Literature DB >> 35217506

Increasing the usefulness of acupuncture guideline recommendations.

Yu-Qing Zhang1,2,3,4, Liming Lu5, Nenggui Xu5, Xiaorong Tang5, Xiaoshuang Shi3, Alonso Carrasco-Labra6, Holger Schünemann2, Yaolong Chen7,8, Jun Xia4,9, Guang Chen10, Jianping Liu11, Baoyan Liu12, Jiyao Wang13, Amir Qaseem14, Xianghong Jing3, Gordon Guyatt2,15, Hong Zhao16,17.   

Abstract

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35217506      PMCID: PMC8868046          DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2022-070533

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


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Acupuncture is the most widely used traditional and complementary medicine, used in 113 of 120 countries according to a 2019 World Health Organization report.3 In addition to registered acupuncturists, medical doctors, nurse practitioners, and chiropractors occasionally deliver acupuncture treatment.4 Despite its widespread use and considerable available evidence, until recently, clinical practice guidelines from conventional medical organisations rarely included recommendations on acupuncture. Clinical practice guidelines aim to optimise patient care,1 and must meet standards of trustworthiness to avoid misleading clinicians, patients, and other stakeholders.2 We begin by summarising the progress made then address deficiencies that limit the clinical usefulness of acupuncture guidelines, examine the barriers to inclusion of acupuncture in guidelines, and suggest how to overcome them.

Which guidelines include acupuncture recommendations?

More than 1300 consensus and evidence based clinical practice guidelines were published between 1991 and 2007, and these included 2189 recommendations on the use of acupuncture.5 Two thirds of these recommendations focused on pain related conditions.5 Guidelines that include acupuncture fall into three types: those including acupuncture with conventional interventions, those restricted to traditional and complementary medicine, and those covering acupuncture only. Although researchers have criticised the exclusion of acupuncture interventions from clinical guidelines,5 6 conventional medicine is increasingly including acupuncture as one more relevant intervention. For example, between 2010 and 2020, 133 guidelines included more than 430 acupuncture recommendations worldwide (fig 1).7 Over 70% of these guidelines were produced by conventional medical organisations, with the remainder published by organisations focused on traditional and complementary medicine in China, South Korea, and Australia.7 Acupuncture was most commonly recommended for musculoskeletal and connective tissue disease; neurological disorders; obstetrics, gynaecology, and women’s health; oncology; and gastrointestinal disorders.5 6 7 8
Fig 1

Clinical guidelines that include acupuncture recommendations according to whether they are comprehensive (including conventional medicine), acupuncture only, or all traditional and complementary medicine

Clinical guidelines that include acupuncture recommendations according to whether they are comprehensive (including conventional medicine), acupuncture only, or all traditional and complementary medicine

Are acupuncture guidelines evidence based?

Trustworthy guidelines are informed by systematic reviews of the best available evidence, including an assessment of the certainty of evidence and a rating of the strength of recommendations.1 Nearly half (49%) of the guidelines that included acupuncture interventions relied on systematic reviews, which is a higher proportion than for guidelines in general medicine (31% used systematic reviews).9 Roughly half of the guidelines used the GRADE approach to assessing evidence certainty and strength of recommendations,7 with other methods such as those of the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network, National Health and Medical Research Council, American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association, and Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine used in less than 5% of guidelines.7

How useful are current acupuncture guidelines?

