| Literature DB >> 27847529 |
Wei-Wei Lu1, Jin-Ming Zhang1, Zheng-Tao Lv1, An-Min Chen1.
Abstract
Objective. The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of acupuncture therapy in the treatment of acute gouty arthritis. Methods. A literature search of PubMed, EMBASE, ISI Web of Science, CENTRAL, and CNKI was conducted from the inception date of each database up to October 2015. Two investigators screened each article independently and were blinded to the findings of the other reviewer. Data was extracted according to the predetermined collection form. Meta-analysis was performed. Results. We analyzed data from 28 RCTs involving 2237 patients with gouty arthritis. Compared with conventional pharmacological treatments acupuncture was more effective in rendering patients free from symptoms after 24 hours, lowering serum urate, alleviating pain associated with gouty arthritis, and decreasing the ESR; regarding CRP, no statistically significant difference was found. In addition, the frequency of adverse events in acupuncture treatment was lower than that in control group. Conclusion. Based on the findings of our study, we cautiously suggest that acupuncture is an effective and safe therapy for patients with gouty arthritis. However, the potential beneficial effect of acupuncture might be overstated due to the methodological deficiency of included studies. High quality RCTs with larger scale are encouraged.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27847529 PMCID: PMC5099464 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9451670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature selection.
Characteristics of RCTs identified in the literature search.
| Study | Population (E/C) | Age (mean or range) | Diagnostic criteria | Outcome measurements | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baiyin 2014 [ | 43/44 | E: 27–56; C: 28–54 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Chenle 2015 [ | 25/25 | E: 25–58; C: 23–60 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect | NR |
| Gong and Chen 2014 [ | 60/60 | NR | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect | NR |
| Gui and Chen 2014 [ | 32/28 | E: 28–65; C: 26–62 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect | Yes |
| He et al. 2008 [ | 30/30 | E: 28–67; C: 30–65 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect | Yes |
| Hu et al. 2010 [ | 68/60 | E: 45.42 ± 11.46; C: 46.74 ± 11.22 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid, CRP, ESR | Yes |
| Jin et al. 2012 [ | 30/30 | E: 23-67; C: 25–66 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | Yes |
| Li et al. 2013 [ | 31/29 | E: 49.67 ± 19.3; C: 46.52 ± 10.29 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | Yes |
| Liu et al. 2008 [ | 56/44 | E: 34–70: C: 33–74 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Liu et al. 2014 [ | 44/41 | E: 20–50; C: 18–52 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score | Yes |
| Liu 2014 [ | 87/87 | E: 44.1; C: 43.4 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid, CRP, ESR | Yes |
| Ma 2002 [ | 48/30 | E: 31–78; C: 29–72 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Ma 2004 [ | 42/30 | E: 31–78; C: 29–72 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Wang 2013 [ | 40/20 | E: 23–70; C: 23–70 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, ESR, CRP, uric acid | Yes |
| Wu et al. 2012 [ | 34/32 | E: 32–60; C: 33–63 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid, CRP, ESR, VAS score | NR |
| Xi et al. 2006 [ | 66/64 | E: 50.1 ± 5.2; C: 45.1 ± 6.1 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score | NR |
| Xie et al. 2007 [ | 30/30/30 | E: 40–70; C1: 42–69; C2: 43–71 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Xie et al. 2009 [ | 30/30 | E: 32–65; C: 40–67 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid | Yes |
| Yan 2009 [ | 40/20 | E: 35–75; C: 38–76 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | Yes |
| Yin et al. 2005 [ | 40/30/30 | E1: 36–72: E2: 31–69: C: 34–76 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Zhang 2010 [ | 28/29 | E: 38–79; C: 29–80 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect | NR |
| Zhao 2007 [ | 30/30 | E: 31–68; C: 30–70 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score | NR |
| Zhao et al. 2009 [ | 30/30 | E: 33–70; C: 32–71 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Zhou et al. 2012 [ | 80/80 | E: 36–65; C: 37–64 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score, ESR | NR |
| Zhou 2014 [ | 20/20 | E: 18–48; C: 17–50 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect | NR |
| Zong et al. 2011 [ | 20/20 | E: 34–72; C: 30–70 | ARA 1977 | Clinical effect, uric acid | NR |
| Zou et al. 2006 [ | 30/30/30 | E1: 32–70; E2: 31–72; C: 35–71 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score | NR |
| Zou et al. 2007 [ | 30/30 | E: 32–70; C: 31–72 | SATCM 1994 | Clinical effect, uric acid, VAS score | NR |
Note. E: experiment; C: control; NR: not reported; CRP: C-reactive protein; ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate; TCM: traditional Chinese medicine; VAS: visual analogue scale; ARA 1977: the American Rheumatism Association preliminary classification criteria for acute gout 1977; SATCM 1994: the Criteria of Diagnosis and Therapeutic Effect of Diseases and Syndromes in Traditional Chinese Medicine issued by the State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Details of intervention in acupuncture groups and control groups.
