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Acupuncture for menopausal hot flashes: A randomized trial

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 00:36 authored by Carolyn Ee, Charlie XueCharlie Xue, Patty Chondros, Stephen Myers, Simon French, Helena Teede, Marie Pirotta
Background: Hot flashes (HFs) affect up to 75% of menopausal women and pose a considerable health and financial burden. Evidence of acupuncture efficacy as an HF treatment is conflicting. Objective: To assess the efficacy of Chinese medicine acupuncture against sham acupuncture for menopausal HFs. Design: Stratified, blind (participants, outcome assessors, and investigators, but not treating acupuncturists), parallel, randomized, sham-controlled trial with equal allocation. (Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12611000393954) Setting: Community in Australia. Participants: Women older than 40 years in the late menopausal transition or postmenopause with at least 7 moderate HFs daily, meeting criteria for Chinese medicine diagnosis of kidney yin deficiency. Interventions: 10 treatments over 8 weeks of either standardized Chinese medicine needle acupuncture designed to treat kidney yin deficiency or noninsertive sham acupuncture. Measurements: The primary outcome was HF score at the end of treatment. Secondary outcomes included quality of life, anxi-ety, depression, and adverse events. Participants were assessed at 4 weeks, the end of treatment, and then 3 and 6 months after the end of treatment. Intention-to-treat analysis was conducted with linear mixed-effects models. Results: 327 women were randomly assigned to acupuncture (n = 163) or sham acupuncture (n = 164). At the end of treatment, 16% of participants in the acupuncture group and 13% in the sham group were lost to follow-up. Mean HF scores at the end of treatment were 15.36 in the acupuncture group and 15.04 in the sham group (mean difference, 0.33 [95% CI, -1.87 to 2.52]; P = 0.77). No serious adverse events were reported. Limitation: Participants were predominantly Caucasian and did not have breast cancer or surgical menopause. Conclusion: Chinese medicine acupuncture was not superior to noninsertive sham acupuncture for women with moderately severe menopausal HFs.

History

Journal

Annals of Internal Medicine

Volume

164

Issue

3

Start page

146

End page

154

Total pages

9

Publisher

American College of Physicians

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 American College of Physicians.

Former Identifier

2006061049

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-05-05

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