| Literature DB >> 29552077 |
Boram Lee1, Jihong Lee1, Jin-Hong Cheon2, Hyun-Kyung Sung3, Seung-Hun Cho4, Gyu Tae Chang1.
Abstract
Objectives. We aimed to summarize and critically evaluate the available evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of acupuncture for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Methods. We searched 13 databases for studies published up to December 2016. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating the efficacy of acupuncture for children with ASD were included. Outcome measures were the overall scores on scales evaluating the core symptoms of ASD and the scores for each symptom, such as social communication ability and skills, stereotypies, language ability, and cognitive function. Effect sizes were presented as mean differences (MD). Results. Twenty-seven RCTs with 1736 participants were included. Acupuncture complementary to behavioral and educational intervention significantly decreased the overall scores on the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS) (MD -8.10, 95% CI -12.80 to -3.40) and the Autism Behavior Checklist (MD -8.92, 95% CI -11.29 to -6.54); however, it was unclear which of the ASD symptoms improved. Acupuncture as a monotherapy also reduced the overall CARS score. The reported adverse events were acceptable. Conclusions. This review suggests that acupuncture may be effective and safe for pediatric ASD. However, it is not conclusive due to the heterogeneity of the acupuncture treatment methods used in the studies.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29552077 PMCID: PMC5820575 DOI: 10.1155/2018/1057539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of the literature screening and selection process.
Summary of the studies included.
| Study | Country | Sample size (A)/(B) | Mean age | Gender | Diagnostic criteria | (A) Experimental intervention | (B) Control intervention | Acupuncture points | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allam et al. 2008 | Egypt | 10/10 | 5.5 ± 1.22 y | (A) 7 : 3 | DSM-IV | MA + (B) | Language therapy | GV20, GV26, GV17, 3 temple needles, YNSA cerebrum and aphasia points | Arabic language test |
| Chen et al. 2014 | China | 30/30 | 5.06 ± 1.32 y | 36 : 24 | CCMD-3 | MA + (B) | Cognitive behavior rehabilitation training | GV20, GV24, EX-HN3, HT7, SP6, HI3, head Anmian point | CSHQ, TER (CSHQ), PTQ |
| Fan and Li 2016 | China | 38/38 | (A) 5.21 ± 1.56 y | (A) 22 : 16 | NR | MA | Language therapy, guided education, cooperative exchanges, music therapy | Jin's three needle technique (Sishenzhen, Zhisanzhen, Naosanzhen, Niesanzhen, Shouzhizhen, Zuzhizhen, Shesanzhen, Xingshenzhen) | CARS, TER (language ability) |
| Gao 2015 | Mongolia | 50/50 | (A) 5.7 ± 0.8 y | (A) 29 : 21 | WHO | MA | Physical therapy, cognitive education, language education, behavior modification | Jin's three needle technique (Sishenzhen, Naosanzhen, Niesanzhen, Zuokeshangsanzhen, Dingshenzhen, | PEP |
| He 2006 | China | 30/30 | (A) 7.16 ± 4.26 y | (A) 24 : 6 | DSM-IV | EA + MA + (B) | Verbal communication training, social communication training, self-care training, cognitive training, motion training | EA (EX-HN1, EX-HN3, PC6, HT7, SP6, KI3), MA (LR3, AT3, TF4) | ABC2, CARS, ATEC |
