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Complementary and alternative medicine Medicine

Alternative medicine continues to fail

You didn’t think this one would go by without my commenting on it, did you? Even though Abel and Tara have already ably commented on it, I can’t help but jump in because the article echoes one of the common threads of this blog since the very beginning. Besides, as I’ve said before, just because everyone else has already commented on an article or issue never stopped me from jumping in before (well, almost never, anyway).

The article in question, Ignoring the failures of alternative medicine, is remarkable (to me, at least) because I can’t recall any major media outlet like MSNBC daring to speak ill of the alternative medicine industry or the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine in a long time. The operating assumption in the media and much of the U.S. is that we should give credence to the claims of alternative medicine, no matter how unlikely. Reiki therapy, homeopathy, it doesn’t matter. No matter how scientifically implausible, we skeptics are castigated if we don’t take non-evidence-based woo seriously.

That’s why what makes this article by Robert Bazell, Chief Science and Health Correspondent for NBC News, all the more surprising:

Call it swimming against the tide of alternative medicine. It is a futile effort costing taxpayers tens of millions of dollars a year.

Last week’s study showing that the widely touted and sold supplement DHEA does nothing to slow the effects of aging was only the latest major piece of research with powerfully negative results from the National Institutes of Health Center for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine. Previous placebo-controlled trials proved the uselessness of St. John’s Wort for depression and saw palmetto for enlarged prostates, shark cartilage for cancer, echinacea for the common cold and glucosamine plus chondroitin sulphate for arthritis.

But it doesn’t matter much — few seem to care.

Indeed few do. Anyone who’s hung out on this blog for a while will rapidly come to realize that. Whenever I critically look at this or that alternative therapy and conclude that there’s no evidence that it works and no good reason to suspect that it should, almost inevitably I’ll get an objection by someone who claims that it “worked” for him or her. Whenever I decry, for example, the altie woo and magical thinking that have led youngsters like Katie Wernecke or Starchild Abraham Cherrix away from evidence-based therapies that actually have a reasonable shot of curing them of their cancer, it nearly always brings some angry comments, no matter how much I try to be fair and objective. When I point out that chelation therapy does nothing for autism because the available evidence strongly contradicts the hypothesis that mercury in vaccines causes autism, I can usually expect to be assailed by the mercury militia, who fervently believe that it does. And whenever I start pointing out the nonsense pushed by antivaccination activists, most of whom have fallen for concepts in alternative medicine that vaccines somehow “hurt” the immune system or that bacteria and viruses don’t really cause the diseases that science tells us they cause, or that “natural” immunity is somehow “better” than immunity from a vaccine, I can usually count on being deluged by angry comments.

As Bazell puts it:

The NIH launched its office of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) in 1991 in response to the public’s huge interest in finding ways around mainstream medicine. At first, those heading the effort brought dubious credentials. Much of the research ranged from mediocre (meaningless animal studies) to laughable (passing magnets over sore knees).

But, in 1999, with the name changed to the National Center for CAM, Dr. Stephen E. Straus took over. Straus, who spent much of his career at the National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases, enjoys a reputation as an accomplished scientist. In his time as director, the Center for CAM has spent much of its $122 million annual budget on clinical trials putting most popular alternative treatments to the same rigorous tests as those required of pharmaceuticals and medical devices before approval by the Food and Drug Administration.

Except for acupuncture, already proven effective in China, almost all the research has come to the same conclusion: the stuff doesn’t work.

Actually, if there’s good evidence out there that acupuncture actually works the way its adherents claim it does (you know, with accupoints, meridians, and altering the flow of qi, and all that stuff), given that sticking needles in areas not considered to be accupoints or on proper meridians (or sticking needles almost anywhere) seems to cause the same effect, which is most likely part placebo, part distraction, I’d be interested. Sticking needles in the skin may somehow relieve pain, but I would argue that all that altie stuff about qi and meridians as an explanation for how acupuncture “works” is nothing more than a lot of mystical hokum that only prevents us from understanding why sticking needles almost anywhere in the skin might relieve pain or treat other problems. I saw this most pointedly in a grant was discussed at the last NIH study section meeting I participated in that proposed to measure qi. But I digress.

Bethell is correct that virtually every study funded by NCCAM whose results have been reported lately has been a negative study, even though NCCAM’s budget has risen to $122 million a year since its origins in 1993. He’s also correct in pointing out that it doesn’t matter. Big altie is on the way to becoming as powerful and influential as big pharma. Alternative medicines and supplements have together grown into a $29 billion industry, and, as I pointed out before, it’s a very profitable industry, given that, unlike big pharma, these companies don’t even have to make a pretense of producing evidence that their therapies work:

Marketers often sell them under the guise of a mom-and-pop alternative to big pharma. Yet the $29 billion-a-year dietary supplement industry wields such power that it got Congress to pass a law in 1994 that basically frees it to peddle almost anything that doesn’t kill people with claims of medical benefit that need not be proven.

No doubt some of the thousands of products sold as dietary supplements work well, but the industry that sells them has neither motivation nor desire to know which ones work and which don’t.

No doubt? Actually there’s a lot of doubt that some of the thousands of dietary supplements “work well” (whatever that means). In fact, all you have to do is to tack a “this product has not been evaluated by the FDA, so consult your doctor”-type disclaimer and you can sell your supplements. But I particularly like the way Bazell takes Andrew Weil to task:

On his Web site someone recently inquired if a supplement called NT was useful for fatigue. “I’m not convinced by the scant literature on the subject that there’s anything to recommend taking NT Factor for fatigue,” Dr. Weil replied, in a surprisingly forthright response.

