TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards more homogenous and rigorous methods in sham-controlled dry needling trials: two Delphi surveys
AU - Braithwaite, Felicity A.
AU - Walters, Julie L.
AU - Moseley, G. Lorimer
AU - Williams, Marie T.
AU - McEvoy, Maureen P.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank all of the expert participants for their valuable contribution to the Delphi surveys. Those participants who provided permission to be publicly acknowledged include: Aaron Alexander, Professor Fabrizio Benedetti, Professor Mark Bishop, Dr Carel Bron, Doug Carey, Christopher Charles, Associate Professor Luana Colloca, Dr Matthew Cotchett, Jack Daniels, Dr Jan Dommerholt, Associate Professor Coralie English, Gary Edwards, Professor César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Dr Katia Ferrar, Jorgen Forsberg, Dr Charles Gay, Professor Steven George, Professor Ian Harris, Professor Anne Holland, Dr Leesa Huguenin, Dr Graham Jamieson, Nicholas Johnson, Associate Professor Steven Kamper, Isaac Lomman, Dr Karen Lucas, Adam Mada, Professor Chris Main, Dr Wael Mahmoud, Robert De Nardis, Dr Christopher Norris, Associate Professor Jennifer Paratz, Ian D Pidgeon, Dr David Ramey, Dr Kim Silverman, Dr Robert Stanborough, Matt Tarrant, Dr Elizabeth Tough, Robert Townsend, Professor Maurits Van Tulder, Mieke Vlamynck, Dr Edo Zylstra. We would also like to thank Associate Professor Tasha R Stanton (TRS) for her assistance with the Round 1 analyses, and Mr Vinh Giang and Mr Gary Edwards for their assistance with recruitment. Ethical approval: Ethical approval was obtained from the University of South Australia Human Research Ethics Committee, protocol number 0000034983. Funding: FAB was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship . GLM was supported by a Principal Research Fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [ID 1061279]. Conflict of interest statements: FAB, JLW, MTW, and MPM declare that they have no conflicts of interest. GLM has received support from: Pfizer Australia, Seqiris, Kaiser Permanente, Workers’ Compensation Boards in Australia, Europe and North America, AIA Australia, the International Olympic Committee, Port Adelaide Football Club, and Arsenal Football Club. Professional and scientific bodies have reimbursed him for travel costs related to presentation of research at scientific conferences/symposia. He has received speaker fees for lectures on pain and rehabilitation. He receives book royalties from NOIgroup publications, Dancing Giraffe Press & OPTP. Appendix A
Funding Information:
Funding: FAB was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. GLM was supported by a Principal Research Fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [ID 1061279].
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Chartered Society of Physiotherapy
PY - 2020/3
Y1 - 2020/3
N2 - Objectives: Sham-controlled trials of dry needling, a popular treatment for pain, use a range of methods and theoretical frameworks and most have high risk of bias. Critically, patient blinding is often unsuccessful and therapist blinding has not been attempted. The specific effects of dry needling on pain therefore remain unclear. Our objectives were to identify (1) important elements of active dry needling; (2) important elements of shams for dry needling. Design and participants: Two Delphi surveys (to quantify levels of consensus) were undertaken with three expert groups: experts in (1) dry needling, (2) research methodology, and (3) deceptive/hypnotic techniques including magic. Experts in dry needling participated in Delphi 1 and all three groups participated in Delphi 2. Each survey commenced with an open-ended question. Responses were converted to single ‘items’ suitable for rating on 9-point Likert scales [categorised as ‘Not important’ (0–3), Depends (4–6), and Essential (7–9)], which participants rated in the following two rounds. Consensus was pre-defined as ≥80% agreement within a 3-point category. Results: In Delphi 1 (n = 20 experts), of 80 items, 35 reached consensus in the ‘Essential’ category, which related to explanations, therapist knowledge/skills, intervention rationale, the setting, and safety. In Delphi 2 (n = 53 experts), of 97 items, 15 items reached consensus in the ‘Essential’ category in all three groups, which related to standardisation/indistinguishability, therapist attributes, expectations/beliefs, vision, protocol, and environment. Conclusions: Experts placed high importance on the entire intervention experience for active and sham protocols. Cognitive influences that extend beyond mimicking of tactile sensations should be used to create a believable simulation of active dry needling.
AB - Objectives: Sham-controlled trials of dry needling, a popular treatment for pain, use a range of methods and theoretical frameworks and most have high risk of bias. Critically, patient blinding is often unsuccessful and therapist blinding has not been attempted. The specific effects of dry needling on pain therefore remain unclear. Our objectives were to identify (1) important elements of active dry needling; (2) important elements of shams for dry needling. Design and participants: Two Delphi surveys (to quantify levels of consensus) were undertaken with three expert groups: experts in (1) dry needling, (2) research methodology, and (3) deceptive/hypnotic techniques including magic. Experts in dry needling participated in Delphi 1 and all three groups participated in Delphi 2. Each survey commenced with an open-ended question. Responses were converted to single ‘items’ suitable for rating on 9-point Likert scales [categorised as ‘Not important’ (0–3), Depends (4–6), and Essential (7–9)], which participants rated in the following two rounds. Consensus was pre-defined as ≥80% agreement within a 3-point category. Results: In Delphi 1 (n = 20 experts), of 80 items, 35 reached consensus in the ‘Essential’ category, which related to explanations, therapist knowledge/skills, intervention rationale, the setting, and safety. In Delphi 2 (n = 53 experts), of 97 items, 15 items reached consensus in the ‘Essential’ category in all three groups, which related to standardisation/indistinguishability, therapist attributes, expectations/beliefs, vision, protocol, and environment. Conclusions: Experts placed high importance on the entire intervention experience for active and sham protocols. Cognitive influences that extend beyond mimicking of tactile sensations should be used to create a believable simulation of active dry needling.
KW - Blinding
KW - Delphi
KW - Dry needling
KW - Placebo
KW - Sham
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85076704473
U2 - 10.1016/j.physio.2019.11.004
DO - 10.1016/j.physio.2019.11.004
M3 - Article
C2 - 32026842
AN - SCOPUS:85076704473
SN - 0031-9406
VL - 106
SP - 12
EP - 23
JO - Physiotherapy (United Kingdom)
JF - Physiotherapy (United Kingdom)
ER -