To be useful, clinical recommendations should explicitly describe the target patients with sufficient detail to allow clinicians to judge the extent of similarity to their patients. In acupuncture guidelines, as in some others, this is not always the case.10 Among acupuncture recommendations published in the past 10 years, less than 4% reported the severity of the underlying condition to which their recommendations apply, and less than 30% reported disease stage.7 For example, in 2019, the China Association of Chinese Medicine published a guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of knee osteoarthritis using traditional Chinese medicine.11 It recommended using acupuncture for knee pain, swelling, and limited function without specifying the severity of the osteoarthritis. It is unclear to which patient population (mild, moderate, severe, or all) its recommendations apply. Failure to provide sufficient details regarding the interventions also limits clinicians’ ability to implement the recommended acupuncture treatment. Just 40% of guidelines from conventional medicine organisations specified the types of acupuncture (eg, manual, electro-acupuncture, acupressure) they were recommending, and only 5% specified the range of points selected.7 The American College of Chest Physicians guideline on complementary therapies and integrative medicine for lung cancer suggested using acupuncture or related techniques as an adjunct treatment for nausea and vomiting from chemotherapy or radiation therapy (moderate certainty evidence, conditional recommendation).12 However, the recommendation did not specify the types of acupuncture, the range of acupoints selected, or the frequency and duration of treatment. When using recommendations, clinicians need to understand how a particular intervention compares with available alternatives. The net benefit of a specific intervention is likely to differ substantially depending on the comparator. Current acupuncture recommendations often fail to make the comparator explicit (box 1).7 Without a clear comparison, a recommendation is not actionable.13

UK guideline on diagnosis and management of headaches in young people and adults14

The guideline from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence concluded a net benefit of acupuncture over no treatment and recommended acupuncture. It also concluded that topiramate had net benefit over acupuncture and so recommended topiramate14

Korean medicine clinical practice guideline for lumbar herniated intervertebral disc in adults15

The recommendation favouring acupuncture for lumbar herniated intervertebral disc failed to specify whether the comparator is no intervention or other alternative intervention (eg, physical therapy)15 For clinicians to determine if the evidence justifies the recommendations, guidelines need to provide evidence on all “patient important” outcomes (benefits, harms, and burdens) for the competing interventions. Among guidelines that included acupuncture interventions in the past decade, 80% of the acupuncture specific guidelines reported outcomes to justify their recommendations. However, nearly half of the guidelines from conventional and complementary medicine do not report the outcomes evaluated.7 Moreover, failure to consider patients’ values and preferences further limited the usefulness of acupuncture recommendations. A review of clinical guidelines including acupuncture found less than 20% explicitly considered patients’ values and preferences (box 2).7 Guidelines on recurrent urinary tract infection from the Canadian Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists16 suggest acupuncture as an alternative prevention strategy in women with recurrent infections who are unresponsive to or intolerant of antibiotic prophylaxis. Continuous low dose antibiotics can cause antibiotic resistance, vaginal and oral candidiasis, and severe side effects such as skin rash and severe nausea.16 17 Patients who place a high value on avoiding antibiotic related adverse effects might prefer acupuncture prophylaxis regardless of their responsiveness to or tolerance of antibiotics. If the panel had considered patient values it might have proposed acupuncture as an alternative to antibiotics in all women considering prophylaxis. A recommendation explicitly addressing patients’ values would have a broader application beyond patients who are unresponsive to or intolerant of antibiotic prophylaxis.

What barriers exist in acupuncture guideline implementation?

Implementing an evidence based intervention into usual care takes an average of 17 years.18 Acupuncture is not an exception to this. For example, less than a quarter of clinicians in the US and China follow evidence based guidelines on use of acupuncture to treat low back pain and assist in recovery from cerebral infarction.19 20 21 Barriers to implementation of acupuncture guidelines include personal factors related to physicians’ knowledge and attitudes, guideline related factors, and external factors such as organisational constraints, lack of resources or time, workload, and facilitation. For instance, a recent UK study surveyed general practitioners’ use of guidelines recommending acupuncture.22 Use of acupuncture was limited because of personal factors such as lack of awareness of the recommendations; external factors such as availability of practitioners to implement the intervention; and organisational constraints (clinical commissioning group controlling access). Another study evaluated the implementation of evidence based traditional and complementary medicine guidelines on the care of inpatients after cerebral infarction in China.19 It found personal factors, including clinicians’ disagreement with the recommendations and lack of training and knowledge in the use of guidelines; external factors related to resources (coverage, unavailability of acupuncturists, and patients' economic status); and social and clinical norms or culture were the most important constraints on uptake of acupuncture recommendations. Cultural factors also affect policy making, the composition of guideline development committees, allocation of resources, and the acceptability of acupuncture. For example, when considering resource use, whether a country relies on universal coverage or insurance companies, whether patients can choose the healthcare providers, and whether healthcare providers have the choice of therapies can substantially affect whether acupuncture recommendations are followed. A hospital focused study across 11 cities in China identified inconvenient usage (eg, failure to link recommendations to the hospital information system); guideline unawareness; practicality (eg, unclear, unfeasible, and impractical to implement); and lack of evidence from local context among the highest barriers. Further research is needed in guideline implementation given the limited number of studies available.

