医学
多囊卵巢
针灸科
随机对照试验
安慰剂
妇科
活产
怀孕
外科
内科学
肥胖
遗传学
生物
病理
替代医学
胰岛素抵抗
作者
Xiao-Ke Wu,Elisabet Stener‐Victorin,Hong-ying Kuang,Hong-Li Ma,Jing Gao,Liang-Zhen Xie,Lihui Hou,Zhen-Xing Hu,Xiaoguang Shao,Jun Ge,Jin-Feng Zhang,Hui-Ying Xue,Xiao-Feng Xu,Rui-Ning Liang,Hong-Xia Ma,Hong-Wei Yang,Weili Li,Dong-Mei Huang,Yun Sun,Cui-Fang Hao,Shao-Min Du,Zheng-Wang Yang,Xin Wang,Ying Yan,Xiu-Hua Chen,Ping Fu,Cai-Fei Ding,Ya-Qin Gao,Zhong-Ming Zhou,Chi Chiu Wang,Tai-Xiang Wu,Jianping Liu,Ernest Hung Yu Ng,Richard S. Legro,Heping Zhang
出处
期刊:JAMA
[American Medical Association]
日期:2017-06-27
卷期号:317 (24): 2502-2502
被引量:148
标识
DOI:10.1001/jama.2017.7217
摘要
Importance
Acupuncture is used to induce ovulation in some women with polycystic ovary syndrome, without supporting clinical evidence. Objective
To assess whether active acupuncture, either alone or combined with clomiphene, increases the likelihood of live births among women with polycystic ovary syndrome. Design, Setting, and Participants
A double-blind (clomiphene vs placebo), single-blind (active vs control acupuncture) factorial trial was conducted at 21 sites (27 hospitals) in mainland China between July 6, 2012, and November 18, 2014, with 10 months of pregnancy follow-up until October 7, 2015. Chinese women with polycystic ovary syndrome were randomized in a 1:1:1:1 ratio to 4 groups. Interventions
Active or control acupuncture administered twice a week for 30 minutes per treatment and clomiphene or placebo administered for 5 days per cycle, for up to 4 cycles. The active acupuncture group received deep needle insertion with combined manual and low-frequency electrical stimulation; the control acupuncture group received superficial needle insertion, no manual stimulation, and mock electricity. Main Outcomes and Measures
The primary outcome was live birth. Secondary outcomes included adverse events. Results
Among the 1000 randomized women (mean [SD] age, 27.9 [3.3] years; mean [SD] body mass index, 24.2 [4.3]), 250 were randomized to each group; a total of 926 women (92.6%) completed the trial. Live births occurred in 69 of 235 women (29.4%) in the active acupuncture plus clomiphene group, 66 of 236 (28.0%) in the control acupuncture plus clomiphene group, 31 of 223 (13.9%) in the active acupuncture plus placebo group, and 39 of 232 (16.8%) in the control acupuncture plus placebo group. There was no significant interaction between active acupuncture and clomiphene (P = .39), so main effects were evaluated. The live birth rate was significantly higher in the women treated with clomiphene than with placebo (135 of 471 [28.7%] vs 70 of 455 [15.4%], respectively; difference, 13.3%; 95% CI, 8.0% to 18.5%) and not significantly different between women treated with active vs control acupuncture (100 of 458 [21.8%] vs 105 of 468 [22.4%], respectively; difference, −0.6%; 95% CI, −5.9% to 4.7%). Diarrhea and bruising were more common in patients receiving active acupuncture than control acupuncture (diarrhea: 25 of 500 [5.0%] vs 8 of 500 [1.6%], respectively; difference, 3.4%; 95% CI, 1.2% to 5.6%; bruising: 37 of 500 [7.4%] vs 9 of 500 [1.8%], respectively; difference, 5.6%; 95% CI, 3.0% to 8.2%). Conclusions and Relevance
Among Chinese women with polycystic ovary syndrome, the use of acupuncture with or without clomiphene, compared with control acupuncture and placebo, did not increase live births. This finding does not support acupuncture as an infertility treatment in such women. Trial Registration
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier:NCT01573858