Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 41

Overview of Complementary and

Alternative Medicine (CAM) and Its


Role in Caring for Veterans with
Post-Deployment Health Concerns
An-Fu Hsiao, MD, PHD
September 15, 2010
WRIISC: Caring for Veterans with Post-Deployment
Health Concerns
Overview
 Introduction of Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (CAM)
 Philosophical discussion about Evidence-
Based approach
 Literature review of the efficacy of
acupuncture and herbs/supplements for
treatment of headaches and osteoarthritis
Popularity of Complementary
and Alternative Medicine
(CAM) in General Population
 CAM Is defined as “a group of therapies that are
not taught in conventional medical school or are
outside of mainstream, conventional medicine”
 Total 1997 out-of-pocket expenditures related to
CAM were estimated at $27 billion
 42% of general population used at least one
type of CAM within past 12 months
Popularity of Complementary
and Alternative Medicine
(CAM) in Veterans
 Headaches and osteoarthritis are common
health concerns for post-deployment
Veterans
 Estimated that 30% to 50% of Veterans
used CAM
 OEF/OIF, female, and younger Veterans
are more likely to use CAM and their use
will increase in the future
CAM vs. Integrative Medicine
 CAM and Integrative Medicine are two different
paradigms
 Integrative Medicine can be defined as
“integrating best elements of conventional
medicine and CAM and combining them into a
safer and more effective model of healing”
 Our talk will focused on CAM because there is
little high-quality research and data on
integrative medicine
Potential Barriers to
Integration of CAM with
Conventional Treatments
 Lack of knowledge on the effectiveness
and safety of CAM treatments.
 Lack of know-how in referring to high-
quality CAM practitioners.
 “Turf battles” between physicians and
CAM practitioners.
Lack of Safe and Effective
Conventional Medical Treatment
for Headaches and Osteoarthritis
 The treatment goals for headaches and
osteoarthritis focus on controlling pain and
improving health-related quality of life.
 Pharmacological therapies include NSAIDS,
COX-2 inhibitors, topical analgesics, opioid
analgesics, and intra-articular steroid and
hyaluronate injections.
 These treatments are expensive
 May cause dangerous side effects
Not All CAM Modalities
Are Created Equal
 Some CAM modalities are evidence-
based, while others are based on
anecdotes and tradition.
 Some CAM modalities may have adverse
effects.
 Some CAM modalities may cause adverse
herb-drug interactions.
Is Randomized Controlled Trial the
Best Research Design to Evaluate the
Efficacy of CAM?
 Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) is
considered the gold standard and the
strongest research design in evaluating
efficacy of conventional treatment
 RCT may not be the best way to evaluate
the efficacy of CAM because they are
individualized, multi-components, and
difficult to double blind
Is It Fair to Require CAM Use
to Be Evidence-Based?
 Is it fair to ask CAM to be held at such
high standard when only 20-25% of
conventional medicine is evidence-based?
 Lack adequate funding to support CAM
research (NCCAM budget is $100 million
and NIH budget is $24 billion)
Acupuncture
 One part of the ancient, rich system of Traditional
Chinese Med, generally combined w/ Chinese herbs
 Yin-Yang - opposing forces in the body. Goal of
acupuncture is to restore their balance.
 Qi - Life energy. Runs along channels (meridians).
Acupuncture relieves blockages, improves flow
 Overarching goal: rebalance, redistribute Yin-Yang
and allow Qi to flow more freely.
 Western Acup – needles only (without Chinese herbs)
Acupuncture Hair-thin, solid, needles: safe, sterile,
disposable. Not painful. Patients often
describe tingling warmth.

Chinese Herbs Centuries-old formulas. Usually 6-12 herbs


mixed together. Exact formulas individualized,
which makes it harder to study.

