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用于神经性疼痛的草药产品或制剂。

Herbal medicinal products or preparations for neuropathic pain.

作者信息

Boyd Adele, Bleakley Chris, Hurley Deirdre A, Gill Chris, Hannon-Fletcher Mary, Bell Pamela, McDonough Suzanne

机构信息

School of Health Sciences, Ulster University, Jordanstown campus, Shore Road, Newtownabbey, County Antrim, UK, BT37 0QB.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Apr 2;4(4):CD010528. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010528.pub4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Neuropathic pain is a consequence of damage to the central nervous system (CNS), for example, cerebrovascular accident, multiple sclerosis or spinal cord injury, or peripheral nervous system (PNS), for example, painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN), postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), or surgery. Evidence suggests that people suffering from neuropathic pain are likely to seek alternative modes of pain relief such as herbal medicinal products due to adverse events brought about by current pharmacological agents used to treat neuropathic pain. This review includes studies in which participants were treated with herbal medicinal products (topically or ingested) who had experienced neuropathic pain for at least three months.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the analgesic efficacy and effectiveness of herbal medicinal products or preparations for neuropathic pain, and the adverse events associated with their use.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched CENTRAL and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL and AMED to March 2018. We identified additional studies from the reference lists of the retrieved papers. We also searched trials registries for ongoing trials and we contacted experts in the field for relevant data in terms of published, unpublished or ongoing studies.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised controlled trials (including cross-over designs) of double-blind design, assessing efficacy of herbal treatments for neuropathic pain compared to placebo, no intervention or any other active comparator. Participants were 18 years and above and had been suffering from one or more neuropathic pain conditions, for three months or more.We applied no restrictions to language or gender. We excluded studies monitoring effects of isolated, single chemicals derived from the plant or synthetic chemicals based on constituents of the plant, if they were not administered at a concentration naturally present within the plant.We excluded studies monitoring the effects of traditional Asian medicine and Cannabinoids as well as studies looking at headache or migraine as these treatments and conditions are addressed in distinct reviews.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Two review authors independently considered trials for inclusion, assessed risk of bias, and extracted data. We calculated the risk ratio (RR) and number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB). The primary outcomes were participant-reported pain relief of 30%, or 50%, or greater, and participant-reported global impression of clinical change (PGIC). We also collected information on adverse events. We assessed evidence using GRADE and created a 'Summary of findings' table.

MAIN RESULTS

We included two studies (128 participants). Both diabetic neuropathy and non-diabetic neuropathic pain conditions were investigated across these two studies.Two herbal medicinal products, namely nutmeg (applied topically as a 125 mL spray for four weeks, containing mace oil 2%, nutmeg oil 14%, methyl salicylate 6%, menthol 6%, coconut oil and alcohol) and St John's wort (taken in capsule form containing 900 μg total hypericin each, taken three times daily, giving a total concentration of 2700 mg for five weeks). Both studies allowed the use of concurrent analgesia.Both reported at least one pain-related outcome but we could not carry out meta-analysis of effectiveness due to heterogeneity between the primary outcomes and could not draw any conclusions of effect. Other outcomes included PGIC, adverse events and withdrawals. There were no data for participant-reported pain relief of 50% or greater or PGIC (moderate and substantial) outcomes.When looking at participant-reported pain relief of 30% or greater over baseline, we observed no evidence of a difference (P = 0.64) in response to nutmeg versus placebo (RR 1.12, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.69 to 1.85; 48.6% vs 43.2%). We downgraded the evidence for this outcome to very low quality.We observed no change between placebo and nutmeg treatment when looking at secondary pain outcomes. Visual analogue scale (VAS) scores for pain reduction (0 to 100, where 0 = no pain reduction), were 44 for both nutmeg and placebo with standard deviations of 21.5 and 26.5 respectively. There was no evidence of a difference (P = 0.09 to 0.33) in total pain score in response to St John's wort compared to placebo, as there was only a reduction of 1 point when looking at median differences in change from baseline on a 0 to 10-point numeric rating scale.There was a total of five withdrawals out of 91 participants (5%) in the treatment groups compared to six of 91 (6.5%) in the placebo groups, whilst adverse events were the same for both the treatment and placebo groups.We judged neither study as having a low risk of bias. We attributed risk of bias to small study size and incomplete outcome data leading to attrition bias. We downgraded the evidence to very low quality for all primary and secondary outcomes reported in this review. We downgraded the quality of the evidence twice due to very serious limitations in study quality (due to small study size and attrition bias) and downgraded a further level due to indirectness as the included studies only measured outcomes at short-term time points. The results from this review should be treated with scepticism as we have very little confidence in the effect estimate.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was insufficient evidence to determine whether nutmeg or St John's wort has any meaningful efficacy in neuropathic pain conditions.The quality of the current evidence raises serious uncertainties about the estimates of effect observed, therefore, we have very little confidence in the effect estimate; the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect.

