• Pain physician · Nov 2015

    Review Meta Analysis

    Manual Therapy for Hip Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

    • Qiong Wang, Teng-teng Wang, Xiao-feng Qi, Min Yao, Xue-jun Cui, Yong-jun Wang, and Qian-qian Liang.
    • Institute of Spine Disease, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, China; Longhua Hospital, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, China.
    • Pain Physician. 2015 Nov 1; 18 (6): E1005-20.

    BackgroundHip osteoarthritis (HOA) is one of the major causes of disability in seniors and is costly to society. Manual therapy is one therapeutic approach to treating HOA.ObjectivesTo assess the effect of manual therapy compared to the placebo or wait-list/no treatment or a minimal intervention control for HOA at post-treatment and short-, intermediate- and long-term follow-ups.Study DesignA systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs).SettingHospital outpatient clinic in China.MethodsWe searched PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL, ISI web of knowledge, and Chinese databases from the inception to October 2014 without language restrictions. References of systematic reviews and other related reviews, files in our department, and conference proceedings as grey literature were also screened by hand. RCTs compared manual therapy to the placebo, wait-list/no treatment or a minimal intervention control with an appropriate and precise description of randomization. Two reviewers independently conducted the search results identification, data extraction, and methodological quality assessment. We calculated the risk difference (RD) for dichotomous data and the mean difference (MD) or standardized mean difference (SMD) for continuous data in a fixed or random effect model.Outcome MeasuresThe primary outcomes were self-reported pain in the past week and physical function. The secondary outcomes were the quality of life, global perceived effect, patients' satisfaction, cost, and adverse events.ResultsSix studies involving 515 HOA patients were included. Five of the 6 studies ranked as high quality in the methodological assessment. Immediately post-treatment, there was low-quality evidence that manual therapy could not statistically significantly relieve pain (SMD: -0.07 [95%CI -0.38 to 0.24]); for physical function, a moderate quality of evidence showed that manual therapy could not improve the physical function significantly (SMD: 0.14 [95%CI -0.08 to 0.37]). We still found low-quality evidence that manual therapy did not benefit the patients in the global perceived effect (RD: 0.12 [95%CI -0.12 to 0.36]), and in terms of quality of life. In addition, the risks of patients in the manual therapy group was 0.13 times higher than that in the controls (RD: 0.13 [95%CI -0.05 to 0.31]) in the low-quality evidence studies. We could not find any evidence that manual therapy benefits the patients at short-, intermediate- or long-term follow-up. There were no studies reporting patients' satisfaction or cost.LimitationsThe limitations of this systematic review include the paucity of literature and inevitable heterogeneity between included studies.ConclusionThis review did not suggest there was enough evidence for manual therapy for the management of HOA. However, we are not confident in making such a conclusion due to the limitations listed above.

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