| Li and Liu 2011 | China | 30/40 | NR | (A) 27 : 3 | DSM-IV | EA + (B) | Music therapy and structured teaching | Scalp points (Zhijiuzhen, emotional zone, heart and liver zone) | Clancy Autism Behavior Scale, CARS, ABC1, GDS |
| Li et al. 2011 | China | 19/19 | 42.75 ± 2.5 m | 36 : 2 | DSM-IV | MA + (B) | Behavioral educational intervention | Tongue points (Naozhongxue, Naoshuxue, Naoyuanxue, Bizhongxue) | PEP-revised |
| Li et al. 2015 | China | 53/53 | 5.1 ± 3.9 y | 82 : 24 | NR | MA + (B) | Intensive therapy, game therapy, sensory integration training | Jin's three needle technique | CARS, ABC1 |
| Liao 2016 | China | 30/30 | (A) 9.24 ± 1.64 y | (A) 19 : 11 | NR | MA + (B) | ABA, language cognitive therapy, sensory integration training | Scalp temporal, frontal, suboccipital, occipital region | CARS, TER (CARS) |
| Liu and Yuan 2007 | China | 33/34 | 5.41 y | 60 : 7 | DSM-IV | MA | Sensory integration training | Jin's three needle technique (Sishenzhen, Niesanzhen, Zhisanzhen, Naosanzhen, Shesanzhen, Shouzhizhen, Zuzhizhen), Siguan | ABC1, CARS |
| J. G. Sun and X. R. Sun 2014 | Hong Kong | 42/42 | (A) 70 m | (A) 30 : 12 | DSM-IV | EA + (B) | Behavior therapy, sensory integration training | Tongue points (Naozhongxue, Naoshuxue, Naoyuanxue, Bizhongxue) | CARS, TER (CARS) |
| Tang et al. 2013 | China | 20/18/18 | (A1) 4.526 ± 1.623 y | (A1) 14 : 6 | DSM-IV | (A1) doing (B) during retention of MA | Educational training, behavior modification, sensory integration training, language therapy | Scalp areas according to symptoms | CARS, TER (CARS) |
| Wang et al. 2006 | China | 30/30 | NR | (A) 24 : 6 | ICD-10 | EA + (B) | Behavior therapy | GV20, EX-HN1, GV24, GB13, EX-HN3, GV17, GB19, PC6, scalp speech areas 1, 2, 3 | Social adaptive quotient, TER (social adaptive quotient) |
| Wang et al. 2007 | China | 30/30 | (A) 5.14 ± 1.53 y | (A) 24 : 6 | ICD-10 | EA + (B) | Sensory integration training, auditory integration training, language therapy | GV20, EX-HN1, GV24, GB13, EX-HN3, GV17, GB19, PC6, scalp speech areas 1, 2, 3 | ABC1, TER (ABC1), PPVT |
| Wang et al. 2015 | China | 32/30 | (A) 5.12 ± 1.42 y | (A) 18 : 14 | NR | MA | Language therapy, guided education, ABA, music therapy | Jin's three needle technique | CARS, TER (language ability) |
| Wong 2008a | Hong Kong | 18/18 | (A) 7.40 ± 2.215 y | (A) 17 : 1 | DSM-IV | EA + MA + (B) | Conventional educational program | EA (GV20, EX-HN3, HT7, SP6), MA (AT3) | ADOS, ABC2, ATEC, RFRLRS, WeeFIM, CGI, SPT |
| Wong and Chen 2010 | Hong Kong | 30/25 | (A) 9.17 ± 4.12 y | (A) 25 : 5 | DSM-IV | EA, conventional | Sham EA, conventional | EX-HN1, EX-HN3, PC6, HT7, LR3, SP6, AT3, TF4 | WeeFIM, PEDI, Leiter-R, CGI, ABC2, RFRLRS, RDLS, a standardized parental report |
| Wong and Sun 2010 | Hong Kong | 25/25 | (A) 6.23 ± 1.8 y | (A) 21 : 4 | DSM-IV | MA, conventional educational and behavior model | Sham MA, conventional educational and behavior model | Tongue points (Runze, Guanzhu, Tianmen, Diyou) | GMDS, RFRLRS, RDLS, SPT, WeeFIM |
| Wong et al. 2014 | Hong Kong | 16/11 | (A) 10.167 ± 3.930 y | (A) 16 : 0 | DSM-IV | MA + (B) | Conventional educational and behavior model | Tongue points (Runze, Guanzhu, Tianmen, Diyou) | ATEC, RDLS, SPT, WeeFIM, CGI, Cerebral FDG metabolism by PET |
| Wu 2015 | China | 40/40 | (A) 6.5 ± 2.3 y | (A) 28 : 12 | DSM-5 | MA | Conventional intervention | Jin's three needle technique (NR) | Functional development scale |
