Acupoint Stimulation for Acne: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials
Item
Title
Acupoint Stimulation for Acne: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials
Author(s)
Date
2013
volume
25(3)
pages
173-194
Research Type
Systematic Review
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acupoint stimulation- including acupunture, moxibustion, cupping, acupoint injection, and acupoint catgut embedding- has shown a beneficial effect for treating acne.. However, comprehensive evaluation of current clinical evidence is lacking. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this review was to assess the effectiveness and safety of all acupoint stimulation techniques used to treat acne vulgaris. DESIGN: A systematic review was conducted. It included only randomized controlled trials on acupoint stimulation for acne. Six electronic databases were searched for English and Chinese language studies. All searches ended in May 2012. Studies were selected for elegibility and assessed for quality. RevMan 5.1 software was used for data analysis with an effect estimate presented as risk ratios (RR) or mean difference (MD) with a 95% confidence interval (CI). PATIENTS: Studies with subjects who were diagnosed with acne vulgaris, or papulopapustular, inflammatory, adolescent, or ploymorphic acne - regardless of gender, age, and ethnicity - were included. INTERVENTION: Interventions included any acupoint stumuation technique - such as acupuncture, moxibustion, cupping, acupoint injection, acupoint catgut embedding -compared with no treatment, placebo, or conventional pharmaceutical medication. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Reduction of signs and symptoms and presence of adverse effects were examined. RESULTS: Forty-three trials involving 3453 patients with acne were included. The methodological quality of trials was gernally poor in terms of randomization, blinding, and intention-to-treat analysis. Meta-analyses showed significant differences in increasing the number of cured patients between acupuncture plus herbal medicine and herbal medicine alone (RR: 1.60; 95% CI; 1.19-2.14; P=0.002), and between acupuncture plus herbal facial mask and herbal facial mask alone (RR: 2.14; 95% CI: 1.29-3.55; P=0.003). Cupping theraopy was significantly better than pharmaceutical medications for increasing the number of cured patients (RR: 2.11; 95% CI: 1.45-3.07; P<0.0001). Serious adverse events were not reported in all included trials. CONCLUSIONS: Acupoint stimulation therapies combined with other treatments appears to be effective for acne. However, further large, rigorously designed trials are needed to confirm these findings. KEY WORDS: Acne; Acupoint Stimulation, Systematic Review;
doi
10.1089/acu.2012.0906
View on Pubmed
has health condition studied
Skin Diseases
has study population number
0