Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a common, preventable, and treatable disease that is characterized by persistent respiratory symptoms and airflow limitation resulting from airway and/or alveolar abnormalities that are usually caused by significant exposure to noxious particles or gases, as defined by the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD).1 Globally, because of continued exposure to COPD risk factors and population aging, the COPD burden is expected to increase in the coming decades.2 COPD is a systemic disease that is associated with a wide variety of symptoms and affects patients’ physical, psychological, and social conditions.3 COPD presents high morbidity and mortality but can be decreased by proper treatment and conventional care or traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) nursing.
With the development of TCM, TCM nursing is becoming increasingly widely used in clinical practice, including in patients with COPD. Chinese medical care researchers have explored involving TCM nursing theory, education, management, practice, and so on to promote the development of TCM nursing. Currently, the clinical efficacy of conventional nursing has been recognized. There are a considerable number of nonrandomized trials and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving the comparison of TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing and conventional nursing alone. The sample size in current studies is limited and multicenter trials are lacking, making the evidence of TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing unreliable and lacking power.
The aim of this study was to compare the effects of TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing with conventional nursing alone in patients with COPD. The meta-analysis allows clinical outcomes to be quantified for evaluating the advantages of TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing.
Criteria for inclusion and exclusion of studies were established according to the participants, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and study design (PICOS) principles. The inclusion criteria were as follows: (1) participants: all of the included participants had a diagnosis of COPD, according to the guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of COPD and received conventional Western medicine; (2) interventions: the participants in the study group were treated with TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing. Conventional nursing involves daily care, dietary nursing, activity nursing, oxygen therapy, assistance with coughing, condition observation, medication care, and health education. TCM nursing, characterized as dialectical nursing, includes dietetic care, emotional nursing, physical therapy of TCM, TCM health education, and TCM rehabilitation training; (3) comparisons: participants in the control group received conventional nursing; (4) outcomes: the study should have reported at least one of the following clinical outcomes: St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) score, pulmonary function index (forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1], FEV1/forced vital capacity [FVC], FEV1%, and FEV1 predicted value), hospital stay, and clinical efficacy; and (5) study design: RCTs aimed at studying the effect of TCM nursing intervention on the clinical outcome of patients with COPD. Exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) literature was not designed rigorously; (2) the control group was not designed in the literature; (3) data in the literature were unknown; or (4) relevant data could not be extracted from the literature. For literature that was duplicated or reported by the same research institution, publications with higher quality or more detailed data were included.
A literature search was conducted in a variety of electronic databases, including PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Google Scholar, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), WanFang Data (WF) and VIP, for research published before January 2017. The following terms or keywords were used ((“pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive” [MeSH Terms] OR (“pulmonary”[All Fields] AND “disease”[All Fields] AND “chronic” [All Fields] AND “obstructive” [All Fields]) OR “chronic obstructive pulmonary disease” [All Fields] OR (“chronic”[All Fields] AND “obstructive” [All Fields] AND “lung” [All Fields] AND “disease” [All Fields]) OR “chronic obstructive lung disease” [All Fields] OR “chronic obstructive pulmonary disease” [All Fields] OR “COPD”[All Fields]))AND ((“medicine, Chinese traditional” [MeSH Terms] OR (“medicine” [All Fields] AND “Chinese” [All Fields] AND “traditional”[All Fields]) OR “Chinese traditional medicine”[All Fields] OR (“traditional” [All Fields] AND “Chinese” [All Fields] AND “medicine” [All Fields]) OR “traditional Chinese medicine” [All Fields] OR “TCM” [All Fields]) AND (“nurses” [MeSH Terms] OR “nurses” [All Fields] OR “nurse” [All Fields] OR care [All Fields])). No language restrictions were followed.
The Jadad scale4 was used to assess the quality of the selected publications that met the inclusion criteria. All of the eligible RCTs were assessed by three reviewers (Chenyang Li, YuNan Ji, and ZhenHua Hou) independently. The criteria of Jadad were as follows: (1) Generation of random sequences (appropriate: 2 points; unclear: 1 point; inappropriate: 0 points); (2) Allocation concealment (appropriate: 2 points; unclear: 1 point; inappropriate: 0 points; unused: 0 points); (3) Double blinding (appropriate: 2 points; unclear: 1 point; inappropriate: 0 points); and (4) Withdrawal (describes the number and rationale for the withdrawal: 1 point; The number and rationale of withdrawal are not described: 0 points). Four aspects of the evaluation quality were used: 1–3 points were regarded as low quality, and 4–7 points were regarded as high quality.