| Xiong 2014 | China | 32/32 | (A) 7.48 ± 3.26 y | (A) 18 : 14 | CCMD-3 | MA + (B) | Educational training, sensory training, behavior modification, language therapy | Scalp frontal, temporal, occipital, suboccipital, parietal regions | CARS |
| Yang 2012 | China | 20/20 | (A) 5.6053 ± 2.2582 y | (A) 16 : 4 | DSM-IV | MA | Behavior therapy, sensory integration training | Jin's three needle technique (Sishenzhen, Dingshenzhen, Zhisanzhen, Yansanzhen, Naosanzhen, Shesanzhen, Shousanzhen, Shouzhizhen, Zusanzhen, Zuzhizhen), CV12, CV4, CV6, GV14, BL20, GV4 | CARS, TER (CARS), EEG, attention value |
| Zeng et al. 2014 | China | 30/25 | (A) 3.51 ± 1.48 y | (A) 18 : 12 | ICD-10 | MA + (B) | ABA, TEACCH, PCI, sensory integration training, auditory integration training, language cognitive therapy | Jin's three needle technique (Sishenzhen, Naosanzhen, Niesanzhen, Zhisanzhen, Shesanzhen, Dingshenzhen, Shouzhizhen, Zuzhizhen) | TER (CARS), TER (PEP) |
| Zeng et al. 2016 | China | 60/25 | (A) 3.62 ± 1.36 y | (A) 36 : 24 | ICD-10 | MA + (B) | ABA, TEACCH, PCI, sensory integration training, language cognitive therapy, music therapy | Jin's three needle technique (Naosanzhen, Niesanzhen, Zhisanzhen, Shesanzhen, Dingshenzhen, Shouzhizhen, Zuzhizhen) | TER (CARS), TER (PEP3) |
| Zhao et al. 2015 | China | 30/30 | NR | NR | ICD-10 | EA + (B) | Special education | Group 1: GV20, Sishenzhen, GV24, GB13 | ABC1, TER (ABC1) |
| Zhao et al. 2015 | China | 35/30 | (A) 3.5 y | (A) 28 : 7 | DSM-IV | MA + (B) | Risperidone 0.5–2 mg/d | Jin's three needle technique (Dingshenzhen, Zhisanzhen, Sishenzhen, Niesanzhen), GV17, transport point mainly pericardium, heart, or liver meridian | TER (improvement of abnormal behavior) |
| Zhen and Jin 2016 | China | 68/68 | (A) 4.2 y | (A) 56 : 12 | DSM-IV | MA + (B) | Speech training and structured teaching | Jin's three needle technique (Esanzhen, Niesanzhen, Zhensanzhen), EX-HN1 | PEP-3 |
ABA, Applied Behavior Analysis; ABC1, Autism Behavior Checklist; ABC2, Aberrant Behavior Checklist; ADI-R, Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised; ADOS, Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale; ATEC, Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist; CARS, Childhood Autism Rating Scale; CCMD, Chinese Classification of Mental Disorder; CGI, Clinical Global Impression; CSHQ, Children's Sleep Habits Questionnaire; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EA, electroacupuncture; EEG, electroencephalography; FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose; GDS, Gesell Development Schedules; GMDS, Griffiths Mental Developmental Scale; ICD, International Classification of Diseases; MA, manual acupuncture; NR, not recorded; PCI, Play and Cultural Intervention; PEDI, Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory; PEP, Psychoeducational Profile; PET, positron emission tomography; PPVT, Peabody Picture and Vocabulary Test; PTQ, Parent Temperament Questionnaire; RDLS, Reynell Developmental Language Scales; RFRLRS, Ritvo-Freeman Real Life Rating Scale; SPT, Symbolic Play Test; TEACCH, Treatment and Education of Autistic and Related Communication Handicapped Children; TER, Total Effective Rate; WeeFIM, Functional Independence Measure for Children; WHO, World Health Organization; YNSA, Yamamoto New Scalp Acupuncture; acrossover trial. The rest are parallel studies.
