Kadhim-Saleh laser neck pain review conclusion incorrect. LLLT is clinically effective

Last October a systematic review on LLLT for neck pain was written by Kadhim-Saleh et al and published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. They report that the evidence for LLLT in neck pain is inconclusive. The paper criticises the 2009 Lancet review by Roberta Chow & Bjordal et al on LLLT for non-specific neck pain claiming their review was more stringent. Well you have to read the rebuttal Bjordal shot back to the journal editor revealing the weakness, errors and fundamental flaws in the work of Kadhim-Saleh et al

Its a great rebuttal by Jan but there are two problems
1) The academic and clinical damage has been done and the rebuttal letter may have little effect as it will appear on pubmed with no abstract (which all that most people ever read).
2) This is not an isolated case, there are several examples of flawed LLLT reviews.

We are lucky to have someone of Jan Bjordal’s calibre who is knowledgeable about LLLT and its parameters who is also willing to set the record straight. Systematic reviews with meta-analeses are hard to get right, I’m afraid Jan will be kept busy for many more years. To read more on why LLLT systematic reviews are hard, click here.

Kadhim-Saleh et al. systematic review  is here
Is low-level laser therapy in relieving neck pain effective? Systematic review and meta-analysishttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=23579335

Bjordal et al rebuttal is here (but there is no abstract and no free text so don’t bother)
Methodological shortcomings make conclusion highly sensitive to relevant changes in review protocol. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24402005

Here is Bjordal’s rebuttal letter to the editor paraphrased by me for copyright reasons:

Bjordal rebuttal letter (paraphrased)

Kadhim-Saleh et al make significant errors and subsequently draw the wrong conclusion. A comprehensive rebuttal by Bjordal et al is published here http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24402005 but as as most readers are unlikely to pay $39.95 to read the letter I have listed some highlights here to help restore some balance.

The authors claim they used “A very strict study selection criterion” but they excluded Chow 2004 because it “most likely” included the same cohort as Chow 2006. It it is clearly stated in the Lancet review they cited http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=19913903 that one cohort was recruited in 1998 – 1999, and the other cohort recruited in 2002–2003.

Rather than contacting the trial authors to resolve uncertainty about the cohorts, which is normal practice for systematic reviewers Kadhim-Saleh et al. decided to base their decision on guess work, not stringent reviewing practice.

Kadhim-Saleh et al. had criticised the lancet review because “… investigators included trials that used different and more subjective tools for assessing the primary pain outcome measure”. Bjordal et al point out they only included studies that used well-recognized and validated scales for pain assessment including “weighted mean difference for continuous data from visual analogues scale (VAS) scores for pain intensity, relative risk for dichotomized data for global improvement, and standardized mean difference to combine different validated scales of disability including the Neck Disability Index, Neck Disability Scale and the Northwick Park Questionnaire”.

Bjordal et al said they enabled a comprehensive analysis of the available evidence and the finding was that the results were consistent across the different measurement tools actually strengthened the robustness of the Lancet conclusion. Kadhim-Saleh et al. only used a single outcome measure at a single time-point as their outcome measure of success.

Kadhim-Saleh et al. also added a study by Konstantinovic 2010 that they say “failed to detect a statistically significance difference between LLLT and placebo” based on only on VAS, but Konstantinovic had measured seven other outcomes and all were in favour of LLLT [but not reported by Kadhim-Saleh]. The study was on acute radiculopathy, which is a specific diagnosis for neck pain, and this would have increased heterogeneity not reduced it which which was their criticism of the Lancet review.

Kadhim-Saleh et al. criticized the Lancet review for having heterogeneity but Bjordal et al noted that Kadhim-Saleh et al was actually worse in their analysis (I2 = 94 % compared with the Lancet analysis I2 = 91 %). This revealed that the so called “stringent” criteria used by Kadhim-Saleh et al. had failed

Bjordal et al explained that in the Lancet they had included a 650-word paragraph that described a sensitivity analyses that found that most heterogeneity was attributed to interventions and that Kadhim-Saleh et al. gave no serious consideration to the appropriateness of LLLT technique including dosage, a priori in selection criteria or analysis protocol.