Two investigators (Chenyang Li and Lingli Xie) extracted the data independently. The following data were extracted from each publication: first author, year of publication, type of study, selection criteria, age, number of participants, randomness in method, SGRQ scores, pulmonary function, hospital stay, and clinical efficacy.
Meta-analysis was performed using Stata12.0 software (StatCorp, College Station, TX, USA). Weighted mean differences (WMDs) were used to compare SGRQ scores, pulmonary function, and hospital stay. Clinical efficacy was compared using odds ratios (ORs), and subgroup analysis was performed. Statistical heterogeneity was evaluated by the use of Cochran Q and
Using the search strategies described, 753 potential articles were initially retrieved, and 662 studies were excluded after screening the titles. Fifty studies (reviews or case reports) were excluded after assessing the abstracts. Upon full-text review, 18 reports were excluded because the control groups were missing. Therefore, 23 studies were eligible for this meta-analysis (Figure 1); the characteristics and quality assessment of eligible studies are shown in Table 1. These eligible articles involved 3116 participants (TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing group: 1559, conventional nursing group: 1557). All included studies were reported in the Chinese language.
Study characteristics and inclusion criteria 1= SGRQ scores; 2= FEV1 Value; 3= FEV1/FVC Value; 4= FEV1% value; 5= FEV1 predicted value; 6= hospital stay; 7= clinical efficacy. SE = standard error; B-value = unstandardized B.Articles Study period Case Number in study group Number in control group Outcomes Quality assessment Dai 20165 2012/11–2015/12 COPD 20 20 1 3 Li 20156 2013/6–2015/6 Stable COPD 50 50 1,3, 5 3 He 20147 2010/12–2013/10 Stable COPD 60 60 1,3, 5 3 Zheng et al 20148 2011/1–2012/12 Stable COPD 143 143 1,2, 3, 5 4 Peng 20099 2007/1–2009/1 Stable COPD 50 50 2, 3 3 Chen et al 201510 – Stable COPD 53 53 2, 3, 7 4 Li 201511 2014/1–2014/12 Stable COPD 43 43 2 4 Zuo et al 201512 2013/4–2014/3 COPD 36 36 2, 3 3 Pei et al 201513 2014/6–2015/6 Stable COPD 46 46 2, 3, 7 4 Shi et al 201414 2013/5–2013/12 Acute exacerbation COPD 15 15 3, 4 4 Liu 201415 2013/1–2014/1 COPD 53 53 3, 4 4 Wang et al 201516 2013/7–2014/7 COPD 40 38 3, 5 4 Huang 201617 2012/10–2014/10 Stable COPD 42 42 3, 5 3 Li et al 201318 2008/1–2013/2 Stable COPD 300 300 4, 7 3 Fu et al 201419 2012/1–2013/12 Acute exacerbation COPD 50 50 6 4 Lei 20 1 420 2012/8–2014/2 COPD 100 100 6, 7 4 Liang et al 201021 2008/1–2009/1 Acute exacerbation COPD 45 45 6 4 Pan 201322 2011/4–2012/3 Acute exacerbation COPD 64 64 6, 7 4 Fan 201 523 2013/5–2015/5 COPD 40 40 7 3 Zhang et al 201324 2011/1–2013/1 Acute exacerbation COPD 27 27 7 4 Nie et al 201225 2011/1–2011/11 Acute exacerbation COPD 120 120 7 3 Han 201 526 2013/9–2014/10 Acute exacerbation COPD 60 60 7 4
Four studies5,7,8 reported indications for SGRQ scores, and a fixed-effect model was used for studying interstudy heterogeneity (
Results of meta-analysis of outcomesOutcomes Number of studies Number of patients Pooled WMD 95% CI of pooled WMD Heterogeneity Study group Control group SGRQ scores 4 273 273 –15.06 –16.56 to 13.55 0.000 0.0 0.990 FEV1 value 6 371 371 0.29 0.13 to 0.45 0.000 95.7 0.000 FEV1/FVC value 11 588 586 4.95 2.71 to 7.19 0.000 96.2 0.000 FEV1% value 4 511 511 9.20 4.71 to 13.68 0.000 97.8 0.000 FEV1 predicted value 4 192 190 4.13 3.44 to 4.82 0.000 0.0 0.725 Hospital stay 4 259 259 –3.96 –5.79 to 1.94 0.000 95.9 0.000
Significant heterogeneity was observed in six studies8,9,10,11,12,13 that reported data on the FEV1 value (
Four studies19,20,21,22 recorded hospital stay. There was significant heterogeneity (
Clinical efficacy was reported by ten studies.10,13,18,20,22,23,24,25,26,27 The analysis of clinical efficacy did not exhibit heterogeneity (
Evaluation of publication bias was performed using Begg’s test and, based on clinical efficacy, showed no significance (
To our knowledge, this comprehensive and detailed meta-analysis is the first to evaluate the association between TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing and conventional nursing alone in treating COPD. This meta-analysis presents us with the evidence that TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing can provide patients with COPD a higher life quality, better lung function, preferable clinical efficacy, and a shorter hospital stay. Furthermore, subgroup analysis indicates that TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing has greater clinical efficacy in patients with AECOPD and stable COPD.