Do guidelines make recommendations Remark: Here is about “making recommendations” not whether a guideline include clinical questions. for all questions of clinical interest?

Patients and clinicians often encounter situations in which limited evidence is available to support the use of an intervention. Even when there is uncertainty, clinicians still prefer to have guidelines rather than relying on systematic reviews, as it saves time and effort. In a randomised controlled trial that presented 500 clinicians with a clinical scenario for which sparse evidence was available, 80% of participants preferred receiving a recommendation.23 24 However, 22% of the guidelines from conventional medicine organisations that included evidence on acupuncture with low or very low certainty refrained from making recommendations.7 For example, the 2021 US Department of Veterans Affairs guidelines on primary care management of headache mentioned acupuncture but did not make any relevant recommendation.25 By contrast, the UK guidelines (rightly in our view) made a conditional recommendation suggesting up to 10 sessions of acupuncture over 5-8 weeks for prevention of chronic tension type headache despite low certainty of evidence compared with no treatment.14 A recent overview of reviews26 found low or very low certainty of evidence for moderate to large benefits from acupuncture in 50 diseases or conditions. Despite the substantial potential benefits documented, clinical guidelines disregarded acupuncture as an alternative in 15 of these diseases or conditions (table 1).
Table 1

Diseases and conditions for which acupuncture has a potential benefit (moderate or large effect) but is not included in clinical practice guidelines

