Woodward Sue, Norton Christine, Chiarelli Pauline
King's College London, 57 Waterloo Road, London, UK, SE1 8WA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 26;2014(3):CD008486. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008486.pub2.
Biofeedback therapy has been used to treat the symptoms of people with chronic constipation referred to specialist services within secondary and tertiary care settings. However, different methods of biofeedback are used within different centres and the magnitude of suggested benefits and comparable effectiveness of different methods of biofeedback has yet to be established.
To determine the efficacy and safety of biofeedback for the treatment of chronic idiopathic (functional) constipation in adults.
We searched the following databases from inception to 16 December 2013: CENTRAL, the Cochrane Complementary Medicine Field, the Cochrane IBD/FBD Review Group Specialized Register, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, British Nursing Index, and PsychINFO. Hand searching of conference proceedings and the reference lists of relevant articles was also undertaken.
All randomised trials evaluating biofeedback in adults with chronic idiopathic constipation were considered for inclusion.
The primary outcome was global or clinical improvement as defined by the included studies. Secondary outcomes included quality of life, and adverse events as defined by the included studies. Where possible, we calculated the risk ratio (RR) and corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI) for dichotomous outcomes and the mean difference (MD) and 95% CI for continuous outcomes. We assessed the methodological quality of included studies using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. The overall quality of the evidence supporting each outcome was assessed using the GRADE criteria.
Seventeen eligible studies were identified with a total of 931 participants. Most participants had chronic constipation and dyssynergic defecation. Sixteen of the trials were at high risk of bias for blinding. Attrition bias (4 trials) and other potential bias (5 trials) was also noted. Due to differences between study populations, the heterogeneity of the different samples and large range of different outcome measures, meta-analysis was not possible. Different effect sizes were reported ranging from 40 to 100% of patients who received biofeedback improving following the intervention. While electromyograph (EMG) biofeedback was the most commonly used, there is a lack of evidence as to whether any one method of biofeedback is more effective than any other method of biofeedback. We found low or very low quality evidence that biofeedback is superior to oral diazepam, sham biofeedback and laxatives. One study (n = 60) found EMG biofeedback to be superior to oral diazepam. Seventy per cent (21/30) of biofeedback patients had improved constipation at three month follow-up compared to 23% (7/30) of diazepam patients (RR 3.00, 95% CI 1.51 to 5.98). One study compared manometry biofeedback to sham biofeedback or standard therapy consisting of diet, exercise and laxatives. The mean number of complete spontaneous bowel movements (CSBM) per week at three months was 4.6 in the biofeedback group compared to 2.8 in the sham biofeedback group (MD 1.80, 95% CI 1.25 to 2.35; 52 patients). The mean number of CSBM per week at three months was 4.6 in the biofeedback group compared to 1.9 in the standard care group (MD 2.70, 95% CI 1.99 to 3.41; 49 patients). Another study (n = 109) compared EMG biofeedback to conventional treatment with laxatives and dietary and lifestyle advice. This study found that at both 6 and 12 months 80% (43/54) of biofeedback patients reported clinical improvement compared to 22% (12/55) laxative-treated patients (RR 3.65, 95% CI 2.17 to 6.13). Some surgical procedures (partial division of puborectalis and stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR)) were reported to be superior to biofeedback, although with a high risk of adverse events in the surgical groups (wound infection, faecal incontinence, pain, and bleeding that required further surgical intervention). Successful treatment, defined as a decrease in the obstructed defecation score of > 50% at one year was reported in 33% (3/39) of EMG biofeedback patients compared to 82% (44/54) of STARR patients (RR 0.41, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.65). For the other study the mean constipation score at one year was 16.1 in the balloon sensory biofeedback group compared to 10.5 in the partial division of puborectalis surgery group (MD 5.60, 95% CI 4.67 to 6.53; 40 patients). Another study (n = 60) found no significant difference in efficacy did not demonstrate the superiority of a surgical intervention (posterior myomectomy of internal anal sphincter and puborectalis) over biofeedback. Conflicting results were found regarding the comparative effectiveness of biofeedback and botulinum toxin-A. One small study (48 participants) suggested that botulinum toxin-A injection may have short term benefits over biofeedback, but the relative effects of treatments were uncertain at one year follow-up. No adverse events were reported for biofeedback, although this was not specifically reported in the majority of studies. The results of all of these studies need to be interpreted with caution as GRADE analyses rated the overall quality of the evidence for the primary outcomes (i.e. clinical or global improvement as defined by the studies) as low or very low due to high risk of bias (i.e. open label studies, self-selection bias, incomplete outcome data, and baseline imbalance) and imprecision (i.e. sparse data).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Currently there is insufficient evidence to allow any firm conclusions regarding the efficacy and safety of biofeedback for the management of people with chronic constipation. We found low or very low quality evidence from single studies to support the effectiveness of biofeedback for the management of people with chronic constipation and dyssynergic defecation. However, the majority of trials are of poor methodological quality and subject to bias. Further well-designed randomised controlled trials with adequate sample sizes, validated outcome measures (especially patient reported outcome measures) and long-term follow-up are required to allow definitive conclusions to be drawn.
