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Am Fam Physician. 2005;71(3):464-465

Clinical Scenario

A 42-year-old woman presents with low back pain that started after she had moved furniture a week earlier. She wants pain relief as quickly as possible and asks if she should go to a chiropractor.

Clinical Question

Should we recommend spinal manipulation as a treatment for low back pain?

Evidence-Based Answer

In the short term, manipulative therapy is as effective for acute or chronic low back pain as other treatments such as analgesics, physical therapy, exercises, back school, and routine care from a primary care physician. Radiation of pain, type of manipulation, and use of multiple modalities do not alter these results.

Practice Pointers

There are many options for treatment of acute and chronic low back pain: physical therapy, exercise, analgesics, muscle relaxants, acupuncture, manipulation, exercise, and massage. Most patients get better within six weeks regardless of treatment. The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research guidelines of 1994,2 as well as other, more recent national guidelines, recommend manipulation for acute low back pain without radiculopathy, and some guidelines recommend it for chronic low back pain. This review, which looked at clinical trials through January 2000, evaluated the role of spinal manipulative therapy.

Cochrane Abstract

Background. Low back pain is a costly illness for which spinal manipulative therapy is commonly recommended. Previous systematic reviews and practice guidelines have reached discordant results on the effectiveness of this therapy for low back pain.

Objectives. To resolve the discrepancies related to the use of spinal manipulative therapy and to update previous estimates of effectiveness by comparing spinal manipulative therapy with other therapies and incorporating data from recent high-quality randomized controlled trials (RCTs) into the analysis.

Search Strategy. The authors1 searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL through January 2000, using the Back Group search strategy. References from previous systematic reviews also were screened.

Selection Criteria. RCTs that evaluated spinal manipulative therapy for patients with low back pain were selected if they included at least one day of follow-up and at least one clinically relevant outcome measure.

Data Collection and Analysis. Two authors, who served as the reviewers for all stages of the meta-analysis, independently extracted data from unmasked articles. Comparison treatments were classified into the following seven categories: sham, conventional general practitioner care, analgesics, physical therapy, exercises, back school, or a collection of therapies judged to be ineffective or even harmful (e.g., traction, corset, bed rest, home care, topical gel, no treatment, diathermy, minimal massage).

Primary Results. A total of 39 RCTs were identified. Meta-regression models were developed for acute and chronic pain, short-term and long-term pain, and function. In patients with acute low back pain, spinal manipulative therapy was superior only to sham therapy (10 mm difference on a 100 mm visual analog scale [95 percent confidence interval, 2 to 17 mm]) or therapies judged to be ineffective or harmful. Spinal manipulative therapy had no statistically or clinically significant advantage over general practitioner care, analgesics, physical therapy, exercises, or back school. Results in patients with chronic low back pain were similar. Radiation of pain, study quality, profession of the manipulator, and use of manipulation alone or in combination with other therapies did not affect these results.

Reviewers' Conclusions. There is no evidence that spinal manipulative therapy is superior to other standard treatments in patients with acute or chronic low back pain.

These summaries have been derived from Cochrane reviews published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in the Cochrane Library. Their content has, as far as possible, been checked with the authors of the originalreviews, but the summaries should not be regarded as an official product of the Cochrane Collaboration; minorediting changes have been made to the text (http://www.cochrane.org).

The evidence in this review shows that manipulation is as effective as analgesics, physical therapy, exercise, and usual care from a family physician. Manipulation is better than sham therapy and several methods that have been shown to be ineffective or harmful, such as traction, corsets, bed rest, diathermy, and no therapy. The studies included in the review examined all types of patients with back pain, including those with radicular pain. Many of the studies examined multiple therapies used concurrently, which made the analysis more difficult. There was no evidence that manipulation was better for any subgroup of low back pain.

The Randomized Osteopathic Manipulation Study,3 which was not part of this review, examined osteopathic manipulation and found short-term improvement at two and six months compared with usual care. Another recent study4 of osteopathic treatment for chronic pain found that therapy was as effective as sham treatment. This raises the question of whether treatment causes a placebo effect, perhaps because of the extra time spent with patients. A recent review5 compared acupuncture and massage with manipulation. There was some initial evidence that massage therapy is effective and may reduce the cost of care. The anticipated results of the United Kingdom Back Pain, Exercise, and Manipulation trial6 comparing exercise, manipulation, or both with standard primary care in 1,350 patients for one year should provide additional data to help answer this question.

These are summaries of reviews from the Cochrane Library.

This series is coordinated by Corey D. Fogleman, MD, assistant medical editor.

A collection of Cochrane for Clinicians published in AFP is available at https://www.aafp.org/afp/cochrane.

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