Clinical Trials on Homeopathy Published from 1988 to 2002
Citation | Description | Findings |
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Vickers and Smith, 2002 |
Seven trials were included in the review (three prevention and four treatment trials); only two studies had sufficient information for complete data extraction. |
The homeopathic remedy oscillococcinum appears safe and effective in reducing the duration of influenza, but has no effect on prevention. |
Lewith et al., 2002 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of 242 participants aged 18 to 55 years. |
Trial compared an oral homeopathic treatment to placebo in asthmatic people allergic to house dust. Authors found the homeopathic treatment “no better than placebo.” They noted “some differences between the homeopathic immunotherapy and placebo for which we have no explanation.” |
Oberbaum et al., 2001 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial in 32 children; 30 completed the study. |
Traumeel S, a homeopathic skin cream, may significantly reduce the severity and length of pain and inflammation of the tissues lining the inside of the mouth from chemotherapy in children being treated with bone marrow transplantation. |
Taylor et al., 2000 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of 51 participants aged 17 years or older (50 completed the study). |
Team tested the hypothesis that homeopathy is a placebo by examining effects of an oral homeopathic preparation in patients with perennial allergic rhinitis. They found a “significant objective improvement in nasal airflow” compared with the placebo group. However, both groups reported subjective improvement in “nasal symptoms” (with no statistically significant difference between groups). Authors concluded that the objective evidence supports that “homeopathic dilutions differ from placebo.” |
Jacobs et al., 2000 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of 126 children; 116 completed the study. |
Individualized homeopathic treatments improved digestive problems in children with acute childhood diarrhea. Results are consistent with findings of a previous study. |
Weiser et al., 1999 |
Randomized, double-blinded trial of 146 people. |
For the treatment of hay fever, a homeopathic nasal spray is as efficient and well tolerated as a conventional therapy, cromolyn sodium. |
Rastogi et al., 1999 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of 100 people between 18 and 50 (71 percent male/29 percent female). |
A subgroup of patients with HIV in the symptomatic phase, receiving treatment, had increased levels of CD4 cells at the end of the trial; the placebo subgroup did not. |
Vickers et al., 1998 |
Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial of 519 people; 400 completed the study. |
Homeopathic remedies, including arnica, are not effective for muscle soreness following long-distance running. |
Weiser et al., 1998 |
Randomized, double-blinded, controlled trial of 119 people; 105 completed the study. |
The homeopathic treatment vertigoheel, and the standard treatment of betahistine, are equally effective in reducing the frequency, duration, and intensity of vertigo attacks. |
Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysesk of Clinical Trials of Homeopathy
Citation | Description | Findings |
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Ernst, 2002335 |
Analyzed 17 systematic reviews (including meta-analyses) of controlled clinical trials for homeopathy. |
Author found that the reviews failed to provide strong evidence in favor of homeopathy. No homeopathic remedy was proven by convincing evidence to yield clinical effects that are different from placebo or from other control intervention for any medical condition. Positive recommendations for use of homeopathy in clinical practice are not supported, and “homeopathy cannot be viewed as an evidence-based form of therapy” until more convincing results are available. |
Linde et al., 2001 42 |
Analyzed the methodological quality of 207 randomized trials collected for 5 previously published reviews on homeopathy, two herbal medicines (St. John’s wort and echinacea), and acupuncture. |
Authors found that the majority of trials had major weaknesses in methodology and/or reporting. Homeopathy trials were “less frequently randomized.and reported less details on dropouts and withdrawals” than the other types. |
Cucherat et al., 2000 17 |
Analyzed 16 randomized, controlled trials (17 comparisons were made) comparing homeopathic treatment to placebo. Work was part of a report prepared for the European Union on the effectiveness of homeopathy. |
Authors found that the “strength of evidence remains low” because of trial flaws and other limitations. They added that “at least one [of the tested homeopathic treatments] shows an added effect relative to placebo.” Group recommended that homeopathy be studied further using the same methods used to study conventional medicine. |
Ernst and Pittler, 199843 |
Systematic review of eight trials. |
Rigorous clinical trials indicate arnica is not more effective than a placebo; most trials studied use of arnica for tissue trauma. |
Linde et al., 1997 6 |
Analyzed 89 trials. Each trial was controlled; compared homeopathy to a placebo; was either randomized or double-blinded; and yielded a written report. |
Authors concluded that their results were not compatible with a hypothesis that the clinical effects of homeopathy are completely due to placebo. However, they found insufficient evidence that homeopathy is clearly efficacious for any single clinical condition. They stated that further research is warranted if it is rigorous and systematic. |
Kleijnen et al., 1991 21 |
Assessed 105 controlled trials of homeopathy, 68 randomized. |
Authors found a positive trend in the evidence, regardless of the quality of the trial or the method of homeopathy used. They cautioned, however, that definitive conclusions about homeopathy could not be drawn, because many of the trials were not of good quality and the role of publication bias was unknown. |
Systematic Reviews of Clinical Trials on Single Medical Conditions | ||
Long and Ernst, 2001 44 |
Systematic review of four osteoarthritis clinical trials. |
Research on homeopathic treatment for osteoarthritis is insufficient to reliably assess the clinical effectiveness of homeopathic treatment of osteoarthritis. |
Jonas et al., 2000 45 |
Meta-analysis of six controlled clinical trials. |
Controlled clinical trials indicate that homeopathic remedies appear to work better than a placebo in studies of rheumatic syndromes, but there are too few studies to draw definitive conclusions, and efficacy results are mixed. |