Table 41Fibromyalgia: mind-body therapies

Author, Year, Followup, Pain Duration, Study QualityInterventionPopulationFunction and Pain OutcomesOther Outcomes

Lynch, 2012

(N=100)

4 months

Duration of fibromyalgia, mean: 9.6 years

Fair

A. Qigong (n=53): Chaoyi Fanhuan Qigong; 3consecutive half-day training sessions then weekly practice sessions for 8 weeks plus daily at-home practice for 45 to 60 minutes.

B. Waitlist (n=47): continued with usual care; offered qigong after the trial ended

A vs. B

Age: 53 vs. 52 years

Female: 94% vs. 98%

Previous opioid therapy: 42% vs. 30%

Current opioid therapy: 36% vs. 23%

Current therapy: 49% vs. 57%

(0-100): 65.5 vs. 61.8

pain (0-10): 6.5 vs. 6.6

SF-36 PCS (0-100): 30.0 vs. 32.6

SF-36 MCS (0-100): 38.1 vs. 40.4

(0-21): 13.8 vs. 13.1

A vs. B

4 months

Mean change from baseline:

: −16.1 vs. −4.8; difference −11.3 (95% −19.3 to −3.3)

pain: −1.21 vs. −0.27; difference −0.9 (95% −1.7 to −0.1)

A vs. B

4 months

Mean change from baseline:

SF-36 PCS: 4.6 vs. 0.2; difference 4.4 (95% 1.5 to 7.3)

SF-36 MCS: 4.4 vs. 0.7; difference 3.7 (95% −0.3 to 7.7)

: −3.3 vs. −1.1; difference −2.2 (95% −3.6 to −0.8)

Wang, 2010

(N=66)

3 months

Duration of fibromyalgia pain: 11 years

Fair

A. Tai chi (n=33) Classic Yang style tai chi; at home practice for at least 20 minutes a day; encouraged to maintain tai chi practice using an instructional video.

B. Attention control (n=33): 40 minutes of education then 20 minutes of supervised stretching (upper body, trunk, and lower body); plus 20 minutes of daily at-home stretching

Both groups had 60-minute sessions twice a week for 12 weeks and continued regular medications and routine activities.

A vs. B

Age: 50 vs. 51 years

Female: 85% vs. 88%

Analgesic use: 88% vs. 73%

(0-100): 62.9 vs. 68.0

pain (0-10): 5.8 vs. 6.3

(0-60): 22.6 vs. 27.8

SF-36 PCS (0-100): 28.5 vs. 28.0

SF-36 MCS (0-100): 42.6 vs. 37.8

(0-21): 13.9 vs. 13.5

A vs. B

3 months

Proportion with clinically meaningful improvement:

: 81.8% vs. 51.5%; 1.6 (95% 1.1 to 2.3)

pain: 54.5% vs. 27.3%; 2.0 (95% 1.1 to 3.8)

Mean change from baseline: : −28.6 vs. −10.2; difference −18.3 (95% −27.1 to −9.6)

pain: −2.4 vs. −0.7; difference −1.7 (95% −2.7 to −0.8)

A vs. B

3 months

Proportion with clinically meaningful improvement:

: 69.7% vs. 39.4%; 1.8 (95% 1.1 to 2.9)

SF-36 PCS: 51.5% vs. 15.2%; 3.4 (95% 1.4 to 8.1)

SF-36 MCS: 48.5% vs. 24.2%; 2.0 (95% 1.0 to 4.0)

: 45.5% vs. 18.2%; 2.5 (95% 1.1 to 5.6)

Mean change from baseline:

: −6.5 vs. −2.4; difference −4.1 (95% −8.2 to 0.1)

SF-36 PCS: 8.4 vs. 1.5; difference 7.0 (95% 2.9 to 11.0)

SF-36 MCS: 8.5 vs. 1.2; difference 7.3 (95% 1.9 to 12.8)

: −4.2 vs. −1.2; difference −3.0 (95% −5.2 to −0.9)

Wang, 2018

All groups were assessed at 12, 24, and 52 weeks from the start of treatment

Duration of pain: Mean 11.1 to 13.8 years

Fair

[New trial]

