MeSH] |
| 24. randomized controlled trial [MeSH] |
| 25. clinical trials [MeSH] |
| 26. OR 16-25 |
| 27. 11 AND 15 AND 26 |
| 28. Animals/not Humans/ |
| 29. 27 not 28 |