Therapeutic area/disease or conditionComparatorsOutcomesCertainty of evidenceRelative risk or standardised mean difference† [Q to A with 95% CI? ] Effect size
Connective tissue diseases
Fibromyalgia syndromeSham acupunctureSleep quality*Low−0.46 (−0.75 to −0.18)Moderate
Ear, nose, and throat disorders
Meniere's diseaseWestern medicineDizziness handicap inventory*Very low−1.88 (−3.06 to −0.7)Large
Eye disorders
XerophthalmiaWestern medicineSymptom scores*Very low−1.23 (−2.08 to −0.38)Large
XerophthalmiaUsual careChanges in Chronic Health Evaluation II scoreLow0.76 (0.5 to 1.03)Large
Gastrointestinal disorders
Peptic ulcerWestern medicineRecurrence rate*Very low0.35 (0.14 to 0.84)Large
Genitourinary disorders
Chronic kidney diseaseUsual careDepression*Very low−0.72 (−1.2 to −0.24)Large
Chronic kidney diseaseUsual carePittsburgh Sleep Quality Index*Very low−0.55 (−0.96 to −0.14)Moderate
Mental health
Alcohol use disorderSham acupunctureAlcohol craving*Very low−1 (−1.79 to −0.21)Large
Alcohol use disorderNo interventionAlcohol withdrawal symptoms*Low−0.54 (−0.93 to −0.14)Moderate
Chronic fatigue syndromeSham acupunctureMental fatigue*Very low−1.99 (−3.67 to −0.31)Large
Opioid use disorderNo interventionCraving for opioid*Low−1.26 (−1.73 to −0.78)Large
Neurological conditions
Children with autism spectrum disorderBehavioural and educational interventionsOverall Childhood Autism Rating Scale*Low−1.87 (−3.21 to −0.53)Moderate
Carpal tunnel syndromeSham acupuncturePain relief (at week 4 after randomisation)*Low−1.14 (−1.98 to −0.3)Large
Carpal tunnel syndromeWestern medicinePain relief (at week 5 after randomisation)*Very low−1.05 (−1.64 to −0.45)Large
Tic disorderWestern medicineSeverity of tics*Low−1.29 (−1.87 to −0.7)Large
Obstetrics, gynaecology, and women’s health
Menopausal syndromeNo interventionHot flush frequency (>12 weeks)*Very low−0.7 (−1.03 to −0.36)Large
Menopausal syndromeNo interventionHot flush frequency (<12 weeks)*Low−0.47 (−0.78 to −0.15)Moderate
Menopausal syndromeWestern medicinePostmenopausal osteoporosis—pain relief*Very low−0.74 (−1.08 to −0.39)Large
Menopausal syndromeSham acupunctureQuality of life (menopause rating scale) at end of treatment*Very low−1.52 (−1.77 to −1.28)Large
Menopausal syndromeSham acupunctureQuality of life (menopause rating scale at follow-up 1-3 months after treatment)*Very low−1.05 (−1.28 to −0.82)Large
Postpartum lactatingStandard careAdequacy ratio of lactation within 24 hours after deliveryLow2.11 (1.29 to 3.43)Large
Postpartum lactatingStandard careAdequacy ratio of lactation within 72 hours after deliveryLow2.37 (1.33 to 4.22)Large
Periprocedural care
Postoperative painSham acupunctureIntensity of postoperative pain on movement or cough*Very low−1.31 (−1.71 to −0.91)Large
Postoperative painSham acupuncturePostoperative resting pain intensity at 24 h*Very low−0.64 (−0.89 to −0.38)Moderate
Postoperative painSham acupunctureVAS scores 24 h after total knee arthroplasty*Very low−0.47 (−0.87 to −0.08)Moderate
Postoperative ileus after abdominal surgeryStandard careTime to first flatus*Low−1.1 (−1.54 to −0.65)Large
Postoperative ileus after abdominal surgeryStandard careTime to first defecation*Low−0.84 (−1.29 to −0.39)Large
Postoperative ileus after abdominal surgeryStandard careTime to bowel sound recovery*Low−1.2 (−1.92 to −0.47)Large

Better outcome when the value is lower.

For dichotomous outcomes, we chose relative risk (RR) of 2.0 or 0.5 as the reference for small and large effects, respectively (RR ≥2.0 or RR ≤0.5 as large, 0.5

Diseases and conditions for which acupuncture has a potential benefit (moderate or large effect) but is not included in clinical practice guidelines Better outcome when the value is lower. For dichotomous outcomes, we chose relative risk (RR) of 2.0 or 0.5 as the reference for small and large effects, respectively (RR ≥2.0 or RR ≤0.5 as large, 0.5

Recommendations

Joint guideline development and definitive integration into patient care

When deciding on treatment, patients should have access to evidence supporting all reasonable care options regardless of whether they belong to conventional, traditional, or complementary medicine. When existing guidelines have compared acupuncture with other interventions, acupuncture specific guidelines can provide more specificity by considering different forms of acupuncture. Conventional medical societies should collaborate with specialised acupuncture medical associations to increase the consideration of acupuncture treatments in recommendations. Collaboration can occur at two levels—firstly, in establishing joint priorities on critical clinical questions to consider in clinical guidelines, including acupuncture.27 For instance, collaboration would facilitate comprehensive guidelines focusing on whether acupuncture for headache prevention should be recommended versus no intervention or usual care, while acupuncture specific guidelines can concentrate on the optimal type of acupuncture, point selection, and duration of acupuncture treatment. Secondly, collaboration could facilitate recruiting a broad range of clinical experts to guideline panels. An example of such a type of collaboration is reflected in the production of the first global acupuncture guideline, a joint effort between conventional medicine, traditional and complementary medicine, and acupuncture specific societies. The World Federation of Acupuncture and Moxibustion Society recently developed the first international acupuncture guideline for treating depression. This effort included 21 expert panels from Australia, South Korea, Germany, Norway, the USA, and China. Several international medical societies have endorsed the guideline. Such joint efforts could improve efficiency, reduce research waste, facilitate guidelines dissemination, and encourage the uptake of recommendations in clinical practice.

