Acupuncture awareness week

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BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine supports the publication of  high-quality research into acupuncture.

Last week was Acupuncture Awareness Week, an initiative supported by the British Acupuncture Council which aimed to better inform the public about this complementary therapy.

Acupuncture is an ancient system of treatment, and is one of the most widely accepted forms of alternative medicine operating today. A quick search using the ‘find a qualified acupuncturist’ tool on the British Acupuncture Website shows that there are at least 20 registered acupuncturists operating within easy walking distance of the BioMed Central offices in central London.

How does acupuncture fit into the theories and practice of modern medicine? According to the theory of traditional Chinese medicine, there is an energy called ‘qi’ which flows through all of our bodies, and diseases are caused by a disregulation of this energy flow. In acupuncture, the insertion of needles at specific points called ‘meridians’ acts to correct the energy flow, and thereby heal the patient. However, there is no modern correlate in scientific knowledge to the concept of ‘qi’, and the mechanisms by which acupuncture works are still strongly debated in the field. Perhaps more importantly, evidence on the effectiveness of acupuncture is still limited.

Compounding the problem, there are also several problems which afflict research into acupuncture. Firstly there is the issue of publication bias, which can lead to the publication of a disproportionate number of positive results, while negative findings are never brought to light. A recent Commentary piece published in our sister journal BMC Psychology (also reported in The Guardian) highlighted how much this bias can negatively impact a scientific discipline. This issue is a common theme in striving towards high-quality research in complementary and alternative medicine, which we have previously also raised on our blog.

Additional problems in acupuncture research can be attributed to the difficulty in providing a placebo control group when performing clinical trials. To be adequately blinded, patients need to be unaware that they are receiving true acupuncture or sham acupuncture. How to do this in acupuncture research, when it is usually quite clear whether a needle is inserted into the body or not, is a tricky proposition.

To illustrate the problem, one possible control group option involves inserting needles into points away from ‘meridians’. However, this is founded on the belief that acupuncture is effective only when performed on meridians, which is yet to be proved. In this case, if there are no differences between the active and control groups, who is to say whether it is because both treatments are effective, or because they are both ineffective?

BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine would be very interested to hear any thoughts, and to receive submissions, suggesting possible ways around this problem.

Finally, numerous systematic reviews have shown that there is a problem with the quality of studies performed in acupuncture research. This is an issue which greatly concerns BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine, and one which we are determined to actively address. We closely  assess the quality of all trials submitted to the journal, and will not send to external peer review any studies which we consider to be of low methodological quality.

In a field that can be as controversial as complementary and alternative medicine research, it is doubly important that we ensure adherence to the correct standards of rigorous scientific methodology and accurate reporting.

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2 Comments

BookClubReadingList

There’s a great mainstream novel that is spreading awareness of acupuncture throughout the U.S.  It’s called The God Complex, by Chris Titus.  It’s a bit edgy and controversial, which definitely gets patients talking.  I think this type of word of mouth is what the practice of Oriental Medicine needs.

Mel Hopper Koppelman

Acupuncture research faces many challenges when it comes to effective study design and the main thing is to choose the design based on the research question. I personally advocate a pragmatic approach to establishing efficacy where acupuncture is compared to both a reasonable acupuncture-like control and to standard care, where standard care has been shown to be more efficacious than placebo. For example, if we look at Diener et al’s 2006 report on the efficacy of acupuncture for the prevention of migraines, we see that there wasn’t a significant difference between true acupuncture, ‘sham’ acupuncture and pharmacological treatment, such as Beta-blockers. However, Linde and Rossnagel’s Cochrane review shows that Beta-blockers are significantly more effective than placebo pills. So we know that both real acupuncture and sham-acupuncture are more effective than sugar pills, which means that acupuncture possibly produces a very good placebo or that it works beyond placebo (or both) and thus, is a reasonable intervention to consider.

I think that studies like Diener et all often get misrepresented, where critical reports summarise by saying that ‘acupuncture is not more effective than placebo.’ First of all, sham acupuncture does not qualify as a suitable ‘placebo’ control because it involves sticking needles into the body, which is in itself a type of acupuncture. Second, what the study actually showed was that sticking needles in acupuncture points, sticking needles in random points, and pharmaceuticals were not significantly different in their effectiveness and we know from previous research that all of these were more effective than sugar pills. It’s important that studies like this one get summarised more fairly.

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