ObjectivesTo comprehensively evaluate the methodological quality and applicability of the results of systematic reviews on acupuncture treatment for primary depression.MethodsWeb of Science, EMbase, PubMed, The Cochrane Library, CNKI, CBM, WanFang Data and VIP databases were electronically searched to collect systematic reviews/meta-analyses on acupuncture treatment for primary depression from inception to December 5th, 2018. Two researchers independently screened and extracted data by using tools of AMSTAR 2 to evaluate the methodological quality, using ROBIS to assess risk of bias, and using CASP-S.R to evaluate the applicability of the results.ResultsA total of 18 systematic reviews/meta-analyses were included, and all focused on acupuncture intervention, including 2 primary outcome indicators. According to AMSTAR 2 evaluation results, there were 4 high quality studies, 12 medium quality studies and 2 low quality studies; ROBIS results found 10 high bias risk studies, 7 low bias risk studies and 1 unclear; CASP-S.R showed only 4 design studies applicable to local individuals, and there were no studies on the relationship between design benefits, hazards and costs.ConclusionsThe quality of systematic reviews/meta-analyses for acupuncture treatment of primary depression is moderate, however with a certain bias. Most studies may not directly benefit local individuals. All studies have no relationship with cost hazards. It is expected for further reviewers to strictly follow systematic evaluation method to improve research quality and reduce bias, while the applicability of the systematic review to individuals from different regions should be considered as well as the relationship between the benefit and cost hazard. In addition, more valid RCTs are required to provide higher quality evidence and explore correlated and comprehensive mechanism.
ObjectiveTo provide a scoping review of the clinical studies of acupuncture on Alzheimer' s disease (AD). MethodsThe CNKI, WanFang Data, VIP, CBM, Web of Science, PubMed, EMbase, Cochrane Library databases, and ClinicalTrials.gov, ChiCTR clinical trial registration systems were searched to collect clinical studies on acupuncture treatment of AD from inception to May 14, 2022. Scope review method was used to summarize and analyze the publication year trend, type, degree of disease, traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndrome differentiation, sample size, treatment plan, intervention time, and outcome. ResultsA total of 226 clinical original research were included. This field emerged in 1995 and has been increasing. The main type of clinical research was randomized controlled trials. 56 studies paid attention to the severity of AD. Only 54 studies classified AD according to different criteria of TCM syndrome differentiation. There were only 4 studies with large sample size (>200 cases). Conventional acupuncture was the main intervention method in clinical research, with a total of 129 articles. Electroacupuncture was the main special acupuncture method, a total of 31 articles. More than 70 % of the studies had a course of intervention between 84 and 168 days. Among the 12 types of outcome indicators, cognitive function, clinical efficiency, activity function evaluation, cerebrospinal fluid and blood biomarkers, and adverse reactions were the most concerned outcomes. However, less attention was paid to neuropsychiatric symptoms and quality of life in AD patients. Acupuncture could improve the cognitive function of AD patients, but the current clinical related mechanism research was shallow, and the acupuncture point selection was also more diverse. ConclusionThe clinical research of acupuncture in AD has formed a scale, but the current research type is single. The clinical research design schemes are various but not yet unified, and there is a lack of relevant authoritative TCM standards.
ObjectivesTo analyze the development of acupuncture registered trials based on WHO international clinical trial registration platform (ICTRP) in the past 5 years.MethodsWHO ICTRP database was electronically searched to collect acupuncture-related clinical trials registered from January 1st, 2014 to December 31st, 2018. Two reviewers independently screened items, extracted data, and descriptive analysis was performed for the included trials.ResultsThe results showed that there were 1 556 registered clinical trials on acupuncture, and the most registered year was 2017. China was in the main country in applying for acupuncture-related clinical trials, however, the most registered unit was Kyung Hee University in Korea. The trials were mainly interventional research, mostly used randomized, blinded methods, and design modes were mainly based on parallel trials. In clinical trial phase, the majority were in the clinical trial period of treatment of new technologies. The field of clinical research was expected to be on pain in the future.ConclusionsAlthough acupuncture research is currently in a good stage of development, it should still value on the quality and innovative training of relevant trials, strengthen Chinese ties with other countries, focus on regional, domestic and international cooperation, expand research types, and enhance acupuncture applicability.
ObjectiveTo summarize and evaluate the quality of methodology, report and evidence of the systematic reviews and meta-analyses (SRs/MAs) of acupuncture and moxibustion interventions for Parkinson's disease. MethodsEight databases including CNKI, WanFang Data, VIP, CBM, PubMed, EMbase, Cochrane Library and Web of Science were searched from inception to May 1, 2023. The quality of methodology, report and evidence involved in these studies were evaluated by AMSTAR 2, PRISMA and GRADE tool. ResultsA total of 28 SRs/MAs were included, and the findings of included studies showed that acupuncture and moxibustion had a clinical advantage for Parkinson's disease. The methodological quality of all studies was extremely low. Thirteen reports were relatively complete, 14 reports had certain flaws, and 1 report had relatively serious flaws. And of the 126 reports for seven outcomes, 1 was graded as high, 12 as moderate, 57 as low, and 56 as critically low. ConclusionThe current evidence shows that acupuncture and moxibustion have a certain clinical effect for Parkinson's disease, but the methodological quality and evidence quality of related SRs/MAs are low, and the standardization still needs to be improved. The efficacy of acupuncture and moxibustion in Parkinson's disease still needs to be verified by high-quality clinical studies in the future.