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Effect of Acupuncture vs Chinese Medicine vs Combined Therapy on Aromatase Inhibitor-related Arthralgia Among Women With Early-Stage Breast Cancer

S

Show Chwan Memorial Hospital

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Arthralgia

Treatments

Device: acupuncture
Drug: Guizhi-Shaoyao-Zhimu decoction

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05264649
1100903

Details and patient eligibility

About

Aromatase inhibitors have been used to treat hormone receptor positive breast cancer women in menopause, but side effects, such as joint pain, would affect their qualities of life. Chinese herbs or acupuncture provides promising clinical effects and plays an important role on alleviating the side effects of cancer treatment. This clinical trial will evaluate the effect of the acupuncture, Chinese medicine, and the combination of both on joint pain related to aromatase inhibitors among women with early-stage breast cancers.

Full description

Reduce estrogen exposure can lower the risk of breast cancer recurrence. Aromatase inhibitors have been used to treat hormone receptor positive breast cancer women in menopause for years. It can increase the survival rate and decrease the chance of recurrence. However, many patients suffered from the side effects of medication, including joint pain, is the main reason for decreasing medication adherence and influencing patients' quality of life. Based on previous phase III clinical trial study, acupuncture may relieve aromatase inhibitor associated joint pain, and experts believe that acupuncture could also be considered as an effective adjuvant treatment. Chinese herbs or acupuncture provides promising clinical effects and plays an important role in alleviating the side effects of cancer treatment. Guizhi-Shaoyao-Zhimu decoction has frequently being prescribed to treat joint pain in traditional Chinese medicine practice. The design of this clinical trial will evaluate the effects of the acupuncture, Chinese medicine, and the combination of both on joint pain related to aromatase inhibitors among women with early-stage breast cancer. The goal of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety with regards to utilizing acupuncture and Chinese herbs in treating joint pain related to the usage of aromatase inhibitors.

Enrollment

72 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

20 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Women with diagnosis of early breast cancer (stages I-III), expressing hormone receptor-positive (ER+, PR+, or both) and took third generation aromatase inhibitors (AIs).
  2. Post- or pre-menopausal with the use of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist.
  3. Taking AIs for more than 30 days before registration and planned to continue treatment for over 1 year.
  4. Have already been recovered from the surgery or chemotherapy.
  5. Have a ECOG performance status score of 0 to 1.
  6. Joint pain which has developed or worsened since starting AIs therapy. The worst pain item score of Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form (BPI-SF) is at least 3 and above.
  7. Have a Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) grading scale for chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy score of 1 to 2.
  8. The patient could cooperate the intervention and sign the informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Had received acupuncture treatment for joint pain would be excluded, but patients with acupuncture treatment for less than 2 times due to other reasons could be included.
  2. Had a history of fractures or underwent surgery on the knee or hand joints in the past six months.
  3. Had severe bleeding disorders. The platelet counts are below 50,000 per μl.
  4. Cognitive disorders (included dementia).
  5. Lymphedema after breast cancer surgery.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

72 participants in 3 patient groups

acupuncture group
Experimental group
Description:
Stainless steel, disposable, sterile needles choosing based on the needs of different body parts (0.22 gauge x 25mm, 0.22 gauge x 40mm, or 0.25 gauge x 100mm) were inserted to acupoints at traditional depths and angles.
Treatment:
Device: acupuncture
Chinese medicine group
Experimental group
Description:
The Chinese medicine group used Guizhi-Shaoyao-Zhimu decoction (GZSD) as their medical intervention. The GZSD samples were made and packed by Sun Ten Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd., a firm that meets the requirements of the good manufacturing practice (GMP) certification in Taiwan. Every 4g of concentrated GZSD was sealed in an isolated paper drug bag.
Treatment:
Drug: Guizhi-Shaoyao-Zhimu decoction
combined group
Experimental group
Description:
The combined group would have both acupuncture and Chinese medicine interventions.
Treatment:
Drug: Guizhi-Shaoyao-Zhimu decoction
Device: acupuncture

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

I-Ting Lee, Bachelor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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