| Literature DB >> 27165971 |
Cindy Crawford1, Courtney Boyd1, Charmagne F Paat1, Ashley Price1, Lea Xenakis1, EunMee Yang1, Weimin Zhang1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Pain is multi-dimensional and may be better addressed through a holistic, biopsychosocial approach. Massage therapy is commonly practiced among patients seeking pain management; however, its efficacy is unclear. This systematic review and meta-analysis is the first to rigorously assess the quality of massage therapy research and evidence for its efficacy in treating pain, function-related and health-related quality of life outcomes across all pain populations.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27165971 PMCID: PMC4925170 DOI: 10.1093/pm/pnw099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Med ISSN: 1526-2375 Impact factor: 3.750
Figure 1PubMed search string.
Figure 2Flow chart.
SIGN 50 checklist quality assessment [44]
| Percentage (N) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| SIGN Criteria | Poor | Adequate | Well |
| Appropriate and clearly focused question | – | 70.1% (47) | 29.9% (20) |
| Randomization | 38.8% (26) | 22.4% (15) | 38.8% (26) |
| Allocation concealment | 65.7% (44) | 20.9% (14) | 13.4% (9) |
| Percentage of dropouts | 16.4% (11) | 10.5% (7) | 73.1% (49) |
| Baseline similarities | 1.5% (1) | 16.4% (11) | 82.1% (55) |
| Group differences | 13.4% (9) | 76.1% (52) | 10.5% (7) |
| Outcome reliability/validity | 10.4% (7) | 26.9% (18) | 62.7% (42) |
| Intention-to-treat analyses | 56.7% (38) | 14.9% (10) | 28.4% (19) |
| Multi-site similarities | – | 16.7% (1) | 83.3% (5) |
SIGN = Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network.
SIGN criteria was modified to exclude blinding and was weighted accordingly because of this.
EVAT quality assessment [45]
| Percentage (N) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poor | Adequate | Well | NA | |
| Recruitment | 23.9% (16) | 73.1% (49) | 3.0% (2) | (0) |
| Participation | 21.6% (11) | 58.8% (30) | 19.6% (10) | (16) |
| Model validity | 71.4% (30) | 19.1% (8) | 9.5% (4) | (25) |
EVAT = External Validity Assessment Tool.
STRICT-M analysis
| Percentage (N) | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| a. Reasoning for treatment provided | 62.7% (42) |
| b. Extent to which treatment varied | 59.7% (40) |
|
| |
| a. Name and description of massage technique | 98.5% (66) |
| b. Details of intervention using terms | 56.7% (38) |
| c. Location of massage | 82.1% (55) |
| d. Amount of time spent massage each location | 34.3% (23) |
| e. Description of pressure | 52.2% (35) |
| f. Response sought | 22.4% (15) |
|
| |
| a. Number of treatment sessions over what time | 89.6% (60) |
| b. Time frame (total duration) | 83.6% (56) |
| c. Frequency | 67.2% (45) |
| d. Duration of each treatment | 74.6% (50) |
|
| |
| a. Details of massage-related interventions | 76.9% (10 out of 13) |
| b. Massage equipment | – |
| c. Setting | 43.3% (29) |
|
| |
| a. Type of practitioner | 95.5% (64) |
| b. Qualifications | 14.9% (10) |
|
| |
| a. Rationale for control | 32.8% (22) |
| b. Name and description of control | 89.6% (60) |
| c. Number of control sessions | 52.2% (35) |
| d. Time frame (total duration) | 52.2% (35) |
| e. Frequency | 41.8% (28) |
| f. Duration of each treatment | 49.3% (33) |
Evidence synthesis for musculoskeletal pain conditions
| Outcome/Comparison | Number of Participants Completed (N) | Confidence in the Estimate of the Effect | Effect Size | Reported Studies Safety GRADE (N) | Strength of the Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| vs. Sham | 655 (9) | B | −0.44 (95% CI, −0.84,−0.05), five studies | +2 (3) | Weak, in favor |
| vs. No Treatment | 245 (4) | A | −1.14 (95% CI, −1.94,−0.35), four studies | +2 (2) | Strong, in favor |
| vs. Active Comparator(s) | 3557 (34) | B | −0.26 (95% CI, −0.53, 0.003), 24 studies | +1 (14) | Weak, in favor |
|
| |||||
| vs. Sham | 584 (7) | B | 0.36 (95% CI, −0.53, 1.25), three studies | +2 (2) | No recommendation |
| vs. Active Comparator(s) | 3063 (25) | B | −0.23 (95% CI, −0.50, 0.05), seven studies | +1 (12) | No recommendation |
|
| |||||
| vs. Active Comparator(s) | 2527 (21) | B | Anxiety | +1 (11) | Weak, in favor |
| B | Health-related quality of life | Weak, in favor | |||
Definitions for scoring are based on Samueli Institute’s Overall Synthesis Evaluation Criteria (adapted from other standard synthesis methods).
*(A) Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect; (B) Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; (C) Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; (D) Any estimate of effect is very uncertain.
†Calculated as the standardized mean difference using Cohen’s d effect size estimation where 0.2 is considered a small, 0.5 a medium, and 0.8 a large overall effect.
‡Safety ranges from (+2) appears safe with infrequent adverse events and interactions to (− 2) appears to have serious safety concerns that include frequent and serious adverse events and/or interactions.
§Ranges from Strong Recommendation in Favor indicating that the EMT Working Group is very certain that benefits do outweigh risks and burdens to Strong Recommendation Against indicating that the EMT Working Group is very certain that benefits do not outweigh the risks and burdens.
¶Negative effect indicates improvement in massage intervention compared to control intervention.
‖Positive effect size indicates improvement in massage intervention compared to control intervention.
Figure 3AResults of massage vs. sham meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: pain intensity/severity at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 290).
Figure 3BResults of massage vs. no treatment meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: pain intensity/severity at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 219).
Figure 3CResults of massage vs. active comparator(s) meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: pain intensity/severity at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 1349).
Figure 3DResults of massage vs. active comparator(s) meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: pain intensity/severity at a 6-month follow-up (sample size analyzed, N = 136).
Figure 3EResults of massage vs. sham meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: activity (range of motion) at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 211).
Figure 3FResults of massage vs. active comparator meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: activity (range of motion) at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 450).
Figure 3GResults of massage vs. active comparator(s) meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: mood (anxiety) at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 210).
Figure 3HResults of massage vs. active comparator(s) meta-analysis for musculoskeletal pain populations: healthrelated quality of life at post-treatment (sample size analyzed, N = 424).