| Literature DB >> 28577542 |
Jia-Jie Mo1,2, Lin-Ying Liu3, Wei-Bin Peng4, Jie Rao5, Zhou Liu6,7, Li-Li Cui8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of creatine in treating Parkinson's disease (PD) has not been conclusively determined. Therefore, we performed a meta-analysis to address this issue.Entities:
Keywords: Creatine; Meta-analysis; Mitochondrial dysfunction; Parkinson’s disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28577542 PMCID: PMC5457735 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-017-0885-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Assessing the risk of bias of the included studies. a A summary of the authors’ evaluation of the risk of bias criteria for each included study; (b) A graph of the authors’ evaluation of each risk of bias criterion presented as percentages across all included studies Flow chart with inclusion criteria to select studies for this meta-analysis
Characteristics of the studies included in the meta-analysis
| Author | Year | Method | Country | Participants | Intervention(s) | Outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Placebo | ||||||
| NINDS [ | 2006 | RCT | USA | 67 | 67 | Creatine 10 g/d and Minocycline 200 mg/d | Total UPDRS scores; |
| Bender [ | 2006 | RCT | Germany | 40 | 20 | Creatine 4 g/d | Total UPDRS scores; |
| NINDS [ | 2008 | RCT | USA | 64 | 63 | Creatine 10 g/d | Total UPDRS scores; |
| Kieburtz [ | 2015 | RCT | Canada | 477 | 478 | Creatine 10 g/d | Total UPDRS scores; |
| Li [ | 2015 | RCT | China | 38 | 37 | Creatine 10 g/d and Coenzyme Q10 300 mg/d | UPDRS III |
RCT Randomized controlled trial, UPDRS Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale
Baseline characteristics of the patient populations
| Author | Intervention(s) | Total | UPDRS | UPDRS | UPDRS | Hoehn & Yahr | Schwab & | Follow-up | Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NINDS 2006 | Creatine 10 g/d | 23.9(9.07) | 1.13(1.29) | 6.33(3.07) | 16.4(6.77) | 1.43(0.5) | 92.7(5.25) | 12 | Within 5 yrs |
| Placebo | 22.8(9.63) | 1.13(1.19) | 6.03(3.45) | 15.6(7.01) | 1.46(0.5) | 94.2(4.81) | |||
| Bender 2006 | Creatine 4 g/d | 27.4(11.7) | 2.2(1.9) | 8.1(4.6) | 16.3(7.0) | 24 | Above 2 yrs | ||
| Placebo | 27.4(17) | 1.6(1.5) | 7.8(4.8) | 17.4(11) | |||||
| NINDS 2008 | Creatine 10 g/d | 23.9(9.07) | 1.13(1.29) | 6.33(3.07) | 16.4(6.77) | 1.43(0.5) | 92.7(5.25) | 18 | Within 5 yrs |
| Placebo | 22.8(9.63) | 1.13(1.19) | 6.03(3.45) | 15.6(7.01) | 1.46(0.5) | 94.2(4.81) | |||
| Kieburtz 2015 | Creatine 10 g/d | 26.5(11.7) | 1.3(1.4) | 7.3(4.1) | 17.9(8.6) | 90.9(6.6) | 60 | Within 5 yrs | |
| Placebo | 25.9(11) | 1.3(1.4) | 7.0(3.8) | 17.6(8.1) | 91.4(6.3) | ||||
| Li 2015 | Creatine 10 g/d | 17.5(7.8) | 18 | Approximately 7.7 yrs | |||||
| Placebo | 18.8(7.4) |
Values: weighted mean difference (standard deviation)
Fig. 2Assessing the risk of bias of the included studies. (a) A summary of the authors’ evaluation of the risk of bias criteria for each included study; (b) A graph of the authors’ evaluation of each risk of bias criterion presented as percentages across all included studies
Fig. 3The effect of creatine treatment versus placebo. (a) Change in Total UPDRS scores from baseline; (b) Change in UPDRS Mental scores; (c) Change in UPDRS ADL scores; (d) Change in UPDRS Motor scores; (e) Change in Schwab & England Scale scores
Efficacy results
| Outcome | Studies | Participants | Heterogeneity | WMD (95% CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total UPDRS score | 4 | 1276 | Chi2 = 5.70, df = 3 ( | −0.39 [−2.63, 1.85] |
| UPDRS Mental score | 2 | 194 | Chi2 = 2.08, df = 1 ( | −0.79 [−1.40, −0.18] |
| UPDRS ADL score | 3 | 1149 | Chi2 = 3.16, df = 2 ( | 0.39 [−0.38, 1.17] |
| UPDRS Motor score | 4 | 1224 | Chi2 = 4.52, df = 3 ( | −0.14 [−1.47, 1.19] |
| Schwab & England Scale score | 2 | 1089 | Chi2 = 0.13, df = 1 ( | 2.52 [0.48, 4.56] |
WMD: weighted mean difference; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval
GRADE evidence profile for all included studies
*Basis for the assumed risk (e.g., the median control group risk across studies) is provided in the footnotes. The corresponding risk (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI). CI: Confidence interval
GRADE Working Group categories for quality of evidence
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate
Low quality: 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
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate of effect
1 Evidence includes lack of allocation concealment and random sequence generation
2 A moderate variation in baseline variables between trials
3 The p value for heterogeneity was greater than 0.05, and I2 was 50% in the comparison of four studies; however, the quality of the evidence was not downgraded because it was considered low risk
4 Two trials [18, 22] used creatine combined with CoQ10 or minocycline as a co-intervention. The intervention was not confined to a single variation, which may induce an indirect influence
5 The p value for heterogeneity was less than 0.05, and I2 was 79% in this comparison with 2 studies. The quality of the evidence was downgraded for inconsistency
6 The rate of drop-outs in the trial [19] was high and greater than 20% (397/894 in the creatine group and 289/867 in the placebo group)