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. 2022 Jul 11;164(3):469–484. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002723

Table 2.

Overview of included studies.

n of studies %
Therapy types
 Manual therapy with spinal manipulation 48 24.2
 Craniosacral therapy and gentle myofascial release 22 11.1
 Other manual therapy 64 32.3
 Rehabilitation or physiotherapy 22 11.1
 Self-management 5 2.5
 Cognitive-behavioural and other psychotherapy 27 13.6
 Spiritual or energetic or esoteric healing 8 4.0
 Other 2 1.0
Intervention complexity
 Simple 112 56.6
 Complex 86 43.4
Pain descriptor
 Musculoskeletal pain 121 61.1
 Diffuse chronic pain 18 9.1
 Cancer-related pain 6 3.0
 Visceral pain 5 2.5
 Neuropathic pain 5 2.5
 Pregnancy-related pain 1 0.5
 Not specified 1 0.5
Median Q1/Q3
Sample size at randomization
 Overall sample size (all trial arms combined) 64 40/101
 Sample size per trial arm (only groups included in review) 27 19.5/46
n %
Registered trial protocol available
 Registered 114 57.9
Group design
 Parallel group 163 92.9
 Cross-over 14 7.1
No. of study conditions per trial*
 2 139 71.6
 3 46 23.7
 4 8 4.1
 5 1 0.5
 6 1 0.5
Additional nonsham comparators included
 Active comparator (comparative effectiveness) ± 29 14.9
 No treatment or waitlist 20 10.3
 Usual care/treatment as usual 13 6.7

The types of therapies, intervention complexity, and pain population are provided for the entire sample. Special cases: In 1 trial, data from the active intervention group were used twice to compare it with 2 different sham controls: Bialosky et al. (2014) used a “standard” and an “enhanced” sham control. Three publications reported more than 1 trial: D'Souza et al. (2008) studied 2 groups with different types of headaches, and the publication of Assefi et al. (2008) included 2 active interventions and a matching sham control each. Finally, Sharpe et al. (2012) reported 2 trials in a single publication, which were treated entirely independently here. In general, only patients who informed the present analyses are counted in this table; patients were not counted twice, and analyses of reporting refer to individual trials.

*

Each intervention or sham intervention was counted, irrespective of whether the trial was a single-arm cross-over trial. ± So-called attention controls were not counted as active comparator, only experimental conditions that were clearly assessed because they were deemed potentially effective alternatives (comparative effectiveness intention).

Intervention complexity: Single-step or single-technique interventions were judged as “simple,” irrespective of how often these were applied, and others as complex. N = 194 publications with 198 comparisons between treatment and a sham control.