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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06990854
NA

Electroacupuncture for PHN: Efficacy and Biomarker Evaluation in a Multicenter, Randomized, Sham-Controlled Trial Protocol

Sponsor: Dexiong Han

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The investigators are conducting a clinical study with the following objectives: to evaluate the clinical efficacy of electroacupuncture combined with pregabalin in treating Postherpetic Neuralgia(PHN); to investigate the correlation between serum biomarker levels and pain symptoms;and to determine whether serum biomarkers can serve as prognostic indicators for PHN. This study utilizes a randomized controlled trial design with assessor blinding. A total of 207 eligible PHN patients were randomly assigned to three groups in a 1:1:1 ratio: the electroacupuncture group, the pharmacotherapy group, and the sham acupuncture group. Comparative analyses of pain intensity and serum biomarker concentrations were conducted across these groups. For the assessment of clinical outcomes, the investigators employed the following measures: the Numerical Rating Scale(NRS), the Hamilton Anxiety Scale(HAMA), the Hamilton Depression Scale(HAMD), the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey(SF-36), serum levels of substance P(SP)and Neuropeptide Y(NPY), and inflammatory markers(IL-10,TNF-α). These assessments were performed at baseline and at the end of weeks 1, 2, 3, and 4 of treatment. The investigators anticipate that this clinical trial will enhance our understanding of the therapeutic efficacy and underlying mechanisms of acupuncture in managing PHN. It aims to elucidate the relationship between serum biomarkers and the clinical manifestations of PHN, as well as to explore their potential prognostic value in disease outcomes.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

20 Years - 80 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

207

Start Date

2025-07-01

Completion Date

2026-12

Last Updated

2025-07-09

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Electroacupuncture (Hans-100A, Nanjing Jisheng Medical Technology, China)

Acupoint prescription: The therapeutic protocol utilized Ashi points (localized to herpetic lesion areas) and Jiaji points (EX-B2, ipsilateral to affected dermatomes). Acupuncture procedure: For Ashi points, sterile disposable needles (0.25 mm diameter, 40 mm length) were inserted at a 15° angle to a depth of 15-20 mm, without deqi sensation or manual manipulation. For Jiaji points (EX-B2), needles (0.30 mm diameter, 50 mm length) were inserted perpendicularly to a depth of 40-45 mm, with twisting manipulation (90° rotation at 90 cycles/min) until patients felt soreness, numbness, or distension. Electroacupuncture was applied using the Hans-100A device, with dense-disperse wave mode (2/100 Hz) and intensity adjusted to patient tolerance, for 30 minutes.

DRUG

Pharmacotherapy:① Pregabalin ( Lyrica™ ,Pfizer Inc. America) ② Methylcobalamin ( Mecobalamin tablets, Weicai (China) Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd, China)

Patients received protocol-guided therapy consisting of: ① Pregabalin: Initial dose 75 mg twice daily. Dose may be titrated upward to 150 mg twice daily within one week based on therapeutic response and tolerability. Gradual discontinuation is recommended when clinically appropriate, tapered by 100 mg decrements every 3-7 days. ② Methylcobalamin: 5 mg three times daily.

PROCEDURE

Streitberger Placebo Needle Set ( Asiamed )

The Streitberger needle, a widely reported placebo needle device in acupuncture RCTs, was applied for sham intervention. This telescoping blunt-tip needle achieves non-penetrating placebo stimulation through its retractable design. Its key advantage lies in evoking a skin-penetrating sensation akin to true needling through tissue compression, while avoiding actual dermal perforation to minimize specific therapeutic effects. Following the perception of needle insertion reported by patients, the device is retracted by approximately 1 mm and connected to electroacupuncture apparatus without electrical stimulation activation.

Locations (1)

The Third Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University

Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China