Question: Do studies of “Western


acupuncture” miss efficacy of the whole TCM
system?
Clinical HA Trials 1980’s + 1990’s
 16 trials of true vs. sham acupuncture - generally
very small trials: n range from 10 to 52, most <30
 Almost all had serious methodological problems
 8 trials had positive results, 8 statistically negative
 Summary data likely skewed to falsely positive by
missing negative trials (publication bias)
 Conclusion: possible benefit, data extremely weak

Melchart et al. Cochrane Reviews 2001; PMID 11279710


Clinical HA Trials 2000-2008
 In the past 8 years there have been 16 more
trials
 Three of these trials have been much larger and
of much higher quality than those which came
before
 All 3 used sound, careful, reliable methodology
 These trials create a new, quite robust, evidence
in assessing the efficacy of acupuncture for HA
in more than 900 patients
Best High Quality RCT’s
ART - Migraine Germany n=302 True vs. sham acupuncture
2005 vs. wait list

ART - Tension Germany n=270 True vs. sham acupuncture


2005 vs. wait list

NHS trial - Mixed England n=401 True acupuncture


2004 vs. “usual care”

Sham = superficial / minimal needling of


random non-acupuncture points

Linde: JAMA 2005 - PMID 15870415


Melchart: BMJ 2005 - PMID 16055451
Vickers: BMJ 2004 - PMID 15023828
Largest High Quality RCT’s
ART - Migraine Germany n=302 True vs. sham acupuncture
2005 vs. wait list

HA days / month
p<.001

Linde: JAMA 2005 - PMID 15870415


Largest High Quality RCT’s
ART - Tension HA’s Germany n=270 True vs. sham acupuncture
2005 vs. wait list

HA days / month
p<.001

Melchart: BMJ 2005 - PMID 16055451


Largest High Quality RCT’s
NHS trial - Mixed England n=401 True acupuncture x 3 mos
2004 vs. “usual care”

Weekly HA score
p=.0002

Vickers: BMJ 2004 - PMID 15023828


Acupuncture for OA
 Large positive RCT in the Annals (Berman, 2004)
 Diverse group of pts (n=570), very few exclusions
 Patients were randomized into three arms:
1) true acup 2) sham acup 3) control - educ only
 Elaborate sham acup. Survey showed successful
blinding (equal # guessed they got “sham” in both arms)
 2 months of full treatment, followed for 6 months

Berman. Ann Intern Med 2004:141:901


Improvement in Pain
Scores P=.003

Ann Intern Med 2004:141:901


Acupuncture for Other
Conditions
Take Home Points:
Acupuncture
 There is strong evidence to show that
acupuncture is effective for treatment of
headaches and osteoarthritis.
 For soldiers and Veterans who have
headache, acupuncture is an effective
adjunctive therapy for conventional
medical treatment.
Opioids Ergot alkaloids Willow bark
- salicylates

Caffeine
Herbs & Supplements: Best Evidence
(Most evidence is for Migraine
Headaches)
 Herbal medicines
 Feverfew
 Butterbur
 Supplements
 Riboflavin (vit B2)
 Coenzyme Q10
Feverfew
(Tanacetum parthenium)
 Daisy family (asteraceae)
 Ragweed, marigold,
chrysanthemum, echinacea
 Traditionally for HA, fever,
arthritis, menstrual
irregularities…
 1980’s: gained popularity in
Great Britain as a migraine HA
remedy (chew on leaves)
Feverfew Studies
for migraine prophylaxis (non-U.S.)
DBRCTs n duration preparation results
Johnson 1985 17 6 mo Dried leaf  HA freq, N/V

Murphy 1988 59 4 mo Dried leaf cap  HA freq, #, N/V


Abstract 1994 20 NEGATIVE STUDY

De Weerdt 1996 50 4 mo Extract NEGATIVE STUDY

Palevitch 1997 57 2 mo Leaf capsule  HA pain, N/V


Pfaffenrath 2002 147 3 mo Extract MIG-99 NEGATIVE STUDY
(3 doses) (+ subset freq HAs)
Deiner 2005 170 4 mo Extract MIG-99  HA freq
Feverfew SEs
 Mouth ulcerations (fresh leaves)
 Mild GI
 Affects platelet activity in vitro
 Allergic rxns
 Abortions in cattle
Butterbur (Petasites hybridus -
sweet coltsfoot)
 Daisy family (asteraceae)
 Ragweed, marigolds,
chrysanthemum, echinacea
 Traditionally for F, cough,
GI/GU cramps,
dysmenorrhea…
 Affects PGs, LTs, histamine
receptor
 RCT evidence for allergic
rhinitis = cetirizine (Zyrtec®)
 Also studied for migraine
prevention, after anecdotal
reports
Butterbur evidence
(from Germany)
DBRCTs n duration preparation results

