Clinical research evidence of cupping therapy in China: a systematic literature review Huijuan Cao, Mei Han, Xun Li, Shangjuan Dong, Yongmei Shang, Qian Wang, Shu Xu
Research article
Figure 1. The process of including and excluding studies.
Figure 2. Numbers of studies on cupping therapy by study type between 1958 and 2008.
Figure 3. Constituent ratio of types of cupping therapy.
Figure 4. Constituent ratio of the diseases which were reported in literatures that were treated
by cupping therapy.
Figure 5. Mapping of top 20 diseases by study type between 1994 and 2008.
Clinical research evidence of cupping therapy in China: a systematic literature review
Center for Evidence-Based
Chinese Medicine, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, 100029, China
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2010, 10:70
doi:10.1186/1472-6882-10-70
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6882/10/70
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6882/10/70
Received: | 31 May 2010 |
Accepted: | 16 November 2010 |
Published: | 16 November 2010 |
© 2010 Cao et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
Background
Though cupping therapy has been used in China for thousands of years, there has been
no systematic summary of clinical research on it.
This review is to evaluate the therapeutic effect of cupping therapy using evidence-based
approach based on all available clinical studies.
Methods
We included all clinical studies on cupping therapy for all kinds of diseases. We
searched six electronic databases, all searches ended in December 2008. We extracted
data on the type of cupping and type of diseases treated.
Results
550 clinical studies were identified published between 1959 and 2008, including 73
randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 22 clinical controlled trials, 373 case series,
and 82 case reports. Number of RCTs obviously increased during past decades, but the
quality of the RCTs was generally poor according to the risk of bias of the Cochrane
standard for important outcome within each trials. The diseases in which cupping was
commonly employed included pain conditions, herpes zoster, cough or asthma, etc. Wet
cupping was used in majority studies, followed by retained cupping, moving cupping,
medicinal cupping, etc. 38 studies used combination of two types of cupping therapies.
No serious adverse effects were reported in the studies.
Conclusions
According to the above results, quality and quantity of RCTs on cupping therapy appears
to be improved during the past 50 years in China, and majority of studies show potential
benefit on pain conditions, herpes zoster and other diseases. However, further rigorous
designed trials in relevant conditions are warranted to support their use in practice.
Background
Cupping therapy belongs to traditional Chinese medicine, the heritage from several
thousand years. It is used with one of several kinds of cups, such as bamboo cups,
glasses or earthen cups, placing them on the desired acupoints on patients' skin,
to make the local place hyperemia or haemostasis, which can obtain the purpose of
curing the diseases [1]. The earliest records of cupping is in Bo Shu (an ancient book written on silk), which was discovered in an ancient tomb of the
Han Dynasty in 1973[2]. Some therapeutic cupping methods and case records of treatment were also described
in early Chinese books. Zhao Xueming, a Chinese doctor practicing more than 200 years
ago, completed a book named "Ben Cao Gang Mu Shi Yi", in which he described in detail the history and origin of different kinds of cupping
and cup shapes, functions and applications [3].
There are seven major types of cupping practice in China. Usually, cupping practitioners
utilize the flaming heating power to achieve suction (minus pressure) inside the cups
to make them apply on the desired part of the body. This basic suction method of cupping
therapy is called retained cupping, which is most commonly used in Chinese clinics
as the first type of cupping. Besides this kind of suction, different types of cupping
composed with different methods. The second type of cupping is bleeding cupping (or
wet cupping), which contains two steps: before the suction of the cups, practitioners
should make some small incisions with a triangle-edged needle or plum-blossom needle
firmly tapping the acupoint for a short time to cause bleeding; the third one is moving
cupping, which practitioners should control the suction by gently moving the cup toward
one direction; then is empty cupping, which means the cups are removed after suction
without delay; or needle cupping, which should apply the acupuncture first, then apply
the cups over the needle. Cupping practitioners may also used other methods of suction,
such as medicinal (herbal) cupping, which used bamboo cups, usually put the cups and
herbal into a deep pan with water and boiled them together, after 30 minutes apply
the cup suction on specific points according to steam instead of fire; or water cupping
which is a technique involves filling a glass or bamboo cup one-third full with warm
water and pursuing the cupping process in a rather quick fashion. Each kind of cupping
therapy may be used for different diseases or different purposes of treatment.