According to the TCM syndrome differentiation standard,28 COPD can be divided into several types, such as exterior cold and interior heat, obstructed lung-Qi by retention of phlegm, stagnated lung-Qi, stagnation of phlegm-heat in the lung, and so on. TCM nursing is based on the theoretical system of TCM, which mainly embodies the concept of wholism and treatment determination based on syndrome differentiation. Tuinaology of TCM is a form of Chinese manipulative therapy that prevents and treats diseases. Currently, it is best known as “Tuina” and “Anmo”. The active principles of Tuina therapy can be considered to keep the balance of Yin and Yang, dredge the meridians and collaterals, regulate the Qi and blood, regulate the Zang-Fu organ function, restore and treat injured soft tissue to reduce the displacement, and lubricate joints. For regulation on the material level, Tuina can regulate the respiration system. When conducting Tuinaology, Feishu, Fenglong, Neiguan, Pishu, Qihai, Zhongji, and Tiantu can be selected to treat patients with COPD. Each procedure is performed for 3 minutes, once a day, until a local acid bilge feeling is reported. Studies29 suggest that Tuina can improve lung function and the quality of life of patients with COPD; this finding is consistent with the results of this meta-analysis. Apart from Tuinaology, acupuncture treatment is also important for COPD patients’ rehabilitation.30 The COPD rehabilitation guideline recommends that effective exercise can be ensured with moderate intensity.31 Traditional rehabilitation exercises such as six words, eight brocade, and Tai chi are relevant to improvements in exercise capacity, respiratory function, and respiratory muscle strength. Additionally, because COPD is a prolonged disease, patients with COPD are prone to be depressed and anxious. TCM emotional care is necessary.
Because of the significant heterogeneity of the eligible studies, random-effects models were used during pooling of data. Significant heterogeneity persisted during the sensitivity analysis, especially when comparing the FEV1 value, FEV1/FVC value, and FEV1% value between the two groups. The significant heterogeneity was likely a result of the differences in some potentially confounding variables that were not specifically considered, such as disease type, demographic characteristics, or methodology differences among studies.6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17 In addition, the studies did not use the same TCM nursing methods, and the severity of illness was also different, leading to potential heterogeneity. COPD severity might affect the rehabilitation of lung function, so there was a significant heterogeneity, especially in comparing the FEV1 value, FEV1/FVC value, and FEV1% value. Thus, more rigorous RCTs should be conducted to evaluate the parameters that have significant heterogeneity in this meta-analysis.
This meta-analysis suggests that for the treatment and rehabilitation of COPD, TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing can be performed preferably. We attempted to search the literature as thoroughly as possible to minimize publication bias. Begg’s test and Egger’s linear regression test, as well as the funnel plots, showed that there was no publication bias, indicating that this meta-analysis approximated the actual results. However, there are some limitations as follows. First, the study of the application of Chinese and Western medicine nursing care in patients with COPD is limited to Chinese language texts; relevant English literature was not retrieved. Second, because some evaluation indicators that were included in the studies are not uniform, data extraction was limited and further subgroup analysis could not be performed. Third, the sample size of the studies was relatively small; a large-scale multicenter RCT comparing TCM nursing integrated with conventional nursing with conventional nursing alone in patients with COPD is warranted.
TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing can achieve maximum optimization by integrating the advantages of TCM nursing with conventional nursing. This meta-analysis shows that for patients with COPD, TCM nursing combined with conventional nursing emphasized that dialectical nursing can be preferably performed. However, because there is significantly high heterogeneity among studies, further studies should be undertaken to confirm this evidence.