1. Qigong for women with breast cancer: An updated systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
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Sheng-fang Hu, Yi-qin Cheng, Mei-na Ye, Tian Meng, Hong-feng Chen, Bing Wang, and Jingjing Wu
- Subjects
Complementary and Manual Therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast Neoplasms ,Anxiety ,03 medical and health sciences ,Other systems of medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Quality of life ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Sleep disorder ,business.industry ,Depression ,Qigong ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Distress ,Meta-analysis ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Strictly standardized mean difference ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,Systematic review ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,RZ201-999 - Abstract
Objective The purpose of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness of Qigong in improving the quality of life and relieving fatigue, sleep disturbance, and cancer-related emotional disturbances (distress, depression, and anxiety) in women with breast cancer. Methods The PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, Sinomed, Wanfang, VIP, and China National Knowledge Infrastructure databases were searched from their inceptions to March 2020 for controlled clinical trials. Two reviewers selected relevant trials that assessed the benefit of Qigong for breast cancer patients independently. A methodological quality assessment was conducted according to the criteria of the 12 Cochrane Back Review Group for risk of bias independently. A meta-analysis was performed by Review Manager 5.3. Results This review consisted of 17 trials, in which 1236 cases were enrolled. The quality of the included trials was generally low, as only five of them were rated high quality. The results showed significant effectiveness of Qigong on quality of life (n = 950, standardized mean difference (SMD), 0.65, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.23–1.08, P = 0.002). Depression (n = 540, SMD = −0.32, 95 % CI −0.59 to −0.04, P = 0.02) and anxiety (n = 439, SMD = −0.71, 95 % CI −1.32 to −0.10, P = 0.02) were also significantly relieved in the Qigong group. There was no significant benefit on fatigue (n = 401, SMD = −0.32, 95 % CI 0.71 to 0.07, P = 0.11) or sleep disturbance relief compared to that observed in the control group (n = 298, SMD = −0.11, 95 % CI 0.74 to 0.52, P = 0.73). Conclusion This review shows that Qigong is beneficial for improving quality of lifeand relieving depression and anxiety; thus, Qigong should be encouraged in women with breast cancer.
- Published
- 2021