Because cupping is widely used in Chinese folklore culture, the technique has been
inherited by the modern Chinese practitioners. In the 1950s the clinical efficacy
of cupping was confirmed by Co-Research of China and acupuncturists from the former
Soviet Union, and was established as an official therapeutic practice in hospitals
all over China [4]. This issue substantially stimulated the development of further cupping research.
In the context of evidence-based medicine (EBM), we need to evaluate therapeutic effect
of cupping therapy to inform the practice heritage from ancient time.
Methods
Inclusion Criteria
Any type of clinical studies including randomized controlled trials (RCTs), clinical
controlled trials (CCTs), case series (CSs), and case reports (CRs) indentifying the
therapeutic effect of cupping therapy, including one or more than two types of cupping
methods, compared with no treatment, placebo or conventional medication were included.
Combined therapy with cupping and other interventions compared with other interventions
alone were also included. Cupping therapy combined with other TCM therapies (including
acupuncture) compared with non-TCM therapies were excluded. There was no limitation
on language and publication type. Multiple publications reporting the same data of
patients were excluded.
Identification and selection of studies
We searched China Network Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI) (1911-1978, 1979-2008),
Chinese Scientific Journal Database VIP (1989-2008), Wan Fang Database (1985-2008),
Chinese Biomedicine (CBM) (1978-2008), PubMed (1966-2008) and the Cochrane Library
(Issue 4, 2008), all the searches ended at December 2008. The search terms included
"cupping therapy", "bleeding cupping", "wet cupping", "dry cupping", "flash cupping",
"herbal cupping", "moving cupping" or "retained cupping". Four authors (SJ Dong, YM
Shang, Q Wang, and S Xu) were involved in study identifying and each of them selected
one fourth of the studies for eligibility and checked against the inclusion criteria
independently, they all cross checked the results with other authors.
Data extraction and quality assessment
Four authors (SJ Dong, YM Shang, Q Wang, and S Xu) extracted the data from the included
trials independently, and each of them was in charge with one fourth of the included
trials. Another author (HJ Cao) checked the data and did the summary of their results.
The extracted data included authors and title of study, year of publication, study
design (detail of randomization if the study was RCT), type of disease, study size,
age and sex of the participants, type of cupping therapy, treatment process, detail
of the control interventions, outcome (for example, total effective rate), and adverse
effect for each study. All data were extracted from the published studies.
Evidence from RCT is considered as gold standard for therapeutic evaluation, we specifically
evaluate the methodological quality of RCT in this review. Two authors (HJ Cao and
M Han) evaluated the quality of included RCTs. Assessment of methodological quality
of RCTs was carried out using criteria from the Cochrane Reviewers' Handbook [5]. We assessed studies according to the risk of bias for each important outcome within
included trials, including adequacy of generation of the allocation sequence, allocation
concealment, blinding and outcome reporting. The quality of all the included trials
was categorized to low/unclear/high risk of bias. Trials which met all criteria were
categorized to low risk of bias, trials which met none of the criteria were categorized
to high risk of bias, and other trials were categorized to unclear risk of bias if
insufficient information acquired to make judgment.
Data analysis and statistical methods
Data were extracted using Microsoft Access, and all the information and data were
transferred into forms of Excel to be calculated for frequency. Data were summarized
using risk ratio (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for binary outcomes or mean
difference (MD) with 95% CI for continuous outcomes. Revman5.0.20 software was used
for data analyses. Meta-analysis was used if the trials had a good homogeneity on
study design, participants, interventions, control, and outcome measures. Publication
bias was explored by funnel plot analysis.
Results
Basic information of studies
After primary searches from six databases, 4696 citations were identified, and the
majority was excluded due to obvious ineligibility from reading title/abstract, and
full text papers of 550 studies were retrieved. At last, all of the 550 studies were
included in this review, which included 525 studies published in Chinese, 1 study
published in English, 20 unpublished conference papers and 4 unpublished dissertation
papers[7,15,30,39] (Figure 1).