But, then he added that the fatigue sufferer might want to try “Siberian ginseng (Eleutherococcus senticosus), coenzyme Q10, the Ayurvedic herb ashwaganda or cordyceps, a traditional Chinese medicinal mushroom that may help fight fatigue and boost energy levels.”

I can find no evidence that any of these relieve fatigue any better than NT.

It gets better.

Dr. Weill concluded his answer by advising that a better-studied treatment might be something called Juvenon. At the bottom of the Web page appeared an ad from the manufacturer of Juvenon with the quote “I take Juvenon every day — Dr. Andrew Weil.”

Such crass commercialism would put most big drug companies to shame.

I hope Bazell has his asbestos suit on, because I predict that he’s going to get flamed by readers. In any case, that was exactly my point the last time I addressed this. Alties view their favored woo as being somehow “above” commerce when it is anything but that and when its sellers are starting to behave more and more like traditional pharmaceutical companies, including indulging in the same sort of promotional excesses of dubious ethics.

So what should be done? Here, I diverge with Tara, who says:

Unfortunately, what Bazell leaves out are suggestions about what to do now. Close down NCCAM altogether and immediately? We have a serious catch-22 here. We do want studies done on these “alternative” medicines, so we can justify saying they’re crap (or, be surprised when they actually work). But the problem is, as mentioned, that for the companies that make them, it doesn’t matter if they work–they can market them anyway, even if they’re no better than a sugar pill placebo. This loophole needs to be closed before any serious reform can be made to NCCAM–and that’s not going to be a politically popular arena to step into.

True enough, and Tara’s opinion is the way I used to think about this topic. Now, however, I’m no longer so convinced that NCCAM is a good idea anymore. NCCAM has had 14 years (with seven years of generous funding) to show some concrete results and has for the most part failed. Although I used to support NCCAM and its mission because I viewed NCCAM as the best way to apply the scientific method to the claims of alternative medicine, a goal that I still support strongly, I no longer see a compelling need for the existence as a separate Center in the NIH to achieve this goal. For one thing, NCCAM does nothing that can’t be done as well–or, in most cases, better–by other NIH Institutes and Centers. For another thing NCCAM is completely a political and ideological entity, not an Institute based on a sound scientific rationale. Indeed, it is the only center or Institute in the NIH that is based on ideology, rather than a category of disease, an organ system, or a type of medicine. I have now reluctantly come to the conclusion that there is not, and never has been, a compelling scientific reason why alternative medicine should be treated any differently from conventional medicine in terms of basic and clinical research. Indeed, the very existence of NCCAM as a separate entity, I would argue, fosters an attitude both within the Center and in Congress that alternative medicine should somehow be treated differently, as separate from, conventional medicine. In practice, this attitude seems to lead to the attitude that alternative medicine should be treated less rigorously, that it should be “cut some slack,” as evidenced by some of the dubious trials being conducted on the basis of poor to nonexistent preliminary data, examples of which include the NCCAM trial on chelation therapy for cardiovascular disease, whose study sites has included a bunch of dubious altie clinics as sites and whose design appears not to provide for adequate blinding of the double-blind trial and the $1.4 million trial testing the Gonzalez protocol, a a strange treatment involving pancreatic enzymes, coffee enemas, and up to 150 dietary supplements a day.

Of course, what I do acknowledge, as Tara does, that it would be politically unpopular to bring real reform to NCCAM to make its output more scientific or to eliminate it altogether and fold its activities into the relevant Institutes of the NIH. Such radical surgery on the Center is unlikely in the extreme. One reason is that NCCAM has powerful defenders and advocates, like Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) and Congressman Dan Burton (R-Indiana), the latter of whom pressured NCCAM into funding the aforementioned study of the Gonzalez protocol in pancreatic cancer despite its lack of scientific merit. (It’s a study for which even Dr. Stephen Straus, Director of NCCAM, has never been able to offer more than a lukewarm endorsement and defense.) Perhaps the more important reason, however, is that people really like their woo. Applying rigorous science to it will almost certainly result in the vast majority of alternative medicine “treatments,” particularly ones that either don’t involve herbal medicines (many of which, after all, contain active pharmaceuticals) or that involve in essence religious concepts like energy healing, failing to show efficacy when compared to conventional medicine. When faced with the likelihood of negative evidence, alties tend to prefer a lack of evidence, which allows them to continue to argue that science hasn’t “disproven” their favorite alternative medicine. Of course, negative trials are useful to physicians, who can with confidence cite them as evidence that some woo or other doesn’t work better than placebo, but unless they’re used to drive policy (for example, forbidding claims of supplement efficacy that aren’t backed up by science), they serve little purpose.

By Orac

Orac is the nom de blog of a humble surgeon/scientist who has an ego just big enough to delude himself that someone, somewhere might actually give a rodent's posterior about his copious verbal meanderings, but just barely small enough to admit to himself that few probably will. That surgeon is otherwise known as David Gorski.

That this particular surgeon has chosen his nom de blog based on a rather cranky and arrogant computer shaped like a clear box of blinking lights that he originally encountered when he became a fan of a 35 year old British SF television show whose special effects were renowned for their BBC/Doctor Who-style low budget look, but whose stories nonetheless resulted in some of the best, most innovative science fiction ever televised, should tell you nearly all that you need to know about Orac. (That, and the length of the preceding sentence.)

DISCLAIMER:: The various written meanderings here are the opinions of Orac and Orac alone, written on his own time. They should never be construed as representing the opinions of any other person or entity, especially Orac's cancer center, department of surgery, medical school, or university. Also note that Orac is nonpartisan; he is more than willing to criticize the statements of anyone, regardless of of political leanings, if that anyone advocates pseudoscience or quackery. Finally, medical commentary is not to be construed in any way as medical advice.

To contact Orac: [email protected]

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