Tatiane Regina de Sousa, Suzana Mattos, Giovanna Marcon, Thayná Furtado, Morgana Duarte da silva

Acupuncture techniques and acupoints used in individuals under chemotherapy or radiotherapy treatment of cancer: A systematic review

  • General Medicine
  • General Nursing

AbstractAims and ObjectivesTo describe the main acupuncture techniques and parameters that have been used in the most varied symptoms of different types of cancer.BackgroundClinical evidence about the potential effectiveness of acupuncture and related therapies to control signs and symptoms associated with cancer or its treatment has been in several studies. Currently, there is already evidence of the use of acupuncture for the treatment of nausea and vomiting, fatigue, dry mouth, anxiety, depression, insomnia and pain. However, many studies lack firm rights or reproducible guidelines for treatment.DesignThis study performs a systematic review of clinical trials related to the topic, based on the PRISMA protocol. Thus, a search was carried out in the Scopus, Pubmed and Web of Science databases, covering studies since January 2007.MethodsStructured and organised according to PICO standards, using keywords (“cancer” OR “malignant tumour” OR “chemotherapy” OR “radiotherapy”) AND (“acupuncture” OR “electroacupuncture”) AND (“pain” OR “nausea” OR “vomit” OR “fatigue” OR “xerostomia” OR “insomnia” OR “depression” OR “neuropathy”).ResultsAfter the selection and evaluation phase, 23 studies were included and analysed.ConclusionBased on this analysis, it is concluded that acupuncture is safe and there is evidence of the reduction of gastrointestinal symptoms, chemotherapy‐induced peripheral neuropathy, pain, dry mouth, fatigue, insomnia, and improvement of cognitive capacity.Relevance to clinical practiceAcupuncture treatments could act by minimising the side effects of conventional treatments and reducing symptoms induced by tumours.No Patient or Public ContributionThe patients had no direct involvement with the study in question.

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