All the included studies which were published between 1959 and 2008, including 73
RCTs [6-78], 22 CCTs, 373 CSs, and 82 CRs. 214 studies (38.9%) were published between 1999 and
2008, and the number of studies has increased over the course of five decades obviously
(Figure 2). The first RCT published in 1993 and over half of the involved RCTs were reported
between 2006 and 2008.
Description of interventions
Among all the included studies, 319 (58.0%) used bleeding cupping as the main intervention,
100 (18.2%) used retained cupping, 48 (8.7%) used moving cupping, 30 studies (5. 5%)
used medicinal cupping, 7 (1.3%) used flash cupping, 5 (0.9%) used water cupping,
and 3 (0.6%) used needle cupping, combined cupping which used at least two types of
cupping methods was used in 38 studies (6.9%) (Figure 3).
Distribution of diseases/conditions
More than 50 kinds of diseases or symptoms were treated by cupping therapy according
to included studies. The top 20 diseases/conditions in which cupping is commonly employed
were pain (70 studies), herpes zoster (59 studies), cough or asthma (39 studies),
acne (29 studies), common cold (24 studies), urticaria (22 studies), lateral femoral
cutaneous neuritis (21 studies), cervical spondylosis (19 studies), lumbar sprain
(19 studies), scapulohumeral periarthritis (17 studies), mastitis (14 studies), facial
paralysis (13 studies), Bi syndrome (Wind, cold and dampness invading the body, which is caused by changeable
climate and alternate cold and heat, or dwelling in damp places, or wading, or being
caught in the rain, and linger in channels and joints resulting in Bi syndrome as
the result of stagnation of qi and blood, 13 studies), headache (13 studies), soft tissue injury (10 studies), arthritis
(10 studies), neurodermatitis (10 studies), wound and sious (8 studies), sciatica
(7 studies) and myofascitis (6 studies), 264 studies were concerned on other diseases
treated by cupping therapy (Figure 4).
Among the top 20 diseases in this review, 12 of them were pain related, including
chronic muscle pain (100 studies, such as low back pain, skelalgia, fibromyalgia,
etc); generalized pain (93 studies, such as lumbar sprain, etc); infection pain (59
studies, herpes zoster); and neuralgia pain (20 studies, such as headache and sciatica).
Relieving pain was the main purpose of treating with cupping therapy of these studies.
Retained cupping, moving cupping, or wet cupping therapy was usually used in these
studies.
Beside pain, respiratory disease, such as common cold and symptom of cough and asthma
are also treated by cupping therapy. Common cold is caused by wind and cold pathogen
according to TCM theory, moving cupping along Du meridian may regulate the qi, expelling wind and clearing away cold. Dingchuan (EX-B1) is an acupoint belonging to Extra Meridian, which is effective on relieving
asthma and cough symptoms. Retained cupping or wet cupping therapy on Dingchuan is usually used on cough and asthma.
Acne belongs to disorders of skin appendages, neurodermatitis and urticaria belong
to disease of skin and subcutaneous tissue. All these three diseases may be caused
by over heat in blood system according to TCM theory. Thereby, wet cupping therapy
is popularly used for these diseases.
Facial paralysis is a kind of nerve root and plexus disorders, which belongs to disease
of the nerve system. Flashing cupping and moving cupping are commonly used on this
disease by regulating the circulation of qi and blood, expelling wind and clearing away cold, and channel meridians.
Mastitis is a kind of disease of the genitourinary system, is an inflammatory disorders
of breast. Wet cupping therapy is commonly used and acupoints belonged to liver meridian
are always chosen for the blood-letting before cups retained. Some of the studies
also used retained cupping therapy on nipple to utilize the negative pressure to cause
milk ejection, which is applied to patients with galactostasis. The same theory is
used for patients with wound and sious that retained cupping therapy may help discharge
of pus.
We also counted the number of studies of the top 20 diseases by study type between
1994 and 2008 (Figure 5).
Methodological quality of RCTs
According to our pre-defined methodological quality criteria, no trial could be evaluated
as low risk of bias, the majority of the 73 included trials were evaluated as high
risk of bias (Table 1: Reporting of five quality components in randomized clinical trials on cupping therapy).
