lisa j taylor-swanson , ms, phd student nancy fugate woods , phd, professor, dean emeritus

15
Traditional Chinese Medicine for hot flashes & associated symptoms: Evidence from a systematic review Lisa J Taylor-Swanson, MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods, PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus Ellen Mitchell, PhD, Associate Professor Emeritus Janet Schnall, MS, AHI, Librarian 2012 State of the Science Congress on Nursing Science September 13-15, 2012 Washington, DC

Upload: tonya

Post on 12-Jan-2016

45 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

Traditional Chinese Medicine for hot flashes & associated symptoms: Evidence from a systematic review. Lisa J Taylor-Swanson , MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods , PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus Ellen Mitchell , PhD, Associate Professor Emeritus Janet Schnall , MS, AHI, Librarian. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Traditional Chinese Medicine for hot flashes & associated symptoms: Evidence from asystematic review

Lisa J Taylor-Swanson, MS, PhD Student

Nancy Fugate Woods, PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Ellen Mitchell, PhD, Associate Professor Emeritus

Janet Schnall, MS, AHI, Librarian

2012 State of the Science Congress on Nursing ScienceSeptember 13-15, 2012Washington, DC

Page 2: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Background

• 80% of women in the US experience menopausal transition (MT) symptoms – usually several symptoms

• Hormone therapy concerns have led to increased utilization of Complementary & Alternative Medicine (CAM)

• Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) used to promote women’s health…for awhile

Page 3: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Background

• TCM differential diagnoses vary by clusters of symptoms presented – congruent with study design.

• No systematic review thus far on TCM for multiple MT symptoms.

Page 4: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Purpose

• To review studies of TCM used to treat MT clusters of symptoms (hot flashes, sleep, cognitive function, mood & pain) during the menopausal transition and early post-menopause.

• To generate information useful for clinicians.

Page 5: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Methods

• We reviewed 13 controlled clinical trials (CCTs) of TCM’s effects on HFs & at least 1 other associated symptom including sleep, cognitive function, mood, and pain.

• 8 Acupuncture, 4 Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM), 1 Moxibustion (“Moxa”) papers.

• Women studied were in the menopausal transition and early post-menopause.

Page 6: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Description of Studies

Study population, location

USA, Norway, Korea, Turkey, Netherlands, China, Hong Kong, Australia

Multi-center trials

Community-based, hospitals

Sample sizes 29 – 267

Age 45-65 years old

Tx 1x - 2x / wk. 4 - 12 wks

Controls Sham acu-puncture, self-care advice, usual care, placebo pills, hormone therapy

Page 7: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Modalities studied

• Acupuncture

• Moxibustion

• Chinese Herbal medicine (CHM)

Page 8: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Results table – CHM & Moxa

Author, Yr

Intervention/Control HFs Sleep Mood Cog. Pain

CHMHaines’08

Dang gui bu xue tang. Control (C) : placebo pill. 6 months.

NS NM NS NM NS

Kwee, 2007

Zhi bai di huang +/- by dx. C: (1) placebo (2) HRT. 16 wks.

+ NM + NM NS

Qian, 2010

Kun bao wan + Xiao yao wan; herbs + psych C: psych only. 6 mos

+ + + NM +

Van der Sluijs, 2009

Er xian tang + zhi bai di huang wan (mod) +Black cohosh C: placebo tablets. 16 wks

NS NM NS NM NS

MOXAPark, ‘09

Moxa –book; moxa-clinical exp. C: wait list. 4 weeks.

+ NM + NM +

Between group findings: + P<0.05 or lower NS non-significant NM Not measured

Page 9: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Acupuncture Results

Author, Yr Intervention/Control HFs Sleep Mood Cog. PainAvis, 2008 2x/week – 8 weeks. Control (C):

usual care; sham acup. NS NS NS NM NM

Borud, ’09 10 sessions, TCM diagnosis (dx), self-care. C: self-care

+ + NM NM +

Borud, ’10 Follow up @ 6 & 12 mos. NS NS NS NM NSHuang, ’06

9 tx in 7 wks. C: off points Streitberger

NS NS NS NM NS

Kim, ’10 3x/wk – 4 wks. C: Usual care. + NM NS NM NMNir, ’07 2x/wk – 7 wks. TCM dx. C:

Streitberger –sham+ NM NS NM NS

Sunay, ’11 2x/wk– 5 wk. C: Streitberger + NM + NM NMVenzke, ’10

16 tx in 12 wks, TCM dx. C: off points.

+ NM NS NM NS

Page 10: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Results

Out of 13 CCTs reviewed – significant between group findings:

• 5 CCTs – HFs and 1+ symptom (sleep, pain, mood). (2 acu, 2 CHM, 1 moxa)

• Acupuncture, Moxibustion and Kun Bao Wan/Xiao Yao Wan plus counseling showed the most broad results. (1 study each)

• 4 CCTs – HFs only

Page 11: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Results - Continued

• Initial findings of significant improvement with 12 weeks’ acupuncture care were no longer present at 6 & 12 months follow-up.

• 5 of 8 CCTs compared acupuncture with sham acupuncture. 1 of these 5 studies found acupuncture and sham acupuncture were both significantly beneficial. (Venzke, 2010).

• No reports of serious harm or adverse events.

Page 12: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Limitations

• Scales used varied: Diary, BDI, MENQOL, Green (HF, psych), WHQ (HF, sleep), MRS (HF, pain, psych)

• Dose – What is an “acupuncture dose”?• Sham acupuncture – it is a sham?• Various CHM formulas, doses, durations studied.• TCM as practiced in clinic was not evaluated (many

tools used simultaneously).• Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) differential dx

& others used a standardized protocol.

Page 13: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Conclusions

• TCM offers promise in the management of hot flashes during the menopausal transition and early post-menopause as a safe & possibly effective tx.

• Standardization of study design and methods is needed.

• Longitudinal studies needed – what is the effectiveness trajectory? Booster sessions?

Page 14: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Thank You!

SoN Travel Fund & de Tornyay CenterSchool of Nursing, University of WA

National Institute for Nursing ResearchNIH NR01 04141 and NINR, NIH, P50-NR-02323, P30-NR04001

ARCS Foundation FellowshipSeattle Chapter

Lisa J Taylor-SwansonPhD Student & Licensed Acupuncturist

[email protected]

Page 15: Lisa J Taylor-Swanson ,  MS, PhD Student Nancy Fugate Woods ,  PhD, Professor, Dean Emeritus

Streitberger needle – sham