生物反馈疗法已被用于治疗在二级和三级医疗机构专科门诊就诊的慢性便秘患者的症状。然而,不同中心使用的生物反馈方法不同,不同生物反馈方法的潜在益处大小和相对有效性尚未确定。
确定生物反馈疗法治疗成人慢性特发性(功能性)便秘的疗效和安全性。
我们检索了以下数据库,检索时间从建库至2013年12月16日:Cochrane系统评价数据库、Cochrane补充医学领域数据库、Cochrane炎症性肠病/功能性肠病综述组专业注册库、医学期刊数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库、英国护理索引数据库和心理学文摘数据库。我们还手工检索了会议论文集以及相关文章的参考文献列表。
所有评估生物反馈疗法治疗成人慢性特发性便秘的随机试验均纳入本研究。
主要结局为纳入研究定义的总体或临床改善情况。次要结局包括生活质量和纳入研究定义的不良事件。在可能的情况下,我们计算了二分法结局的风险比(RR)及相应的95%置信区间(CI),以及连续型结局的平均差(MD)及95%CI。我们使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具评估纳入研究的方法学质量。使用GRADE标准评估支持各结局的证据的总体质量。
共纳入17项符合条件的研究,总计931名参与者。大多数参与者患有慢性便秘和排便协同失调。16项试验在盲法方面存在高偏倚风险。还发现有4项试验存在失访偏倚,5项试验存在其他潜在偏倚。由于研究人群、不同样本的异质性以及不同结局指标差异较大,无法进行Meta分析。报道的不同效应大小范围为接受生物反馈疗法干预后症状改善的患者比例为40%至100%。虽然肌电图(EMG)生物反馈是最常用的方法,但缺乏证据表明任何一种生物反馈方法比其他生物反馈方法更有效。我们发现低质量或极低质量的证据表明生物反馈疗法优于口服地西泮、假生物反馈疗法和泻药。一项研究(n = 60)发现EMG生物反馈疗法优于口服地西泮。生物反馈疗法组70%( 21/30)的患者在3个月随访时便秘症状改善,而地西泮组为23%(7/30)(RR = 3.00,95%CI 1.51至5.98)。一项研究将测压生物反馈疗法与假生物反馈疗法或由饮食、运动和泻药组成的标准疗法进行比较。生物反馈疗法组在3个月时每周完全自主排便(CSBM)的平均次数为4.6次,假生物反馈疗法组为2.8次(MD = 1.80,95%CI 1.25至2.35;52例患者)。生物反馈疗法组在3个月时每周CSBM的平均次数为4.6次,标准治疗组为1.9次(MD = 2.70,95%CI 1.99至3.41;49例患者)。另一项研究(n = 109)将EMG生物反馈疗法与使用泻药及饮食和生活方式建议的传统治疗方法进行比较。该研究发现,在6个月和12个月时,生物反馈疗法组80%(43/54)的患者报告临床症状改善,而泻药治疗组为22%(12/55)(RR = 3.65,95%CI 2.17至6.13)。一些外科手术(耻骨直肠肌部分离断术和经肛门吻合器直肠切除术(STARR))据报道优于生物反馈疗法,尽管手术组不良事件风险较高(伤口感染、大便失禁、疼痛和出血,需要进一步手术干预)。EMG生物反馈疗法组1年时排便梗阻评分降低> 50%被定义为成功治疗,该比例为33%(3/39),而STARR组为82%(44/54)(RR = 0.41, 95%CI 0.26至0.65)。另一项研究中,球囊感觉生物反馈疗法组1年时的平均便秘评分为16.1,而耻骨直肠肌部分离断术手术组为10.5(MD = 5.60,95%CI 4.67至6.53;40例患者)。另一项研究(n = 60)发现手术干预(内括约肌和耻骨直肠肌后位肌瘤切除术)与生物反馈疗法在疗效上无显著差异。关于生物反馈疗法与肉毒杆菌毒素A的相对有效性,研究结果相互矛盾。一项小型研究(48名参与者)表明,肉毒杆菌毒素A注射可能比生物反馈疗法有短期益处,但在1年随访时治疗的相对效果尚不确定。大多数研究未专门报告生物反馈疗法的不良事件,但报告中未提及生物反馈疗法有不良事件。由于偏倚风险高(即开放标签研究、自我选择偏倚、结局数据不完整和基线不平衡)和不精确性(即数据稀疏),GRADE分析将支持主要结局(即研究定义的临床或总体改善)的证据总体质量评为低质量或极低质量,因此所有这些研究的结果都需要谨慎解读。
目前,尚无足够证据就生物反馈疗法治疗慢性便秘患者的疗效和安全性得出任何确切结论。我们从单项研究中发现低质量或极低质量的证据支持生物反馈疗法治疗慢性便秘和排便协同失调患者的有效性。然而,大多数试验的方法学质量较差且存在偏倚。需要进一步开展设计良好、样本量充足、结局指标经过验证(尤其是患者报告的结局指标)且有长期随访的随机对照试验,以便得出明确结论。