Details of acupuncture treatment methods.
| Study | Depth of insertion | Deqi | Needle stimulation | Needle retention time | Number of treatment sessions | Frequency of treatment | Duration of treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allam et al. 2008 | 0.5–1 cun | O | Rapid manual stimulation upon insertion and removal of the needles | 20 min | NR | Twice per week | 9 months |
| Chen et al. 2014 | NR+ | NR | Han's acupoint nerve stimulator | 30 min | NR | 5 times per week | 2 months |
| Fan and Li 2016 | NR | NR | Twirling every 30 min | Head: 1 h, | 20 | 5 times per week | NR |
| Gao 2015 | NR | NR | Twirling every 5 min | 45 min | NR | 6 times per week | 20 weeks |
| He 2006 | NR | NR | Electrical stimulation (10 V, wave of rarefaction) | NR | 24 | 3 times per week | 8 weeks |
| Li and Liu 2011 [ | 0.5–1 cun | NR | Electrical stimulation (1.25 Hz, wave of condensation and rarefaction, 15 min), twirling | 2–4 h | 60 | 6 times per week | NR |
| Li et al. 2011 [ | NR | NR | Twirling, lifting, thrusting | No retention | NR | 1–5 times per week | 6 weeks |
| Li et al. 2015 | NR | NR | Twirling every 10 min | 30 min | NR | 6 times per week | 3 months |
| Liao 2016 | 10–15 mm | NR | Twirling every 30 min | 3-4 h | NR | NR | NR |
| Liu and Yuan 2007 | Head: 0.5–0.8 cun, tongue, limbs: 0.2–0.8 cun | NR | Twirling every 10 min | 30 min | 72 | 6 times per week | 12 weeks |
| J. G. Sun and X. R. Sun 2014 | NR | NR | Electrical and thermal stimulation | 20 min | NR | 3 times per day | 2 months |
| Tang et al. 2013 | 10–15 mm | NR | Twirling | 6–8 h | NR | 6 times per week | 25 weeks |
| Wang et al. 2006 | GV20, EX-HN1: 0.5–0.8 cun | O | Electrical stimulation (1.25 Hz, wave of condensation and rarefaction) | 50 min | NR | 5 times per week | 4 months |
| Wang et al. 2007 | GV20: 15–20 mm, EX-HN1: 1.5–20 mm | O | Electrical stimulation (75 Hz) | 50 min | NR | 5 times per week | 4 months |
| Wang et al. 2015 | NR | NR | Twirling | Head: 1 h, limbs: 30 min | 20 | 5 times per week | NR |
| Wong 2008a [ | GV20, EX-HN3, HT7, SP6: 13–25 mm, AT3: 5–10 mm | O | Electrical stimulation (25–75 Hz, continuous wave) | 30 min | 24 | 3 times per week | 8 weeks |
| Wong and Chen 2010 | NR | NR | Electrical stimulation | 30 min | 12 | 3 times per week | 4 weeks |
| Wong and Sun 2010 | Runze: 1 cm, Guanzhu: 0.3 cm, Tianmen: 0.5–1 cm, Diyou: 0.5 cm | NR | Quick and accurate insertion into acupoints | <15 s | 40 | 5 times per week | 8 weeks |
| Wong et al. 2014 | Runze: 1 cm, Guanzhu: 0.3 cm, Tianmen: 0.5–1 cm, Diyou: 0.5 cm | NR | Quick and accurate insertion into acupoints | <15 s | 40 | 5 times per week | 8 weeks |
| Wu 2015 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 120 | 6 times per week | NR |
| Xiong 2014 | 10–15 mm | NR | Twirling every 1 h | 6–8 h | NR | NR | NR |
| Yang 2012 | Trunk: 0.1–0.3 cun, head: 0.5–0.8 cun | NR | Twirling every 20 min | 60 min, trunk: no retention | 120 | 5 times per week | NR |
| Zeng et al. 2014 | NR | NR | Twirling every 15 min | 1 h | 120 | 5 times per week | 6 months |
| Zeng et al. 2016 | Head: 15–20 mm, | O | Twirling every 15 min | 1 h | 120 | 5 times per week | 6 months |
