Liu Zhao Lan, Xie Liang Zhen, Zhu Jiang, Li George Q, Grant Suzanne J, Liu Jian Ping
Centre for Evidence-Based Chinese Medicine, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, 11 Bei San Huan Dong Lu, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China, 100029.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Aug 24(8):CD009059. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009059.pub2.
Fatty liver disease is potentially a reversible condition that may lead to end-stage liver disease. Since herbal medicines such as Crataegus pinnatifida and Salvia miltiorrhiza have increasingly been used in the management of fatty liver disease, a systematic review on herbal medicine for fatty liver disease is needed.
To assess the beneficial and harmful effects of herbal medicines for people with alcoholic or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
We searched The Cochrane Hepato-Biliary Group Controlled Trials Register, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (Issue 3, 2012), MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Science Citation Index Expanded to 1 March 2012. We also searched the Chinese BioMedical Database, Traditional Chinese Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Chinese VIP Information, Chinese Academic Conference Papers Database and Chinese Dissertation Database, and the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database to 2 March 2012.
We included randomised clinical trials comparing herbal medicines with placebo, no treatment, a pharmacological intervention, or a non-pharmacological intervention such as diet or lifestyle, or Western interventions in participants with fatty liver disease.
Two review authors extracted data independently. We used the 'risk of bias' tool to assess the risk of bias of the included trials. We assessed the following domains: random sequence generation, allocation concealment, blinding, incomplete outcome data, selective outcome reporting, and other sources of bias. We presented the effects estimates as risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) or as mean differences (MD) with 95% CI, depending on the variables of the outcome measures.
We included 77 randomised clinical trials, which included 6753 participants with fatty liver disease. The risks of bias (overestimation of benefits and underestimation of harms) was high in all trials. The mean sample size was 88 participants (ranging from 40 to 200 participants) per trial. Seventy-five different herbal medicine products were tested. Herbal medicines tested in the randomised trials included single-herb products (Gynostemma pentaphyllum, Panax notoginseng, and Prunus armeniaca), proprietary herbal medicines commercially available, and combination formulas prescribed by practitioners. The most commonly used herbs were Crataegus pinnatifida,Salvia miltiorrhiza,Alisma orientalis,Bupleurum Chinense,Cassia obtusifolia, Astragalus membranaceous, and Rheum palmatum. None of the trials reported death, hepatic-related morbidity, quality of life, or costs. A large number of trials reported positive effects on putative surrogate outcomes such as serum aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, glutamyltransferase, alkaline phosphatases, ultrasound, and computed tomography scan. Twenty-seven trials reported adverse effects and found no significant difference between herbal medicines versus control. However, the risk of bias of the included trials was high.The outcomes were ultrasound findings in 22 trials, liver computed tomography findings in eight trials, aspartate aminotransferase levels in 64 trials, alanine aminotransferase activity in 77 trials, and glutamyltransferase activities in 44 trials. Six herbal medicines showed statistically significant beneficial effects on ultrasound, four on liver computed tomography, 42 on aspartate aminotransferase activity, 49 on alanine aminotransferase activity, three on alkaline phosphatases activity, and 32 on glutamyltransferase activity compared with control interventions.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Some herbal medicines seemed to have positive effects on aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, ultrasound, and computed tomography. We found no significant difference on adverse effects between herbal medicine and control groups. The findings are not conclusive due to the high risk of bias of the included trials and the limited number of trials testing individual herbal medicines. Accordingly, there is also high risk of random errors.
脂肪肝疾病有可能是一种可逆性病症,可能会导致终末期肝病。由于诸如山楂和丹参等草药越来越多地被用于脂肪肝疾病的治疗,因此有必要对治疗脂肪肝疾病的草药进行系统评价。
评估草药对酒精性或非酒精性脂肪肝患者的有益和有害影响。
我们检索了Cochrane肝胆疾病组对照试验注册库、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(2012年第3期)、MEDLINE、EMBASE以及截至2012年3月1日的科学引文索引扩展版。我们还检索了中国生物医学数据库、中国中医药文献分析与检索系统、中国知网、中文维普资讯、中国学术会议论文数据库、中国学位论文数据库以及截至2012年3月2日的补充与替代医学数据库。
我们纳入了比较草药与安慰剂、不治疗、药物干预、非药物干预(如饮食或生活方式)或西医干预的随机临床试验,试验对象为脂肪肝患者。
两位综述作者独立提取数据。我们使用“偏倚风险”工具评估纳入试验的偏倚风险。我们评估了以下领域:随机序列生成、分配隐藏、盲法、不完整的结局数据、选择性结局报告以及其他偏倚来源。根据结局指标的变量,我们将效应估计值表示为具有95%置信区间(CI)的风险比(RR)或具有95%CI的均值差(MD)。
我们纳入了77项随机临床试验,其中包括6753例脂肪肝患者。所有试验中的偏倚风险(益处高估和危害低估)都很高。每个试验的平均样本量为88名参与者(范围为40至200名参与者)。测试了75种不同的草药产品。随机试验中测试的草药包括单味草药产品(绞股蓝、三七和杏仁)、市售的专利草药以及从业者开具的复方制剂。最常用的草药是山楂、丹参、泽泻、柴胡、决明子、黄芪和大黄。没有试验报告死亡、肝脏相关发病率、生活质量或费用。大量试验报告了对假定替代结局的积极影响,如血清天冬氨酸氨基转移酶、丙氨酸氨基转移酶、谷氨酰转移酶、碱性磷酸酶、超声和计算机断层扫描。27项试验报告了不良反应,发现草药与对照组之间无显著差异。然而,纳入试验的偏倚风险很高。结局指标在22项试验中为超声检查结果,8项试验中为肝脏计算机断层扫描结果,64项试验中为天冬氨酸氨基转移酶水平,77项试验中为丙氨酸氨基转移酶活性,44项试验中为谷氨酰转移酶活性。与对照干预相比,六种草药对超声检查显示出统计学上显著的有益效果,四种对肝脏计算机断层扫描有显著效果,42种对天冬氨酸氨基转移酶活性有显著效果,49种对丙氨酸氨基转移酶活性有显著效果,三种对碱性磷酸酶活性有显著效果,32种对谷氨酰转移酶活性有显著效果。
一些草药似乎对天冬氨酸氨基转移酶、丙氨酸氨基转移酶、超声和计算机断层扫描有积极影响。我们发现草药组与对照组在不良反应方面无显著差异。由于纳入试验的偏倚风险高且测试单个草药的试验数量有限,这些发现并不具有决定性。因此,随机误差的风险也很高。