Grossman 2000 60 3 mo. Petadolex®  # attacks


50 mg BID
Lipton 2004 245 4 mo. Petadolex® 75 mg BID
75, 50 mg BID  # attacks

 Petadolex®
 German standardized proprietary extract of root
 Extract process reduces hepatotoxic/carcinogenic
pyrrolizidine alkaloids to < limit of detection (0.01 ppm)
Butterbur SEs
 Petadolex® - GI
(burping)
 C/I
 Raw herb
(pyrrolizidine alkaloids)
 Liver disease,
pregnancy/lactation
Riboflavin (vit B2)
 Mitochondrial electron transport dysfxn ~ migraines
 Riboflavin is utilized by mitochondria
DBRCTs n duration preparation results
Schoenen 1998 55 3 mo. 400 mg/dy  # attacks
>50%: 59%
vs. 15%
Maizels 2004 49 3 mo. Vit B2 400 mg Negative study
Feverfew 100 mg > 50%: 44%
Mag 300 mg vs 42%
Placebo=25mg B2
Coenzyme Q10
 Also critical for mitochondrial fxn

DBRCT n duration preparation results

Sandor 2005 42 3 mo. 100 mg TID  # attacks


>50%:
48% vs. 14%
Supplement Recommendation
for Migraine Prevention?
 Standardized butterbur extract
 e.g. Petadolex® 75 mg BID
 Combination product containing:
 Feverfew leaf 100 mg/dy
 Riboflavin (Vit B2) > 25 mg
 Coenzyme Q10 300 mg/dy
 Magnesium? (diarrhea)
 Avoid:
 Butterbur raw herb - toxic
 Feverfew extracts - less effective?
Glucosamine & Chondroitin
 Europe: Researched
since the 1960s
 and used for
osteoarthritis for
decades
 US: “The Arthritis
Cure” in 1997--->
GAIT Trial
 Glucosamine/chondroitin Arthritis Intervention Trial
 NIH funded, rigorous DBRCT (NEJM Feb. 23, 2006)
 1583 pts followed for 6 months, in 16 US centers
 Symptomatic knee OA

Glucosamine Chondroitin Glucosamine Celebrex


Placebo +
500mg tid 400mg tid Chondroitin 200mg qd

 Well matched; withdrawal rate equal; good compliance;


ITT
 All patients, mild pain, mod-severe pain
GAIT Trial
 Primary outcome = >20% reduction in WOMAC* Score
 (secondary outcomes = similar results)
All subjects Mod-Severe
Placebo 60% 54%
Glucosamine 64% 66%
Chondroitin 65% 61%
Glucosamine +
Chondroitin
67% P=0.09 79% P<0.01

Celebrex 70% P<0.01 69% P=0.06


* WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index
Adverse Effects & Cost
 Both products very well tolerated
 Mild GI (dyspepsia, D, C) = placebo
 Shellfish allergy?
 No known drug interactions
 Cost: ~ $20-40/month
Take Home Points:
Supplements and Herbs
 Appear to have analgesic activity for OA
 Both = safe and well-tolerated
 Slow onset of action (2 month trial)
 Combination preferred [GAIT]
 Best for pts with mod-severe pain [GAIT]
 Some evidence G&C are “disease
modifying” agents
 Mixed quality of products always a problem
 www.ConsumerLab.com
INFORMATION RESOURCES
••ConsumerLab.co
ConsumerLab.co
mm
Discussion
 Veterans with post-deployment health concerns, such as
headaches and osteoarthritis, are commonly using CAM
as an adjunctive therapy with conventional medical
treatment
 There is strong evidence to support the use of
acupuncture as an adjunctive therapy for treatment of
headaches and osteoarthritis.
 There is preliminary evidence to support use of feverfew
and butterbur for treatment of headaches and
glucosamine and chondroitin for treatment of
osteoarthritis
Policy Implications for VHA
and DOD
 Clinicians need to openly inquire Veterans about
their CAM use to help them successfully
integrate CAM with their conventional treatment.
 VHA and DOD need to establish guideline for
CAM use and credentialing and privileging
standards for CAM practitioners
 VHA and DOD need to allocate more resources
to deliver CAM modalities, provide educational
training for clinicians, and conduct research

You might also like