| Study | Acupuncture intervention | Control | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baiyin 2014 [ | MA (Ashi point) 25 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Colchicine 0.5 mg twice a day, allopurinol 50 mg twice a day | 15 days |
| Chenle 2015 [ | MA (Ashi point, Gb34, Sp10, St35, EX-LE4, S34, EX13) 25 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Colchicine 0.5 mg twice a day, allopurinol 50 mg twice a day | 15 days |
| Gong and Chen 2014 [ | MA (Ashi point), every other day | Allopurinol 50 mg 3 times a day | 20 days |
| Gui and Chen 2014 [ | MA (Ashi point, Sp9, St36, Sp6, Li11, Gv14), once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, colchicine 0.5 mg/hour | 10 days |
| He et al. 2008 [ | EA (Ashi point, St36, Sp6, Ki3, Sp4) 20 min, once a day, plus acupoint injection | Colchicine 0.5 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 10 days |
| Hu et al. 2010 [ | MA (Gb11, Cv6, Ki3, B40) 30 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day, allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day | 21 days |
| Jin et al. 2012 [ | MA (Sp6, Sp9, Li11, S34, Sp10, H3, L15), once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Allopurinol 100 mg twice a day | 7 days |
| Li et al. 2013 [ | MA (Sp6, St36, Sp9, St40, Sp10, Li11, Li4, Lr3) 15 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Colchicine 0.5 mg 3 times a day | 21 days |
| Liu et al. 2008 [ | EA (Ashi point, Sp1, Lr3, Sp6, St40, Sp9, Gb34) 30 min, once a day, plus local blocking therapy | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 7 days |
| Liu et al. 2014 [ | MA (surrounded the diseased region), once a day, plus external Chinese herbal medicine | Colchicine 0.5 mg twice a day, celecoxib 200 mg twice a day | 7 days |
| Liu 2014 [ | MA (Sp10, Sp6, St36, St40, Sp9, Li11, Li4, Lr3) 30 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Benzbromarone 50 mg once a day | 14 days |
| Ma 2002 [ | MA (Sp6, Ki3, Sp10, Li11) 30 min, once a day | Indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day, allopurinol 100 mg 2-3 times a day | 28 days |
| Ma 2004 [ | MA (Bl23, Bl22, Cv3, Cv4, Sp10, Sp6, Ki3) 30 min, once a day | Allopurinol 100 mg 2-3 times a day | 28 days |
| Wang 2013 [ | MA (Ashi point, Ki3, Sp9, B60, Li11, Li4, Lr3) 20 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Colchicine 0.5 mg 3 times a day | 14 days |
| Wu et al. 2012 [ | EA 2 Hz (St36, St40, Ashi point) 30 min, once a day, plus bloodletting | Colchicine 0.5 mg 3 times a day, allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Xi et al. 2006 [ | MA (Ashi point, Sp6, Sp10, Sp9, Li4, Li11) 30 min, once a day | Meloxicam 7.5 mg once a day | 20 days |
| Xie et al. 2007 [ | EA (Sp6, Sp9, St40) 30 min, once a day | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, probenecid 250 mg 3 times a day | 10 days |
| Xie et al. 2009 [ | MA (surrounded the diseased region) 30 min, once a day | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 15 days |
| Yan 2009 [ | MA (Ashi point, Ki3, Sp6, St36, B60, St40, Lr3) 30 min, once a day, plus bloodletting | Allopurinol 100 mg twice a day | 14 days |