A. Yang style tai chi (n=39): one 60-minute session/week for 12 weeks. Mean adherence rate (): 66.7% (28.7%)

B. Yang style tai chi (n=37): two 60-minute sessions/week for 12 weeks. Mean adherence rate (): 65.1% (26%)

C. Yang style tai chi (n=39): one 60-minute session/week for 24 weeks. Mean adherence rate (): 57.2% (27.9%)

D. Yang style tai chi (n=36): two 60-minute sessions/week for 24 weeks. Mean adherence rate (): 57.8% (33.3%)

E. Aerobic exercise (n=75): two 60-minute sessions/week for 24 weeks.

All groups received educational information about the importance of physical activity and home practice; encouraged to integrate at least 30 minutes of tai chi or aerobic exercise into their daily routine; asked to continue exercise after completing their 12 week or 24 week sessions, as well as throughout 52 weeks of followup.

A vs. B vs. C. vs. D vs. E

Age: 53 vs. 52 vs. 51 vs. 52 vs. 51 years

Female: 85% vs. 81% vs. 97% vs. 100% vs. 96%

Baseline -R (0-100): 52.4 vs. 53.8 vs. 56.5 vs. 60.4 vs. 57.3

All results reported as mean change from baseline (95% )

C vs. E

6 months

-R: −16.7 (−23.4 to −10.1) vs. −9.2 (−14.3 to −4.1)

12 months

-R: −13.6 (−20.4 to −6.8) vs. −11.7 (−16.7 to −6.6)

D vs. E

6 months

-R: −25.4 (−32.3 to −18.4) vs. −9.2 (−14.3 to −4.1); difference 16.2 (8.7 to 23.6), p<0.001

12 months

-R: −22.7 (−30.0 to −15.4) vs. −11.7 (−16.7 to −6.6); difference 11.1 (2.7 to 19.6), p=0.01

Any tai chi vs. E

3-6 months

-R; differnce 5.5, (0.6 to 10.4) p=0.03

6-12 months

(-R, differnce −2.7, 95% −2.3 to 7.7)

All results reported as mean change from baseline (95% )

C vs. E

6 months

SS (0-12): −1.8 (−2.6 to −1.0) vs. −0.8 (−1.4 to −0.2)

PGAS (0-10): −1.6 (−2.4 to −0.8) vs. −0.4 (−1.0 to 0.2)

(0-100): −3.9 (−8.6 to 0.9) vs. −4.1 (−7.8 to −0.5)

(0-63): −7.5 (−10.8 to −4.1) vs. −5.2 (−7.7 to −2.7)

(0-21): −1.4 (−2.6 to 0.3) vs. −0.6 (−1.5 to 0.4)

(0-21): −1.4 (−2.5 to −0.2) vs. 0.0 (−0.9 to 0.9)

SF-36 MCS (0-100): 5.3 (1.9 to 8.7) vs. 0.9 (−1.8 to 3.6)

SF-36 PCS (0-100): 5.0(2.5 to 7.6) vs. 4.0 (2.0 to 6.0)

(0-100): −1.9 (−3.2 to −0.6) vs. −1.1 (−2.1 to −0.1)

12 months

SS: −1.4 (−2.3 to −0.6) vs. −1.1 (−1.8 to −0.4)

PGAS: −1.4 (−2.2 to −0.5) vs. −0.3 (−0.9 to 0.3)

: −3.5 (−8.8 to 1.8) vs. −3.9 (−7.8 to 0.0)

: −5.5 (−9.4 to −1.6) vs. −6.4 (−9.3 to −3.5)

: −0.9 (−2.2 to 0.5) vs. −0.6 (−1.6 to 0.4)

: −1.3 (−2.7 to 0.0) vs. −0.4 (−1.4 to 0.6)

SF-36 MCS: 3.8 (−0.5 to 8.0) vs. 3.0 (−0.1 to 6.0)

SF-36 PCS: 6.9 (3.9 to 9.9) vs. 2.6 (0.4 to 4.7)

: −1.1 (−2.6 to 0.4) vs. −1.2 (−2.3 to −0.1)

D vs. E

6 months

SS: −1.7 (−2.5 to −0.8) vs. −0.8 (−1.4 to −0.2); difference 0.9 (−0.1 to 1.9), p=0.09

