| Literature DB >> 26560971 |
Zhang Xin1, Liu Xue-Ting2, Kang De-Ying2.
Abstract
Systematic reviews (SRs) of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have demonstrated acupuncture's effectiveness in stroke rehabilitation. The current study reviews the quality of evidence in SRs of acupuncture in stroke rehabilitation, and rates the strength of recommendation for its use based on this evidence using the GRADE (grading of recommendations, assessment, development and evaluations) approach. A comprehensive literature search was performed using multiple databases (e.g., Medline, Embase) with advanced search strategies. Two authors independently selected articles, collected data, and assessed the methodological quality of each identified SR according to AMSTAR (a measurement tool to assess systematic reviews) and OQAQ (Oxman and Guyatt's overview quality assessment questionnaire). Outcomes related to stroke rehabilitation were evaluated. SRs of high methodological quality (AMSTAR score ≥9 and OQAQ score ≥7) were graded using GRADE. Ultimately, acupuncture yields benefits in stroke rehabilitation (neurological function improvement: RR = 1.34; swallowing improvement: RR = 1.61, 1.49, 1.07; disability: SMD = 0.49 or 0.07). Poor evidentiary quality and insufficient information about harm led to weak recommendations. In conclusion, acupuncture may improve stroke rehabilitation, as the GRADE approach indicated a weak recommendation for acupuncture's usage in this context.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26560971 PMCID: PMC4642304 DOI: 10.1038/srep16582
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Rating scale for outcome ranking according to clinical importance.
| Importance | Measure |
|---|---|
| Critical | Death (Mortality rate; Fatality rate; DALY; Death rate) |
| Disabilities | |
| Physiological function (Language function; Sensory function; Swallowing function; Motor function; Strength of respiratory muscles) | |
| Stroke-associated outcomes (Stroke recurrence; Intracranial/Extracranial hemorrhage; Modified Rankin Scale | |
| Quality of life (QOL) | |
| Important | Acupuncture-associated outcomes (Bent needle; Stuck needle; Broken needle; Fainting; Injury to important organs; Infection; Bleeding) |
| Withdrawal | |
| Not important | Anxiety and depression |
| Cognition of disease | |
| Patient satisfaction |
*Critical for making a decision and included in the evidence profile.
†Important for making a decision and included in the evidence profile.
‡Not important for making a decision and not included in the evidence profile.
SR evidence included in the GRADE approach.
| SR | PRISMAscore | AMSTAR score | OQAQscore |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wu 2006 | 24 | 9 | 9 |
| Xie 2008 | 25 | 9 | 8 |
| Sze 2002 | 25 | 9 | 8 |
| SR, systematic review | |||
Figure 1Flowchart: study selection.
Quality assessment and summary of findings using the GRADE approach.
| Outcomes | Patients(n) | IncludedRCTs (n) | FU | Quality assessment | Summary of findings | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | Overall quality of evidence | Study event rates(%) | Relative effect [95% CI] | |||||
| Control | Acupuncture | |||||||||||
| Acupuncture+CC vs. CC | ||||||||||||
| 352 | 4 RCT | 30-90 d | No serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | 118/169 (69.8%) | 173/183 (94.5%) | 6.55 | |
| 66 | 1 RCT | na | Serious risk of bias | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | 7/32 (21.9%) | 12/34 (35.3%) | 1.61 | |
| 66 | 1 RCT | na | Serious risk of bias | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | 17/32 (53.1%) | 27/34 (79.4%) | 1.49 | |
| 66 | 1 RCT | na | Serious risk of bias | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | 29/32 (90.6%) | 33/34 (97.1%) | 1.07 | |
| Acupuncture+CSR vs. CSR | ||||||||||||
| 481 | 6 RCTs | 7 d-1 yr | Serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | — | — | 0.06 | |
| 481 | 6 RCTs | 7 d-1 yr | Serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | — | — | 0.49 | |
| Acupuncture+CC vs. CC | ||||||||||||
| 488 | 4 RCTs | 2 d-40 d | No serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | Undetected | ⊕⊕⊕ΘMODERATE | 157/223 (70.4%) | 258/265 (97.4%) | 12.5 | |
| Real Acupuncture+CSR vs. Sham Acupuncture+CSR | ||||||||||||
| 254 | 2 RCTs | 3 w-12 mo | No serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | — | — | 0.07 | |
| 270 | 3 RCTs | 3 w-12 mo | No serious risk of bias | Serious | No serious indirectness | Serious | Undetected | ⊕ΘΘΘLOW | — | — | -0.06 | |
CI, confidence interval; *OR, odds ratio; †RR, relative risk; ††SMD, standardized mean difference; na, not available; CSRS, Chinese Stroke Recovery Scale; CSR, conventional stroke rehabilitation; CC, conventional care; FU, follow-up.