| Yin et al. 2005 [ | EA (St36, St40, Ashi point) 30 min, once a day; EA plus western medicine | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Zhang 2010 [ | MA 30 min, once a day, plus western medicine | Indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Zhao 2007 [ | MA (St36, Sp6, Ashi point), once a day | Indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day, allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Zhao et al. 2009 [ | EA (Ashi point, Li4, St36, Gb34, Sp10, B60, Ki3) 30 min, once a day, plus bloodletting | Probenecid 250 mg twice a day | 10 days |
| Zhou et al. 2012 [ | MA (Sp10, St36, Sp6, Li11, Gb34) 30 min, once a day, plus infrared irradiation | Indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 5 days |
| Zhou 2014 [ | MA (Ashi point, Li11, Sp10, Sp6, Gv14, Lr3, St36) 30 min, once a day, plus Chinese herbal medicine | Ibuprofen 300 mg twice a day | 7 days |
| Zong et al. 2011 [ | MA (Ashi point, Sp9, St36, Sp6, Li11, Li4, S34) 30 min, once a day, plus moxa-moxibustion | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Zou et al. 2006 [ | EA 100 Hz (St36, Sp6) 30 min, once a day; EA 2 Hz (St36, Sp6) 30 min, once a day | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
| Zou et al. 2007 [ | EA 2 Hz (St36, Sp6) 30 min, every other day, plus acupoint injection | Allopurinol 100 mg 3 times a day, indometacin 25 mg 3 times a day | 6 days |
Note. EA: electroacupuncture; MA: manual acupuncture; Ashi point: pain spot; Sp10: Xuehai; Sp9: Yinlingquan; St36: zusanli; Ki3: taixi; Gb11: touqiaoyin; Cv6: qihai; Sp6: sanyinjiao; Li11: quchi; Lr3: taichong; Bl23: shenyu; Bl22: sanjiaoyu; Cv3: zhongji; St40: fenglong; B60: Kunlun; St35: dubi; EX-LE4: neixiyan; S34: liangqiu; EX13: heding; Gv14:dazhui; Sp4: gongsun; B40: weizhong; H3: shaohai; L15: chize; Li4: hegu; Cv4: guanyuan; B12: fengshi.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Figure 3Risk of bias graph: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Figure 4Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: clinical effect.
Figure 5Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: uric acid.
Figure 6Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: pain intensity (VAS score).
Figure 7Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: ESR.
Figure 8Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: CRP.
Figure 9Forest plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: adverse events.
Metaregression of basic characteristics of trials and improvement of uric acid and VAS score.
| Outcome | Number of RCTs | Factor tested |
|
| Adjusted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uric acid | 22 | Acupuncture type | 2.21 | 0.038 | 20.20% |
| Combined therapy | 0.35 | 0.730 | −6.31% | ||
| Duration of treatment | 1.58 | 0.127 | 7.67% | ||
| VAS score | 7 | Acupuncture type | −1.62 | 0.165 | 23.55% |
| Combined therapy | 1.32 | 0.243 | 12.20% | ||
| Duration of treatment | −1.27 | 0.259 | 10.11% |
Note. RCT: randomized controlled trial; VAS: visual analogue scale.
Figure 10Funnel plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: clinical effect.
Figure 11Funnel plot of acupuncture therapy versus western medicine: uric acid.