Sinew Acupuncture for Neck Pain: Randomized Controlled Trial

Last updated: October 31, 2017
Sponsor: The University of Hong Kong
Overall Status: Active - Not Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Neck Pain

Chronic Pain

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT02834702
UHongKong-UW 15-456
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The study aims to examine the efficacy and safety of sinew acupuncture for chronic mechanical neck pain (CMNP).

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • (1) aged 18 years or above; (2) able to read and write Chinese; (3) the pain islocated between the neck and shoulder regions and movement or palpation of thecervical region provokes the symptoms (18); (4) the pain has persisted for more than 3months; (5) VAS (0 to 100 mm) pain score is ≥30 mm at baseline assessment; (6) notreatments (Chinese medicine, acupuncture, moxibustion, physiotherapies, medications,etc) intended for pain management have been received within the preceding two weeks.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • (1) a history of fracture or surgery to the neck; (2) malignant tumor; (3) cervicalcongenital abnormality; (4) a severe psychiatric illness; (5) needle phobia; (6)acupuncture treatment in the preceding 3 months, and (7) other acupuncturecontraindications as indicated in Hospital Authority Guideline on Safety inAcupuncture for Chinese Medicine Practitioners (Quality and Risk Sub-Committee,Hospital Authority, 2010).

Study Design

Total Participants: 130
Study Start date:
September 01, 2018
Estimated Completion Date:
June 30, 2020

Study Description

Objectives:

Sinew acupuncture is a superficial needling technique with the advantage of minimal pain, feasible manipulation, and no apparent adverse effects. The proposal aims to examine the efficacy and safety of sinew acupuncture for chronic mechanical neck pain (CMNP).

Hypothesis to be tested:

Sinew acupuncture can reduce pain intensity, and improve neck pain disability and health-related quality of life without significant side effects for CMNP subjects compared to a sham acupuncture treatment.

Design:

A randomized, subject- and assessor-blind, sham acupuncture-controlled clinical trial

Participants:

Subjects (N=130) will be randomized into sinew acupuncture or sham acupuncture group (in 1:1 ratio).

Study instrument:

Visual Analog Scale (VAS), Northwick Park Neck Pain Questionnaire (NPQ) and Short Form-36 (SF-36)

Intervention:

Sinew acupuncture group will receive five sessions of needling in two weeks. Sham group will receive the non-invasive treatment with the same procedures. All subjects are followed up for 4 weeks.

Main outcome measures:

VAS for neck pain intensity at week 3 serves as the primary outcome. VAS at other time points, NPQ score and SF-36 at week 1, 2, 3, and 6, and adverse events are analyzed as the secondary outcomes.

Data analysis:

Analysis will be on the 'intention to treat' principle. T-test and mixed-effect model analysis will be used to measure primary and secondary outcomes respectively.

Expected results:

Five sessions of sinew acupuncture treatment can significantly reduce neck pain intensity, and improve neck pain disability and quality of life without obvious side effects.