He pointed out that an example of how LLLT dose explains heterogeneity was provided by examining the two acute group trials included in the Lancet review. The negative trial using LLLT on acupuncture points by Aigner et al. was under-dosed (632 nm wavelength, 0.075 J) with an ineffective dose of only 0.02 % when compared with the positive trial by Soriano et al. (904 nm wavelength, 4 J). The additional acute radiculopathy trial by Konstantinovic et al. included in the review by Kadhim-Saleh et al. had similar doses and wavelength (904 nm wavelength, 2 J) to the positive trial by Soriano et al., and both were complying with the dosage recommendations from World Association for Laser Therapy (WALT). By conducting a meta-analysis that excludes the trial by Aigner et al. and substituting it with the new acute radiculopathy trial by Konstantinovic et al. Bjordal et al have found that heterogeneity disappears completely(from I2 =91% to I2 =0%). This results in a significant and clinically relevant RR for global improvement at 2.63 (95 % CI 1.73, 4.01).

Kadhim-Saleh et al also made an unsubstantiated claim about a re-analysis of the Lancet meta-analysis by Shiri and Viikari- Juntura 2010 “After applying a random-effects model Shiri and Viikari-Juntura found no significant difference between laser-treated and placebo-treated groups in pain reduction”. Bjordal et al emphatically state “This is simply untrue, as Shiri and Viika-Junturi 2010 confirmed that pain reduction on VAS with a weighted mean difference of 19.41 (95 % CI 9.67, 29.15) in a random-effects model. The inaccuracies in our original analysis brought to our attention by Shiri and Viikari-Juntura weakened slightly the size of effect on recalculation, yet the overall result remained that LLLT gave significant and clinically relevant relief for 6 out of 8 outcomes and lasting up to 22 weeks”.

Bjordal et al also criticised the Kadhim-Saleh paper because it “cited meta-analyses published over 20 years ago to demonstrate the consistency of their claim with previous reviews that found no effect from LLLT despite 80–90 % of RCTs on LLLT being published after these citations. The rate of publication of RCTs in recent years means that the survival period for systematic reviews is typically less than 5 years. In addition, they used literature published between 14 and 30 years ago to support descriptions of LLLT mechanisms. We stand by our original findings that LLLT gives clinically relevant neck pain relief and disability improvement after treatment and possibly follow-ups up to 5 months.”

END

Great rebuttal but who other than you is going to read it ?

Let me know if you got this far by sending me a note in the comment section below

About James Carroll

Founder and CEO at THOR Photomedicine Ltd. About THOR
This entry was posted in Rants. Bookmark the permalink.

8 Responses to Kadhim-Saleh laser neck pain review conclusion incorrect. LLLT is clinically effective

  1. Doug says:

    I am thankful that this information was made available for LLLT patients and practitioners alike. I have been recommending LLLT to many of my associates since becoming aware of the accelerated benefits of LLLT treatment. I found it incredulous that anyone would find otherwise which is what attracted me to read this article.

  2. Donna Rasplica MSc, Dr.TCM says:

    Saddening and disappointing. The journal’s editors and reviewers were asleep at the switch. This journal doesn’t have the impact that the Lancet does but, you’re right, sadly, damage has been done.

  3. Rupert Molloy says:

    It all reads like ‘a storm in a teacup’, whilst those practitioners of LLLT know the results that can be achieved. For me it’s a question of how LLLT is applied.

  4. Brian says:

    I got this far! Thank you James for posting this.

    Very interesting, and frustrating topic.

  5. Paul Barton says:

    Thanks James. I spend everyday at Dr Chow’s clinic (as co-founder) and hear and see the beneficial impact Dr. Chow has on all pain sufferers not just neck pain. Regards
    Paul

  6. Jill Laroussini says:

    Thanks for sharing and rigorously following the data. – Jill

  7. Ani Rupinski says:

    I got this far too James! Thanks for the article.

    It’s a shame how much incorrect information is still spread around and published regarding LLLT and it’s effectiveness, which is one of the main reasons I believe the general public still isn’t as familiar with it as they could be nor do they believe in it like they would if they weren’t fed so many “conflicting stories”, so to speak.

  8. marcus McDOnald says:

    I got this far… the same problems plague a few other modalities…like ultrasound. cowboys shooting off variable in all directions.

    Good job

Comments are closed.