1The authors of the SR46 stated no trial described the method of randomization, allocation concealment wwas unclear in all included trials, and only one trial reported that participants were blinded but did not describe the method in detail. No information on blinding was available in the remaining three trials.
2Inconsistencies were found among the 4 studies in the meta-results with a substantially large I2 (I2 = 63%, P = 0.04).
3Differences between study populations (Ischemic/hemorrhagic) and durations of stroke.
4The sample size was less than 400, the 95% CI overlapped with no effect (i.e., an OR or RR of 1.0), and CI failed to exclude important benefits (an OR or RR increase of 25% or more).
5It was not possible to check publication bias because of the limited number of trials for this outcome.
6The 95% CI failed to exclude important benefits (an OR increase of 25% or more).
7The 95% CI overlapped with no effect (CI includes RR of 1.0), and the CI failed to exclude important benefits (an RR increase of 25% or more).
8Downgraded for blinding (blinding of participants and personal and outcome assessment).
9Inconsistency was mainly due to differences in intervention, details of acupuncture and methodological quality among these studies.
10Risk of bias was mainly due to blinding.
From SR evidence to recommendations.
| Treatmentstrategies | Outcomes | Patients characteristics | Factors determining recommendations | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroke type | Severity onentry | Stage | Best estimates of the magnitude of effects | Importanceof outcomes | Quality of evidence | Quality ofevidence acrosscritical outcomes | Balance of benefitsand harms | Strength ofrecommendation | ||||
| Point estimateof Relative effects | Large magnitudeof effect | Directionof effect | ||||||||||
| Acupuncture+CC | Neurological function | Ischemic/hemorrhagic | L, Md, S | Recovery | OR=6.55 (RR=1.34) | No | Favors acupuncture | Critical | Low | Low | Uncertain | Weak |
| Swallowing function | Ischemic/hemorrhagic | L, Md, S | Subacute | RR=1.61, 1.49, 1.07 | No | Favors acupuncture | Critical | Low | ||||
| Acupuncture+CSR | Motor recovery | Ischemic/hemorrhagic | Md, S | Acute, subacute and recovery | SMD = 0.06, -0.06 | Unclear | Favors acupuncture or CSR | Critical | Low | Low | Uncertain | Weak |
| Disability | Ischemic/hemorrhagic | Md, S | Acute, subacute and recovery | SM = 0.49, 0.07 | Unclear | Favors acupuncture | Critical | Moderate and Low | ||||
| Acupuncture+CC | Disability | Ischemic/hemorrhagic | L,Md, S | Acute, subacute and recovery | OR = 12.5, RR = 1.37 | Unclear | Favors acupuncture | Critical | Moderate and Low | Low | Uncertain | Weak |
OR, odds ratio; RR, relative risk; CSR, conventional stroke rehabilitation; CC, conventional care; L, light; Md, moderate; S, severe.
↑?Symbolic representation of weak recommendation for an intervention.
*GRADE definition of magnitude of effect: large, RR > 2 or <0.5; very large, RR > 5 or <0.2. We converted OR to RR when assessing the magnitude of an OR effect.
†No current definition of a large effect for this continuous variable.
‡Insufficient information from SRs and original RCTs for assessing harm.