Thursday, September 6, 2012

Acupuncture treatment is not as safe as advertised

The first ever study of the adverse effects of acupuncture in state-funded acupuncture clinics in the UK has found that the procedure is largely safe, but not as safe as advertised. In extreme cases, it could even put lives at risk.

Despite this, claims that acupuncture is completely safe could soon lead to the procedure being funded by Medicare, the US government-funded medical benefits programme. Acupuncture is already government-funded in much of Europe.

Investigators from the National Patient Safety Agency, part of the UK's government-funded National Health Service, assembled all reports of adverse events following acupuncture treatment in NHS clinics between 2009 and 2011. In these clinics, acupuncture is provided by conventionally qualified doctors and therapists, who are also trained to perform acupuncture. This is offered in several NHS hospitals, GP's surgeries and nearly all NHS pain clinics.

The investigators found 325 reports of adverse effects. There is no data for the total number of acupuncture treatments given, so the frequency of these events cannot be calculated. But other studies in Germany and the UK have found adverse effects following some 10 per cent of treatments.

Some of the reports were merely of sloppy practice. In 100 cases, patients were left with needles still in them, sometimes hours longer than intended or even after they or the staff went home. Some needles subsequently had to be surgically removed.

Definition of harm

Of the 325 adverse reports, 309 were rated as involving little or no harm. This included 162 people experiencing dizziness and fainting when the needle was inserted.

Five people experienced lung collapse, or pneumothorax, caused by the needle puncturing the pleural membranes around the lung.

The fact that only one of these collapses was reported as "severe" ? and one was listed as "no harm" even though lung collapse can be fatal ? rings alarm bells for Edzard Ernst of the University of Exeter, a leading expert on the evidence-based evaluation of alternative medicine, who helped conduct the study.

"Clearly this is not a highly risky treatment," he says. "But acupuncturists are adamant that it is devoid of risk, and that is not the case." If a patient has trouble breathing after treatment and the acupuncturist does not suspect lung collapse, they could send the patient home, where, if both lungs go, the patient can die. "They are in denial. They don't realise there's a potential problem, and that is the problem."

Ernst says that studies of acupuncture in other countries and in the UK outside the NHS have revealed 86 deaths after acupuncture between 1965 and 2009, most of them from lung collapse. Another risk, he says, is to the 6 per cent of people who naturally have a hole in their breastbone, near an acupuncture point. The hole is covered with ligaments, so a doctor cannot feel it. "Acupuncture needles go right through and penetrate the membranes around the heart," with lethal effect, says Ernst.

The British Acupuncture Council, a professional association, cites two studies "showing the risk of a serious adverse reaction to acupuncture is less than 1 in 10,000. This is far less than many orthodox medical treatments".

Any such risk assessment, however, must be weighed against the treatment's benefits says Ernst. "Critical analysis of existing evidence shows acupuncture might help in back pain, osteoarthritis and nausea," he says. "That's about it. But the NHS uses it for just about anything, even smoking cessation." This means that even though the risks are small, "they could well outweigh the benefit, which is next to non-existent".

Leading US acupuncturist Phil Veneziano writing in the Huffington Post, says acupuncturists "provide a safe, side effect-free method of recovery" from post-operative pain and nausea, constipation, urinary difficulties, hypertension, anxiety and insomnia. He predicts that by 2014, the US health care laws could "formally recognise acupuncture as a profession, opening the door to Medicare coverage for acupuncture."

Journal reference: International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine, DOI: 10.3233/JRS-2012-0569

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