Commentary

The therapeutic choices for patients suffering from temporomandibular pain (ie, pain located in the masticatory muscles and/or temporomandibular joints) are limited: in clinical trials counseling, relaxation training, stabilisation splints, physical therapy and some pharmacological agents have been shown to be effective. Therefore, any new therapeutic modality with proven efficacy is warmly welcomed.

On the basis of their search, Jung et al. identified seven pertinent study articles. A pooled meta-analysis revealed 'significant improvements in pain intensity' after needle acupuncture. Due to methodological weaknesses inherent to all trials, Jung et al. judge this evidence as being 'limited' and 'weak'.

Interestingly, three other recent systematic reviews on the same topic came to comparable conclusions: La Touche et al. (four studies) noted that the evidence, although limited in amount, showed statistically significant short-term analgesic benefit of acupuncture for masticatory muscle pain.1 Cho and Wang (19 studies) concluded that there was 'moderate evidence that acupuncture is an effective intervention to reduce symptoms associated with TMD'.2 Further subgroup analysis carried out by Jung et al. disclosed that manual acupuncture reduced pain significantly more than non-penetrating sham control. Conversely, no difference in efficacy was seen when penetrating sham acupuncture at non-acupuncture points served as control.

Well-designed randomised controlled studies with more than 40,000 patients diagnosed with tension-type headache, migraine or persistent low back pain support the finding that penetrating sham acupuncture at non-acupuncture points is similarly effective as point-specific 'real' acupuncture. Interestingly, in these large-scale trials, both therapeutic strategies were more successful than conventional standard therapy or a waiting list control group.3

Considering these findings, the results obtained in the review by Jung et al. suggest that acupuncture may remain a therapeutic opportunity in patients suffering from temporomandibular pain. The clinically most relevant question is obviously not whether acupuncture works better than sham acupuncture, but how acupuncture behaves as compared to standard care or no therapy. Therefore, RCTs with larger sample sizes and longer observation periods are needed to gain deeper knowledge about the efficacy and/or effectiveness of acupuncture for TMD patients. Readers of this journal are well aware of the fact that these methodological shortcomings are by no means limited to the topic covered in Jung et al.'s review.