Acupuncture in Patients with Allergic Asthma: A Randomized Pragmatic Trial.

J Altern Complement Med. 2017 Apr;23(4):268-277. doi: 10.1089/acm.2016.0357. Epub 2017 Mar 13.

Brinkhaus B, Roll S, Jena S, Icke K, Adam D, Binting S, Lotz F, Willich SN, Witt CM

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Although the available evidence is insufficient, acupuncture is used in patients suffering from chronic asthma. The aim of this pragmatic study was to investigate the effectiveness of acupuncture in addition to routine care in patients with allergic asthma compared to treatment with routine care alone.

METHODS:

Patients with allergic asthma were included in a randomized controlled trial and randomized to receive up to 15 acupuncturesessions over 3 months or to a control group receiving routine care alone. Patients who did not consent to randomization received acupuncture treatment for the first 3 months and were followed as a cohort. All trial patients were allowed to receive routine care in addition to study treatment. The primary endpoint was the asthma quality of life questionnaire (AQLQ, range: 1-7) at 3 months. Secondary endpoints included general health related to quality of life (Short-Form-36, SF-36, range 0-100). Outcome parameters were assessed at baseline and at 3 and 6 months.

RESULTS:

A total of 1,445 patients (mean age 43.8 [SD 13.5] years, 58.7% female) were randomized and included in the analysis (184 patients randomized to acupuncture and 173 to control, and 1,088 in the nonrandomized acupuncture group). In the randomized part, acupuncture was associated with an improvement in the AQLQ score compared to the control group (difference acupuncture vs. control group 0.7 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.5-1.0]) as well as in the physical component scale and the mental component scale of the SF-36 (physical: 2.5 [1.0-4.0]; mental 4.0 [2.1-6.0]) after 3 months. Treatment success was maintained throughout 6 months. Patients not consenting to randomization showed similar improvements as the randomized acupuncture group.

CONCLUSIONS:

In patients with allergic asthma, additional acupuncture treatment to routine care was associated with increased disease-specific and health-related quality of life compared to treatment with routine care alone.

KEYWORDS:

acupuncture; allergic asthma; comparative effectiveness research; complementary medicine; pragmatic trial; randomized controlled trial; routine care

PMID: 28287818    DOI: 10.1089/acm.2016.0357

Product of the week

Save up to 50% on professional therapy treatments at the Body & Mind Therapy Centre

Body & Mind Discount Club

Become a member and save up to 50% on our list prices! Members receive an automatic 15% off every list price therapy treatment. T&C’s apply

Testimonials

I have visited twice now for a wellbeing package with Oliwia. She is a miracle worker and has helped alleviate so the stress caused my busy lifestyle. Not only is she a brilliant massage therapist, but the treatment is much more holistic than you get elsewhere – by this, I mean she incorporates gentle touches too, to really relax your mind and feel cared for and supported. I highly recommend Oliwia for busy mums like me. She gives lots general wellbeing advice too and has changed the way I feel about myself and look after myself.

View more...