None of the trials reported sample size calculation, 15 trials described randomization
procedures (such as random number table or computer generated random numbers), but
none of them reported allocation concealment. Three trials mentioned blinding, but
only one trial reported that they blinded outcome assessors, the other two trials
did not report who were blinded. Two trials reported the number of dropouts, but none
of them used intention-to-treat analysis.
Table 1. Reporting of five quality components in randomized clinical trials on cupping therapy
There were 48 (65.8%) trials reported the comparability of baseline data, 18 (24.7%)
trials specified the inclusion criteria, 17 (23.3%) trials specified the exclusion
criteria and 48 (65.8%) trials described the diagnostic criteria. 67 (91.8%) trials
reported the efficacy standard, but 51 (69.9%) out of 73 trials used composite outcome
measure which categorized the effect of the treatment into four grades (cured, markedly
effective, effective, ineffective) according to the change of the symptoms, the remaining
16 trials (21.9%) used single outcome measure for therapeutic effect. Symptoms were
commonly used as outcome measurements, which were applied in 34 (46.6%) trials.
Estimate effects of RCTs with cupping
Due to the insufficient RCTs and the variations in study quality, participants, intervention,
control and outcome measures of the included RCTs, the results of most of the studies
could not be synthesized by quantitative method. Though most of the studies showed
that cupping therapy was significant effective on certain diseases, the interpretation
of the positive findings from the individual studies need to be incorporated with
the clinical characteristics of the included studies and evidence strength. Therefore,
the conclusion of the beneficial effect of cupping therapy needs to be confirmed in
large and rigorously designed RCTs.
We conducted a systematic review [80] (in press) of 8 RCTs to evaluate therapeutic effect of wet cupping therapy for herpes
zoster, the meta-analyses showed that wet cupping was superior to medications for
the number of cured patients (RR 2.49, 95%CI 1.91 to 3.24, p < 0.00001), the number of patients with improved symptom (RR 1.15, 95%CI 1.05 to 1.26,
p = 0.003), and the incidence rate of post-herpetic neuralgia (RR 0.06, 95%CI 0.02 to
0.25, p = 0.0001). Combination of wet cupping and medications was significantly better than
medications alone on number of cured patients (RR 1.93, 95%CI 1.23 to 3.04, p = 0.005), but no difference in symptom improvement (RR 1.00, 95%CI 0.92 to 1.08, p = 0.98).
We also conducted a systematic review [81] of RCTs to evaluate the therapeutic effect of TCM therapies for fibromyalgia, only
3 trials [82-84] on cupping therapy were included in the review according to the inclusion criteria,
and two of them could be conducted in meta-analysis according to VAS (Visual Analogue
Scale) and HAMD (Hamilton Depression Scale) scores after treatment. These sub-analysis
of 2 out of 25 trials showed that compared to medications alone, cupping therapy combined
with acupuncture plus medications was significantly better on pain relieving (MD -1.66,
95%CI -2.14 to -1.19, p < 0.00001) and depression remission (MD -4.92, 95%CI -6.49 to -3.34, p < 0.00001).
Serious adverse effects were not reported in any of the trial publications.
Discussion
According to our findings, clinical studies on cupping therapy were obviously improved
either on number or quality during the last 50 years. Though the methodological quality
of the included RCTs were generally poor, some quality items showed that it was improved
during the last 10 years, such as the number of the RCTs which reported the sequence
generation of randomization (Table 1: Reporting of five quality components in randomized clinical trials on cupping therapy).
But we should wake up to that these studies leave much scope for well designed, conducted
and reported trials. We included 550 clinical studies in this review, only 73 RCTs
were published in the last two decades, 78.1% of these RCTs were with high risk of
bias. According to the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) [85], randomization methods need to be clearly described and fully reported. Although
blinding of the cupping therapy might be very difficult, blinding of outcome assessors
and statistics should be attempted as much as possible to minimize performance and
assessment biases. Sample size calculation and analysis of outcomes based on intention-to-treat
principle are important. Similar to acupuncture, cupping therapy is a kind of treatment
which relevant to meridian and acupoints, so researchers may consult to the standard
of STRICTA [86] on trial report, which means details of cupping treatment should be reported, such
as type of cups, experience of the practitioners, period and frequency of the treatment.