Produce more patient centric guidelines and recommendations

When making acupuncture recommendations, guidelines should summarise all patient important benefits, harms, and burdens of the competing interventions and specify the values and preferences underlying their recommendations, including how they arrived at those values. To ensure a consistent understanding of outcomes when discussing evidence, guideline developers should create standard health outcome descriptors (or marker states)— presentations in lay terms that describe the symptoms, time horizon (when and how long the outcome will persist), testing and treatment required, and consequences.28 Estimates of the relative importance patients place on different outcomes can come from systematic reviews of primary studies, surveys, or focus groups. Including patient partners in the panel may provide additional insights about patients’ perspectives.29

Increase use of existing extensive acupuncture evidence to inform recommendations

Much evidence in many clinical areas, including acupuncture, is of low certainty.26 When guideline developers identify relevant clinical questions, they should use the best available evidence to formulate recommendations even if it is low certainty. Evidence matrices can help guideline developers to identify relevant evidence. A 2021 evidence mapping identified systematic reviews of 1402 randomised controlled trials in acupuncture for 77 diseases, across 12 therapeutic areas, including 138 995 patients.26

Improve reporting standards

Acupuncture recommendations should improve reporting of patients’ condition, disease state and severity, intervention, comparator(s), and outcomes. The International Standard for Reporting Items for Practice Guideline in Healthcare (RIGHT) includes an extension that covers reporting of acupuncture guidelines and recommendations .30 31 The Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) and TIDieR-Placebo checklists help achieve optimal reporting of interventions and comparators.32 33

Conclusion

Conventional medical communities increasingly consider acupuncture, contributing two thirds of all guidelines addressing acupuncture interventions. These recommendations are, however, still limited in their usefulness because of poor reporting of target populations, incomplete description of acupuncture intervention, failure to specify alternative care options, lack of comprehensive consideration of all patient important outcomes, failure to elucidate and apply patients’ values and preferences, and disregard of a large portion of the available body of acupuncture evidence. While limited available evidence suggests that existing barriers to implementation of acupuncture recommendations have commonality across cultures, few research efforts have focused on implementing acupuncture guidelines. Guideline developers should establish joint efforts to set research priorities between conventional and complementary medicine communities and follow the relevant reporting standards and checklists to produce clear, actionable, trustworthy, patient centred guidelines. A global approach to guideline implementation research is needed to increase the uptake and adherence of evidence based acupuncture guidelines in practice. Local, regional, or international medical organisations producing conventional guidelines, including western interventions, contributed two thirds of acupuncture related guidelines Failure to adequately characterise patient, intervention, and comparator undermines the usefulness of acupuncture recommendations Clinical practice guidelines often fail to consider acupuncture interventions despite evidence of benefit Establishing collaboration between conventional and traditional complementary medicine communities may help remedy the neglect of acupuncture Key necessary improvements in acupuncture guidelines include explicit consideration of patients’ values and preferences, using entire body evidence in acupuncture, and a clearer description of interventions, comparators, and the patients to whom recommendations apply.
  23 in total

1.  GRADE guidelines: 20. Assessing the certainty of evidence in the importance of outcomes or values and preferences-inconsistency, imprecision, and other domains.

Authors:  Yuan Zhang; Pablo Alonso Coello; Gordon H Guyatt; Juan Jose Yepes-Nuñez; Elie A Akl; Glen Hazlewood; Hector Pardo-Hernandez; Itziar Etxeandia-Ikobaltzeta; Amir Qaseem; John W Williams; Peter Tugwell; Signe Flottorp; Yaping Chang; Yuqing Zhang; Reem A Mustafa; María Ximena Rojas; Feng Xie; Holger J Schünemann
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2018-05-22       Impact factor: 6.437

2.  Do clinicians want recommendations? A multicenter study comparing evidence summaries with and without GRADE recommendations.