| Zhao et al. 2015 | 25 mm | NR | Electrical stimulation (1–100 Hz, continuous wave, ≤50 mA, 30 min) | 2 h | NR | 6 times per week | 3 months |
| Zhao et al. 2015 | 1–1.5 cun | NR | Twirling 200 times per min for 2-3 min | Scalp: 1 h, others: no retention | NR | 6 times per week | 3 months |
| Zhen and Jin 2016 | NR | NR | Lifting and thrusting | 30 min | NR | 5 times per week | 3 months |
1 cun = 3.0303030 cm; +NR: not recorded. aCrossover trial. The rest are parallel studies.
Figure 2Summary of risk of bias in all included studies; “+” low risk; “?” unclear risk; “−” high risk.
Figure 3Forest plots for comparison of acupuncture plus BEI versus BEI alone. (a) Overall CARS score. (b) Overall ABC score. (c) Overall ATEC score. (d) TER based on CARS score. (e) TER based on ABC score. ABC1, Autism Behavior Checklist; AT, acupuncture treatment; ATEC, Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist; BEI, behavioral and educational interventions; CARS, Childhood Autism Rating Scale; TER, total effective rate.
Figure 4Forest plots for comparison of acupuncture plus BEI versus BEI alone. (a) Social interaction skill (ATEC). (b) Communication ability (ATEC). (c) Language ability (SPT). (d) Cognitive function (ATEC). (e) Cognitive function (WeeFIM). AT, acupuncture treatment; ATEC, Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist; BEI, behavioral and educational interventions; SPT, Symbolic Play Test; WeeFIM, Functional Independence Measure for Children.
Figure 5Forest plots for the outcome “overall CARS score”. (a) Acupuncture versus BEI. (b) Acupuncture versus BEI and music therapy. AT, acupuncture treatment; BEI, behavioral and educational interventions; CARS, Childhood Autism Rating Scale.
Figure 6Forest plots for comparison of acupuncture versus sham acupuncture. (a) Overall RFRLRS score. (b) Social interaction skill (RFRLRS). (c) Language ability (RFRLRS). (d) Language ability-comprehension age (RDLS). (e) Language ability-expression age (RDLS). (f) Cognitive function (WeeFIM). AT, acupuncture treatment; BEI, behavioral and educational interventions; RDLS, Reynell Developmental Language Scales; RFRLRS, Ritvo-Freeman Real Life Rating Scale; WeeFIM, Functional Independence Measure for Children.
Adverse events in included studies.
| Study (reference) | Sample size | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|
| J. G. Sun and X. R. Sun 2014 | 42/42 | None |
| Wong 2008 | 18/18 | E: 1 (worsening of sleep pattern; sleeping late at night), 1 (worsening of hyperactivity and ritualistic behavior) |
| Wong and Chen 2010 | 30/25 | E: minor superficial bleeding or crying, and irritability during acupuncture was experienced by some |
| Wong and Sun 2010 | 25/25 | None. Initial crying in fear and possible minor pain occurred in the first few sessions, but patients adapted easily and tolerated the procedure well |
| Wong et al. 2014 | 12/9 | None. Initial crying in fear and possible minor pain occurred in first few sessions, but patients adapted easily and tolerated the procedure well |
| Zhao et al. 2015 | 30/30 | None |
C, control group; E, experimental group.