About one third of the included RCTs did not report the diagnostic criteria, 63.0%
of the RCTs did not report the criteria of inclusion and exclusion, and the use of
composite outcome measures in 51 (69.9%) trials to evaluate overall improvement of
symptoms, all the issues limit the generalization of the findings. The classification
of "cure", "markedly effective", "effective" or "ineffective" is not internationally
recognized, and it is hard to interpret the effect. All of the above uncertain items
may increase the clinical heterogeneity. We suggest future trials completely report
all the criteria they chose and comply with international standards in the evaluation
of treatment effect.
We searched PubMed database using the above searching strategy, only 2 RCTs were published
by international researchers outside of China until 2008. One tested wet cupping therapy
on serum lipid concentrations [87], which concluded that wet cupping may be an effective method of reducing LDL cholesterol
in men and consequently may have a preventive effect against atherosclerosis. Another
study tested wet cupping therapy for nocturnal brachialgia paraesthetica [88], which suggested short-term effects of a single wet cupping therapy. Meanwhile, two
further RCTs with cupping originating outside China have been published after 2008,
demonstrating increasing interest in this field. One trial [89] found that traditional wet-cupping care was significantly more effective in reducing
bodily pain than usual care at 3-month follow-up with satisfactory safety and acceptance
to patients with nonspecific low back pain. Another trial [90] investigated the effectiveness of cupping therapy with the conclusion that cupping
therapy may be effective in relieving pain and other symptoms related to carpal tunnel
syndrome (CTS), however, the efficacy of cupping in the long-term management of CTS
and related mechanisms remains to be clarified. We are glad to see that these trials
are apparently with good methodological quality, however, though most of the clinical
trials showed positive results on therapeutic effect of cupping therapy, the appropriate
duration of the cupping therapy, the syndrome differentiation for acupoints selection,
and the frequency of the cupping therapy were unclear according to current evidence.
Future studies should address these issues.
This review suggests that there is insufficient high-quality evidence to support the
use of cupping therapy on relevant diseases. Although quite a number of clinical studies
reported that cupping therapy may have effect on pain conditions, herpes zoster, symptoms
of cough and asthma, acne, common cold, or other common diseases. The current evidence
is not sufficient to allow recommendation for clinical use of cupping therapy for
the treatment of above diseases of any etiology in people of any age group. The long-term
effect of cupping therapy is not known, but use of cupping is generally safe based
on long term clinical use and reports from the reviewed clinical studies.
The number of RCTs on treatment using cupping therapy is scarce in terms of a specific
disease. Existing trials are of small size and low methodological quality. Further
high quality studies of larger sample size are needed to assess the effectiveness
of cupping therapy. It might be worthwhile to examine the effectiveness of cupping
therapy or combination of cupping therapy with other non-pharmacological or pharmacological
treatments for pain conditions, herpes zoster, symptoms of cough and asthma, acne,
common cold, or other common diseases which were most treated by cupping therapy according
to this review. In addition, the methodological quality should be improved, and the
study design and report should also be standardized. The protocol of the study should
be registered in authoritative organizations [91], such as WHO International Clinical Trial Registration Platform (WHO ICTRP).
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
HC participated in the design of the study, searched studies, participated in extracted
data, assessed study quality, analyzed data, performed the statistical analysis and
drafted the manuscript. MH participated in extracted data, assessed study quality.
XL co-developed the full text of the review. SD, YS, QW, SX participated in searched
literature, identified clinical studies for inclusion and extracted data. JL conceived
of the study, and participated in its design and coordination, co-developed the full
text of the review and is the corresponding author.
Acknowledgements
Huijuan Cao and Jianping Liu were supported by a grant from the National Basic Research
Program of China ('973' Program, No. 2006CB504602), the grant of international cooperation
project (No. 2009DFA31460) and the 111 Project (B08006) from China. Jianping Liu was
in part supported by the Grant Number R24 AT001293 from the National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) of the US National Institutes of Health.
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