Authors:  Ignacio Neumann; Pablo Alonso-Coello; Per Olav Vandvik; Thomas Agoritsas; Gemma Mas; Elie A Akl; Romina Brignardello-Petersen; Jose Emparanza; Lauren McCullagh; Catherine De Sitio; Thomas McGinn; Hind Almodaimegh; Khalid Almodaimegh; Solange Rivera; Luis Rojas; Jérôme Stirnemann; Jihad Irani; Sani Hlais; Reem Mustafa; Fadi Bdair; Abdelrahman Aly; Annette Kristiansen; Ariel Izcovich; Anggie Ramirez; Jan Brozek; Gordon Guyatt; Holger J Schünemann
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2018-03-09       Impact factor: 6.437

3.  The Western model of integrative oncology: the contribution of Chinese medicine.

Authors:  Gustav J Dobos; Barbara Kirschbaum; Kyung-Eun Choi
Journal:  Chin J Integr Med       Date:  2012-08-31       Impact factor: 1.978

4.  How to Interpret and Use a Clinical Practice Guideline or Recommendation: Users' Guides to the Medical Literature.

Authors:  Romina Brignardello-Petersen; Alonso Carrasco-Labra; Gordon H Guyatt
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2021-10-19       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 5.  A guide for health professionals to interpret and use recommendations in guidelines developed with the GRADE approach.

Authors:  Ignacio Neumann; Nancy Santesso; Elie A Akl; David M Rind; Per Olav Vandvik; Pablo Alonso-Coello; Thomas Agoritsas; Reem A Mustafa; Paul Elias Alexander; Holger Schünemann; Gordon H Guyatt
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2016-01-06       Impact factor: 6.437

6.  Better reporting of interventions: template for intervention description and replication (TIDieR) checklist and guide.

Authors:  Tammy C Hoffmann; Paul P Glasziou; Isabelle Boutron; Ruairidh Milne; Rafael Perera; David Moher; Douglas G Altman; Virginia Barbour; Helen Macdonald; Marie Johnston; Sarah E Lamb; Mary Dixon-Woods; Peter McCulloch; Jeremy C Wyatt; An-Wen Chan; Susan Michie
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2014-03-07

Review 7.  The answer is 17 years, what is the question: understanding time lags in translational research.

Authors:  Zoë Slote Morris; Steven Wooding; Jonathan Grant
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 5.344

8.  Nonpharmacologic and Pharmacologic Management of Acute Pain From Non-Low Back, Musculoskeletal Injuries in Adults: A Clinical Guideline From the American College of Physicians and American Academy of Family Physicians.

Authors:  Amir Qaseem; Robert M McLean; David O'Gurek; Pelin Batur; Kenneth Lin; Devan L Kansagara; Thomas G Cooney; Mary Ann Forciea; Carolyn J Crandall; Nick Fitterman; Lauri A Hicks; Carrie Horwitch; Michael Maroto; Robert M McLean; Reem A Mustafa; Janice Tufte; Sandeep Vijan; John W Williams
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2020-08-18       Impact factor: 25.391

9.  Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use in the US Adult Low Back Pain Population.

Authors:  Neha Ghildayal; Pamela Jo Johnson; Roni L Evans; Mary Jo Kreitzer
Journal:  Glob Adv Health Med       Date:  2016-01-01
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  1 in total

1.  Efficacy of acupuncture in animal models of vascular dementia: A systematic review and network meta-analysis.

Authors:  Guangyao Li; Yuling Shi; Lu Zhang; Chuanghui Yang; Ting Wan; Hang Lv; Wenxuan Jian; Jinghu Li; Min Li
Journal:  Front Aging Neurosci       Date:  2022-08-18       Impact factor: 5.702

  1 in total

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