PGAS: −2.0 (−2.8 to −1.2) vs. −0.4 (−1.0 to 0.2); difference 1.6 (0.7 to 2.5), p=0.0006

: −6.7 (−12.0 to −1.3) vs. −4.1 (−7.8 to −0.5); difference 2.4 (−4.3 to 9.0), p=0.48

: −9.5 (−13.0 to −6.0) vs. −5.2 (−7.7 to −2.7); difference 4.3 (0.0 to 8.5), p=0.049

: −2.7 (−4.1 to 1.4) vs. −0.6 (−1.5 to 0.4); difference 2.1 (0.5 to 3.7), p=0.01

: −2.1 (−3.4 to −0.8) vs. 0.0 (−0.9 to 0.9); difference 2.1 (0.6 to 3.6), p=0.008

SF-36 MCS: 7.4 (3.6 to 11.2) vs. 0.9 (−1.8 to 3.6); difference 6.2 (1.9 to 10.6), p=0.006

SF-36 PCS: 5.9 (3.1 to 8.8) vs. 4.0 (2.0 to 6.0); difference 2.0 (−1.3 to 5.3), p=0.24

: −2.1 (−3.5 to −0.7) vs. −1.1 (−2.1 to −0.1); difference 1.0 (−0.6 to 2.5), p=0.22

12 months

SS: −1.8 (−2.8 to −0.9) vs. −1.1 (−1.8 to −0.4); difference 0.7 (−0.3 to 1.8), p=0.18

PGAS: −1.7 (−2.7 to −0.8) vs. −0.3 (−0.9 to 0.3); difference 1.5 (0.4 to 2.5), p=0.008

: −5.0 (−10.8 to 0.7) vs. −3.9 (−7.8 to 0.0); difference 1.8 (−5.9 to 9.4), p=0.65

: −11.1 (−15.2 to −6.9) vs. −6.4 (−9.3 to −3.5); difference 4.6 (−0.5 to 9.7), p=0.08

: −2.2 (−3.7 to 0.8) vs. −0.6 (−1.6 to 0.4); difference 1.6 (0.0 to 3.2), p=0.05

: −2.1 (−3.6 to −0.7) vs. −0.4 (−1.4 to 0.6); difference 1.6 (0.1 to 3.1), p=0.04

SF-36 MCS: 5.4 (0.8 to 9.9) vs. 3.0 (−0.1 to 6.0); difference 2.2 (−2.7 to 7.1), p=0.38

SF-36 PCS 5.4 (2.2 to 8.6): vs. 2.6 (0.4 to 4.7); difference 3.0 (−0.7 to 6.8), p=0.11

: −2.0 (−3.6 to −0.4) vs. −1.2 (−2.3 to −0.1); difference 0.9 (−0.7 to 2.5), p=0.26

Any tai chi vs. E:

Change in narcotics use:

24 weeks: OR 0.89 (0.28, 2.80)

52 weeks: OR 1.08 (0.33, 3.51)

= Beck Depression Inventory; = Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression index; = confidence interval; = Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire; = Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score; MCS = Mental Component Summary; = numeric rating scale; NSAIDs = nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PCS = Physical Component Summary; = Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; = risk ratio; SF-36 = Short-Form-36 Questionaire; SS = Symptom Severity; = visual analog scale

a

Unless otherwise noted, followup time is calculated from the end of the treatment period

b

A reduction of ≥8.1 points from baseline on the was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

c

A reduction of ≥2 points from baseline on the was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

d

A reduction of ≥6 points from baseline on the was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

e

An increase of ≥6.5 points from baseline on the SF-36 PCS was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

f

An increase of ≥7.9 points from baseline on the SF-36 MCS was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

g

A reduction of >5 points from baseline on the was considered a clinically meaningful improvement

From: Results

Cover of Noninvasive Nonpharmacological Treatment for Chronic Pain: A Systematic Review Update
Noninvasive Nonpharmacological Treatment for Chronic Pain: A Systematic Review Update [Internet].
Comparative Effectiveness Review, No. 227.
Skelly AC, Chou R, Dettori JR, et al.

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