Chinese Herbal Medicine for
Henoch-Schönlein Purpura
Henoch-Schönlein Purpura (HSP) is the most common
necrotizing vasculitis affecting children. Traditional Chinese herbal medicine
(CHM) was widely used. We aim to explore the evidence of effectiveness and safety
of CHM for HSP in children without renal damage. Randomized controlled trials
(RCTs) comparing CHM with conventional medications were searched from five
databases. Eligible data were pooled using random-effects model using RevMan
5.2 Subgroup analysis for different co-interventions and sensitivity analysis
for reducing heterogeneity were implemented. GRADE approach was adopted. We
included 15 trials with 1112HSP children (age 1-16 years old), disease duration
one day to three months. The overall methodological quality of included trials
is relatively low. Adjunctive oral CHM treatments reduced renal damage (6
trials, RR 0.47, 95%CI 0.31-0.72, I(2)=0%), and subsiding time (days) of
purpura (5 trials, mean difference (MD) -3.60, 95%CI -4.21 to -2.99, I(2)=23%),
joint pain (5 trials, MD -1.04, 95%CI -1.33 to -0.74, I(2)=1%) and abdomen pain
(5 trials, MD -1.69, 95%CI -2.51 to -0.86, I(2)=74%). Subgroup and sensitivity
analysis did not change the direction of results. No severe adverse events
reported. Orally taken adjunctive CHM treatments are effective for children
suffering HSP in terms of reducing renal damage and subsiding time of purpura,
and could possibly reduce subsiding pain of joint and abdomen. No reliable
conclusion regarding safety is possible based on the safety data retrieved.
Further rigorous trials are warranted.
Source: Yang Y,
Wang C,
Li X,
Chai Q,
Fei Y,
Xia R,
Xu R,
Yang L,
Liu J.
Chinese herbal
medicine for Henoch-Schönlein purpura in children without renal damage: A
systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Complement Ther Med. 2015
Oct;23(5):741-50.
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