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Acupuncture for low back pain

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House of Lords Report. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SCIENCES ... Kate Thomas (PI) Lucy Thorpe. Mark Roman. Julie Ratcliffe. John Brazier. Mike Fitter. Mike Campbell ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acupuncture for low back pain


1
Acupuncture for low back pain
  • Hugh MacPherson
  • Senior Research Fellow
  • Department of Health Sciences
  • hm18_at_york.ac.uk

2
Numbers of practitioners
  • 50,000 Complementary Alternative (CAM)
    practitioners
  • 10,000 acupuncture practitioners - approx
  • 2500 doctors (BMAS)
  • 2500 physios (AACP)
  • 2500 acupuncturists (BAcC)
  • 2500 Chinese shop practitioners (unregulated)
  • House of Lords Report

3
Effectiveness gaps in primary care
  • Based on survey of GP perceptions (n78)
  • Musculoskeletal 95
  • Depression 45
  • Eczema 36
  • Chronic pain 32
  • Irritable bowel 32
  • Fisher 2004

4
Why use the randomised controlled trial (RCT) for
evidence of effectiveness?
  • Key reasons are
  • Control for natural history of the disease
    (people tend to recover anyway)
  • Attribute change to intervention (minimise bias)

5
Comparing pragmatic and explanatory RCT
6
Acupuncture versus sham acupuncture short-term
(lt6 weeks outcome)
7
Acupuncture versus no treatment short-term (lt6
weeks outcome)
Source Manheimer et al Ann In Med 2005
8
Acupuncture versus no treatment long-term (gt6
weeks outcome)
Source Manheimer et al Ann In Med 2005
9
Overall improvement
Source Manheimer et al Ann In Med 2005
10
GERAC randomised controlled trials
LBP
OA Knee
Scharf et al, Ann Int Med 2006
11
sham intervention vs. no treatment
Hrobjartsson A, Götzsche P. Cochrane Library
2006 ART Mig Linde K. et al. JAMA
20052932118 ART TTH Melchart D et al. BMJ
2005331376 ART LBP Brinkhaus et al. Arch
Intern Med 2006166450 ART OAK Witt et al.
Lancet 2005366136
12
The UK perspective
  • Health Technology Assessments call for
    proposals 1997
  • Does acupuncture have long term effectiveness in
    the management of pain in primary care?

13
We set out to test the hypothesis that.
  • . primary care patients in the UK with
    persistent low back pain, when referred for up to
    10 acupuncture sessions, gain more relief from
    pain than those offered usual management only,
    for equal or less cost.

14
Inclusion/exclusion
  • INCLUSION Patients aged 20 to 65 with current
    episode at least 4 weeks duration
  • EXCLUSION A current episode of back pain of more
    than 12 months duration, possible serious spinal
    pathology

15
(No Transcript)
16
Baseline demographics
17
Baseline demographics
18
Acupuncture treatments provided
  • Average 8 treatments per patient, usually weekly
  • Average 10 needles per treatment
  • Individualised point selection
  • Auxiliary techniques and advice

19
Underlying principles of acupuncture
  • Diagnosis of imbalance
  • Catalyst for change
  • Leads to self-healing
  • Goal of longer-term impact

20
Treatments received during 3 three months
21
SF-36 Bodily Pain score at 3 months adjusted
for baseline
Diff 5 pts P 0.129
22
SF-36 Bodily Pain score at 12 months adjusted
for baseline
Diff 6 pts P 0.111
23
SF-36 Bodily Pain score at 24 months adjusted
for baseline
Diff 8 pts P 0.003
Source Thomas et al BMJ 2006
24
Practitioner approach(based on interviews)
  • a complex intervention
  • individualised care
  • new understandings
  • actively involving patients
  • a long term approach

25
At randomisationDo you believe that
acupuncture can help your low back pain?
26
At randomisationDo you believe that
acupuncture can help your low back pain?
27
Worry about back pain at 24 months (compared to
baseline)
Diff. between groups Plt0.001
28
Heterogeneity of acupuncturists
29
NHS and total social costs (mean cost/patient at
24 months)
Estimated cost per QALY gained 4,241Source
Ratcliffe et al BMJ 2006
30
Conclusions
  • The evidence suggests that acupuncture is
    effective for low back pain
  • In primary care in the UK, a short course of
    individualised acupuncture confers clinical and
    cost benefits at 24 months
  • The evidence supports appropriate commissioning
    of acupuncture for low back pain in primary care

31
Acknowledgements re back pain trial
  • NCCHTA
  • Patients
  • Acupuncturists
  •  
  • Patient representative
  • David Laverick
  • Advisory Board
  • Trevor Sheldon (chair)
  • Sally Bell?Syer
  • Research Team
  •  
  • Kate Thomas (PI)
  • Lucy Thorpe
  • Mark Roman
  • Julie Ratcliffe
  • John Brazier
  • Mike Fitter
  • Mike Campbell
  • Ann Morgan
  • Liz Oswald
  • Helen Wilkinson
  • Jon Nicholl
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