Hillier Susan L, Louw Quinette, Morris Linzette, Uwimana Jeanine, Statham Sue
Centre for Allied Health Evidence, University of South Australia (City East), North Terrace, Adelaide, SA, Australia, 5000.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2010 Jan 20;2010(1):CD007502. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007502.pub2.
Infection with human immunodeficency virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficency syndrome (AIDS) is a pandemic that has affected millions of people globally. Although major research and clinical initiatives are addressing prevention and cure strategies, issues of quality of life for survivors have received less attention. Massage therapy is proposed to have a positive effect on quality of life and may also have a positive effect on immune function through stress mediation.
The objective of this systematic review was to examine the safety and effectiveness of massage therapy on quality of life, pain and immune system parameters in people living with HIV/AIDS.
A comprehensive search strategy was devised incorporating appropriate terms for HIV/AIDS, randomised controlled trials (RCTs), massage therapy and the pertinent measures of benefit. All electronic databases identified were searched in November 2008, including Cochrane Group Trials Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCIENCE CITATION INDEX, AIDSLINE, AIDSearch, CINAHL, HEALTHSTAR, PsycLIT, AMED, Current Contents, AMI, NLM GATEWAY, LILACS, IndMed, SOCIOFILE, SCI, SSCI, ERIC and DAI. We also reviewed relevant published and unpublished conference abstracts and proceedings and scrutinised reference lists from pertinent journals. There were no language or date restrictions.
Studies were identified by two reviewers based on trial design (RCTs) and participants (ie, people of any age with HIV/AIDS, at any stage of the disease) who had undergone an intervention that included massage therapy for the identified aims of improving quality of life and activity and participation levels, improving immune function, reducing pain and improving other physiological or psychological impairments.
Two reviewers independently identified included studies and extracted relevant data. Two other reviewers independently reviewed the included studies for risk of bias. All data and risk of bias judgements were entered into Revman (v5) and meta-analyses were conducted where appropriate.
Twelve papers were identified, from which four were included. The remaining eight papers were excluded predominantly due to inappropriate methodology. The four included studies were highly clinically heterogenous, investigating a range of age groups (ie, children, adolescents and adults) across the disease spectrum from early HIV through late-stage AIDS. The settings were either community or palliative care, and the outcome measures were a combination of quality of life and immunological function. The trials were judged to be at moderate risk of bias mostly because of incomplete reporting. For quality of life measures, the studies reported that massage therapy in combination with other modalities, such as meditation and stress reduction, are superior to massage therapy alone or to the other modalities alone. The quality of life domains with significant effect sizes included self-reported reduced use of health care resources, improvement in self-perceived spiritual quality of life and improvement in total quality of life scores. One study also reported positive changes in immune function, in particular CD4+ cell count and natural killer cell counts, due to massage therapy, and one study reported no difference between people given massage therapy and controls in immune parameters. Adverse or harmful effects were not well reported.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is some evidence to support the use of massage therapy to improve quality of life for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), particularly in combination with other stress-management modalities, and that massage therapy may have a positive effect on immunological function. The trials are small, however, and at moderate risk of bias. Further studies are needed using larger sample sizes and rigorous design/reporting before massage therapy can be strongly recommended for PLWHA.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染和获得性免疫缺陷综合征(AIDS)是一种全球性大流行疾病,已影响全球数百万人。尽管主要的研究和临床举措都在致力于预防和治愈策略,但HIV/AIDS幸存者的生活质量问题却较少受到关注。有人提出按摩疗法对生活质量有积极影响,并且可能通过调节压力对免疫功能也有积极作用。
本系统评价的目的是研究按摩疗法对HIV/AIDS患者生活质量、疼痛及免疫系统参数的安全性和有效性。
制定了一个全面的检索策略,纳入了与HIV/AIDS、随机对照试验(RCT)、按摩疗法及相关获益指标的适当检索词。2008年11月检索了所有已识别的电子数据库,包括Cochrane协作网试验注册库、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、科学引文索引、艾滋病在线数据库、艾滋病检索数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库、健康之星数据库、心理学文摘数据库、医学文摘数据库、目次数据库、医学索引数据库、美国国立医学图书馆网关、拉丁美洲及加勒比地区健康科学数据库、印度医学数据库、社会科学数据库、科学引文索引、社会科学引文索引、教育资源信息中心数据库和国际学位论文文摘数据库。我们还查阅了相关的已发表和未发表的会议摘要及会议记录,并仔细审查了相关期刊的参考文献列表。没有语言或日期限制。
两名评价员根据试验设计(RCT)和参与者(即任何年龄、处于疾病任何阶段的HIV/AIDS患者)来识别研究,这些参与者接受了包括按摩疗法在内的干预措施,干预目的是改善生活质量、活动和参与水平、改善免疫功能、减轻疼痛以及改善其他生理或心理障碍。
两名评价员独立识别纳入研究并提取相关数据。另外两名评价员独立评估纳入研究的偏倚风险。所有数据和偏倚风险判断均录入Revman(v5)软件,并在适当情况下进行荟萃分析。
共识别出12篇论文,其中4篇被纳入。其余8篇论文主要因方法学不恰当而被排除。纳入的4项研究在临床方面高度异质性,研究了从早期HIV到晚期AIDS整个疾病谱范围内的一系列年龄组(即儿童、青少年和成人)。研究场所为社区或姑息治疗机构,结局指标是生活质量和免疫功能的综合指标。这些试验大多因报告不完整而被判定为存在中度偏倚风险。对于生活质量指标,研究报告称,按摩疗法与其他方式(如冥想和减压)相结合优于单独的按摩疗法或单独的其他方式。效应量显著的生活质量领域包括自我报告的医疗资源使用减少、自我感知的精神生活质量改善以及总体生活质量评分提高。一项研究还报告了按摩疗法使免疫功能出现积极变化,尤其是CD4+细胞计数和自然杀伤细胞计数,另一项研究报告接受按摩疗法的人与对照组在免疫参数方面没有差异。不良或有害影响报告不充分。
有一些证据支持使用按摩疗法改善HIV/AIDS患者(PLWHA)的生活质量,特别是与其他压力管理方式相结合时,并且按摩疗法可能对免疫功能有积极影响。然而,这些试验规模较小,且存在中度偏倚风险。在能够强烈推荐按摩疗法用于PLWHA之前,需要使用更大样本量和严格设计/报告的进一步研究。