| Literature DB >> 25997850 |
Jing Luo1, Hao Xu2, Baoyan Liu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acupuncture has been widely used in the management of a variety of diseases for thousands of years, and many relevant randomized controlled trials have been published. In recent years, many randomized controlled trials have provided controversial or less-than-convincing evidence that supports the efficacy of acupuncture. The clinical effectiveness of acupuncture in Western countries remains controversial. DISCUSSION: Acupuncture is a complex intervention involving needling components, specific non-needling components, and generic components. Common problems that have contributed to the equivocal findings in acupuncture randomized controlled trials were imperfections regarding acupuncture treatment and inappropriate placebo/sham controls. In addition, some inherent limitations were also present in the design and implementation of current acupuncture randomized controlled trials such as weak external validity. The current designs of randomized controlled trials of acupuncture need to be further developed. In contrast to examining efficacy and adverse reaction in a "sterilized" environment in a narrowly defined population, real world research assesses the effectiveness and safety of an intervention in a much wider population in real world practice. For this reason, real world research might be a feasible and meaningful method for acupuncture assessment. Randomized controlled trials are important in verifying the efficacy of acupuncture treatment, but the authors believe that real world research, if designed and conducted appropriately, can complement randomized controlled trials to establish the effectiveness of acupuncture. Furthermore, the integrative model that can incorporate randomized controlled trial and real world research which can complement each other and potentially provide more objective and persuasive evidence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25997850 PMCID: PMC4440554 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-015-0676-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Characteristics of six acupuncture randomized controlled trials with equivocal results
| Trials | Conditions | Interventions | Controls | Sample size | Outcomes | Results | Practitioner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brinkhaus B 2006 [ | chronic low back pain | verum acupuncture | (1) minimal acupuncture; (2) waiting list | 298 | pain intensity (VAS), back function*, PDI, depression, QOL(SF-36), emotional aspects of pain, pain medication use | Significant difference between acupuncture and no treatment. No difference between acupuncture and minimal acupuncture. | specialized acupuncture physician |
| Haake M 2007 [ | chronic low back pain | verum acupuncture | (1) sham acupuncture; (2) CT | 1162 | treatment response†, responder rate‡, adverse events | Significant difference between acupuncture and conventional therapy. No difference between acupuncture and sham. | experienced physician |
| Cherkin DC 2009 [ | chronic low back pain | (1) individualized acupuncture; (2) standardized acupuncture | (3) simulated acupuncture; (4) CT | 638 | dysfunction(RDQ), symptom(bothersome score), physical and mental health(SF-36), loss of days, medication use, adverse events | Significant difference between acupuncture and conventional therapy. No difference between acupuncture and sham. | experienced acupuncturist |
| Vas J 2012 [ | acute low back pain | verum acupuncture plus CT | (1) sham acupuncture plus CT; (2) placebo acupuncture plus CT; (3) CT | 275 | clinical improvement (RMQ), disability (RMQ), pain intensity(VAS), SEE, adverse events | Significant difference between acupuncture and no treatment. No difference between acupuncture and sham or placebo. | experienced physician |
| Macklin EA 2006 [ | moderate essential hypertension | (1) individualized acupuncture; (2) standardized acupuncture | sham acupuncture | 192 | blood pressure, QOL, antihypertensive medication use, adverse events | No significant difference between acupuncture and sham. | licensed acupuncturist |
| Enblom A 2012 [ | radiotherapy induced nausea and vomiting | verum acupuncture plus CT | sham acupuncture plus CT | 215 | nausea and vomiting§, SEE, adverse events | Acupuncture was effective for nausea, but no difference between acupuncture and sham. | experienced physiotherapist |
Abbreviations: VAS, visual analog scale; PDI, Pain Disability Index; QOL, quality of Life; SF-36, the 36-Item Short-Form Quality of Life Questionnaire; CT, conventional treatment; RDQ, modified Roland Disability Questionnaire; RMQ, the 24-pointRoland Morris Disability Questionnaire; SEE, subjectively experienced effects
* Measured by validated German questionnaire FunktionsfragebogenHannover-Rucken
† Measured by Von Korff Chronic Pain Grade Scale or Hanover Functional Ability Questionnaire
‡ Measured by 12-item Short Form Health Survey, and patient global assessment of therapy effectiveness on a scale of 1 to 6
§ Measured by a category scale or VAS
Fig. 1Characteristics of acupuncture treatment. Abbreviations: TCM, traditional Chinese medicine. * Acupuncture treatment is a complex intervention which includes three aspects consisting of many components. † Acupuncture treatment is an individualized treatment based on patient conditions and TCM theory. ‡ Varies considerably across different physicians as different skill and experience
Fig. 2Flow diagram of real world researches on acupuncture treatment