摘要

背景

神经性疼痛是中枢神经系统(CNS)受损的结果,例如脑血管意外、多发性硬化症或脊髓损伤,或者是外周神经系统(PNS)受损,例如糖尿病性疼痛性神经病变(PDN)、带状疱疹后神经痛(PHN)或手术。有证据表明,由于用于治疗神经性疼痛的当前药物制剂会带来不良事件,患有神经性疼痛的人可能会寻求替代的疼痛缓解方式,如草药产品。本综述纳入了参与者接受草药产品(局部用药或口服)治疗的研究,这些参与者患有神经性疼痛至少三个月。

目的

评估草药产品或制剂对神经性疼痛的镇痛效果和有效性,以及与其使用相关的不良事件。

检索方法

我们检索了截至2018年3月的Cochrane系统评价中心数据库、CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL和AMED。我们从检索到的论文的参考文献列表中识别出其他研究。我们还在试验注册库中检索正在进行的试验,并就已发表、未发表或正在进行的研究联系该领域的专家以获取相关数据。

选择标准

我们纳入了双盲设计的随机对照试验(包括交叉设计),评估草药治疗神经性疼痛相对于安慰剂、无干预或任何其他活性对照的疗效。参与者年龄在18岁及以上,患有一种或多种神经性疼痛疾病三个月或更长时间。我们对语言或性别没有限制。我们排除了监测从植物中分离出的单一化学物质或基于植物成分的合成化学物质的效果的研究,如果它们不是以植物中天然存在的浓度给药。我们排除了监测传统亚洲医学和大麻素的效果的研究,以及研究头痛或偏头痛的研究,因为这些治疗方法和病症在不同的综述中已有涉及。

数据收集与分析

我们采用Cochrane期望的标准方法程序。两位综述作者独立考虑纳入试验、评估偏倚风险并提取数据。我们计算了风险比(RR)和为获得额外有益结果所需治疗的人数(NNTB)。主要结局是参与者报告的疼痛缓解30%或50%及以上,以及参与者报告的临床变化总体印象(PGIC)。我们还收集了不良事件的信息。我们使用GRADE评估证据并创建了一个“结果总结”表。

主要结果

我们纳入了两项研究(128名参与者)。这两项研究都对糖尿病性神经病变和非糖尿病性神经性疼痛病症进行了调查。两种草药产品,即肉豆蔻(作为125 mL喷雾剂局部应用四周,含有2%的肉豆蔻衣油、14%的肉豆蔻油、6%的水杨酸甲酯、6%的薄荷醇、椰子油和酒精)和圣约翰草(以胶囊形式服用,每粒含有900 μg总金丝桃素,每日服用三次,五周的总浓度为2700 mg)。两项研究都允许同时使用镇痛剂。两项研究都报告了至少一项与疼痛相关的结局,但由于主要结局之间存在异质性,我们无法对有效性进行荟萃分析,也无法得出任何效果结论。其他结局包括PGIC、不良事件和退出情况。没有关于参与者报告疼痛缓解50%及以上或PGIC(中度和显著)结局的数据。当观察参与者报告的疼痛缓解超过基线30%及以上时,我们观察到肉豆蔻与安慰剂相比没有差异的证据(P = 0.64)(RR 1.12,95%置信区间(CI)0.69至1.85;48.6%对43.2%)。我们将该结局的证据降级为极低质量。在观察次要疼痛结局时,我们发现安慰剂和肉豆蔻治疗之间没有变化。疼痛减轻的视觉模拟量表(VAS)评分(0至100,其中0 = 无疼痛减轻),肉豆蔻和安慰剂均为44,标准差分别为21.5和26.5。与安慰剂相比,圣约翰草治疗后总疼痛评分没有差异的证据(P = 0.09至0.33),因为在0至10分的数字评分量表上,从基线变化的中位数差异仅降低了1分。治疗组91名参与者中有5名(5%)退出,安慰剂组91名中有6名(6.5%)退出,而治疗组和安慰剂组的不良事件相同。我们认为这两项研究都没有低偏倚风险。我们将偏倚风险归因于研究规模小和结局数据不完整导致的失访偏倚。对于本综述中报告的所有主要和次要结局,我们将证据降级为极低质量。由于研究质量存在非常严重限制(由于研究规模小和失访偏倚),我们将证据质量降级两次,并且由于纳入研究仅在短期时间点测量结局,因间接性又降级一级。由于我们对效应估计几乎没有信心,本综述的结果应谨慎对待。

作者结论

没有足够的证据来确定肉豆蔻或圣约翰草在神经性疼痛病症中是否具有任何有意义的疗效。当前证据的质量对观察到的效应估计提出了严重的不确定性,因此,我们对效应估计几乎没有信心;真实效应可能与效应估计有很大差异。

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