Luo Xiao-Chao, Liu Jia-Li, Yao Ming-Hong, Chen Ye-Meng, Fan Arthur Yin, Liang Fan-Rong, Zhao Ji-Ping, Zhao Ling, Zhou Xu, Zhong Xiao-Ying, Yang Jia-Hui, Li Bo, Zhang Ying, Sun Xin, Li Ling
Institute of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine and Chinese Evidence-based Medicine Center, Cochrane China Center and MAGIC China Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041 Sichuan Province, China; NMPA Key Laboratory for Real-world Data Research and Evaluation in Hainan, Chengdu 610041 Sichuan Province, China; Sichuan Center of Technology Innovation for Real-world Data, Chengdu 610041 Sichuan Province, China.
New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Mineola, NY 11501, USA.
J Integr Med. 2025 Jul 30. doi: 10.1016/j.joim.2025.07.011.
The use of inserted sham acupuncture as a placebo in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is controversial, because it may produce specific effects that cause an underestimation of the effect of acupuncture treatment.
This systematic survey investigates the magnitude of insert-specific effects of sham acupuncture and whether they affect the estimation of acupuncture treatment effects.
PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched to identify acupuncture RCTs from their inception until December 2022.
RCTs that evaluated the effects of acupuncture compared to sham acupuncture and no treatment.
The total effect measured for an acupuncture treatment group in RCTs were divided into three components, including the natural history and/or regression to the mean effect (controlled for no-treatment group), the placebo effect, and the specific effect of acupuncture. The first two constituted the contextual effect of acupuncture, which is mimicked by a sham acupuncture treatment group. The proportion of acupuncture total effect size was considered to be 1. The proportion of natural history and/or regression to the mean effect (PNE) and proportional contextual effect (PCE) of included RCTs were pooled using meta-analyses with a random-effect model. The proportion of acupuncture placebo effect was the difference between PCE and PNE in RCTs with non-inserted sham acupuncture. The proportion of insert-specific effect of sham acupuncture (PIES) was obtained by subtracting the proportion of acupuncture placebo effect and PNE from PCE in RCTs with inserted sham acupuncture. The impact of PIES on the estimation of acupuncture's treatment effect was evaluated by quantifying the percentage of RCTs that the effect of outcome changed from no statistical difference to statistical difference after removing PIES in the included studies, and the impact of PIES was externally validated in other acupuncture RCTs with an inserted sham acupuncture group that were not used to calculate PIES.
This analysis included 32 studies with 5492 patients. The overall PNE was 0.335 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.255-0.415) and the PCE of acupuncture was 0.639 (95% CI, 0.567-0.710) of acupuncture's total effect. The proportional contribution of the placebo effect to acupuncture's total effect was 0.191, and the PIES was 0.189. When we modeled the exclusion of the insert-specific effect of sham acupuncture, the acupuncture treatment effect changed from no difference to a significant difference in 45.45% of the included RCTs, and in 40.91% of the external validated RCTs.
The insert-specific effect of sham acupuncture in RCTs represents 18.90% of acupuncture's total effect and significantly affects the evaluation of the acupuncture treatment effect. More than 40% of RCTs that used inserted sham acupuncture would draw different conclusions if the PIES had been controlled for. Considering the impact of the insert-specific effect of sham acupuncture, caution should be taken when using inserted sham acupuncture placebos in RCTs. Please cite this article as: Luo XC, Liu JL, Yao MH, Chen YM, Fan AY, Liang FR, Zhao JP, Zhao L, Zhou X, Zhong XY, Yang JH, Li B, Zhang Y, Sun X, Li L. Specific effect of inserted sham acupuncture and its impact on the estimation of acupuncture treatment effect in randomized controlled trials: A systematic survey. J Integr Med. 2025; Epub ahead of print.
在随机对照试验(RCT)中使用插入式假针灸作为安慰剂存在争议,因为它可能产生特定效应,导致对针灸治疗效果的低估。
本系统综述调查假针灸插入特定效应的大小以及它们是否影响对针灸治疗效果的评估。
检索了PubMed、Embase和Cochrane对照试验中心注册库,以识别从开始到2022年12月的针灸RCT。
评估针灸与假针灸及不治疗相比效果的RCT。
RCT中针灸治疗组测量的总效应分为三个部分,包括自然病程和/或均值回归效应(针对不治疗组进行控制)、安慰剂效应和针灸的特定效应。前两者构成针灸的背景效应,假针灸治疗组可模拟该效应。针灸总效应大小的比例视为1。使用随机效应模型的荟萃分析汇总纳入RCT的自然病程和/或均值回归效应比例(PNE)和比例背景效应(PCE)。针灸安慰剂效应比例是未插入假针灸的RCT中PCE与PNE的差值。插入式假针灸的插入特定效应比例(PIES)通过在插入假针灸的RCT中从PCE中减去针灸安慰剂效应比例和PNE获得。通过量化纳入研究中去除PIES后结果效应从无统计学差异变为有统计学差异的RCT百分比,评估PIES对针灸治疗效果评估的影响,并在未用于计算PIES的插入式假针灸组的其他针灸RCT中对PIES的影响进行外部验证。
本分析纳入32项研究,共5492例患者。总体PNE为0.335(95%置信区间[CI],0.255 - 0.415),针灸的PCE为针灸总效应的0.639(95%CI,0.567 - 0.710)。安慰剂效应在针灸总效应中的比例贡献为0.191,PIES为0.189。当我们模拟排除假针灸的插入特定效应时,在纳入的RCT中,45.45%的研究针灸治疗效果从无差异变为有显著差异,在外部验证的RCT中这一比例为40.91%。
RCT中假针灸的插入特定效应占针灸总效应的18.90%,并显著影响对针灸治疗效果的评估。如果控制了PIES,超过4%使用插入式假针灸的RCT会得出不同结论。考虑到假针灸插入特定效应的影响,在RCT中使用插入式假针灸安慰剂时应谨慎。请将本文引用为:罗雪超,刘佳丽,姚梦华,陈亚明,范爱云,梁凤荣,赵建平,赵亮,周鑫,钟雪艳,杨建华,李波,张宇,孙鑫,李玲。随机对照试验中插入式假针灸的特定效应及其对针灸治疗效果评估的影响:一项系统综述。《整合医学杂志》。2025年;印刷前在线发表。