The New England Journal of Medicine -- October 8, 1998 -- Volume 339,
Number 15
A Comparison of Physical Therapy, Chiropractic Manipulation,
and Provision of an Educational Booklet for the Treatment of Patients with Low Back Pain
Daniel
C. Cherkin, Richard A. Deyo, Michele Battie, Janet Street, William Barlow
Background and Methods. There are few data on the relative effectiveness
and costs of treatments for low back pain. We randomly assigned 321 adults with low back
pain that persisted for seven days after a primary care visit to the McKenzie method of
physical therapy, chiropractic manipulation, or a minimal intervention (provision of an
educational booklet). Patients with sciatica were excluded. Physical therapy or
chiropractic manipulation was provided for one month (the number of visits was determined
by the practitioner but was limited to a maximum of nine); patients were followed for a
total of two years. The bothersomeness of symptoms was measured on an 11-point scale, and
the level of dysfunction was measured on the 24-point Roland Disability Scale.
Results. After adjustment for base-line differences, the chiropractic
group had less severe symptoms than the booklet group at four weeks (P=0.02), and there
was a trend toward less severe symptoms in the physical-therapy group (P=0.06). However,
these differences were small and not significant after transformations of the data to
adjust for their non-normal distribution. Differences in the extent of dysfunction among
the groups were small and approached significance only at one year, with greater
dysfunction in the booklet group than in the other two groups (P=0.05). For all outcomes,
there were no significant differences between the physical-therapy and chiropractic groups
and no significant differences among the groups in the numbers of days of reduced activity
or missed work or in recurrences of back pain. About 75 percent of the subjects in the
therapy groups rated their care as very good or excellent, as compared with about 30
percent of the subjects in the booklet group (P<0.001). Over a two-year period, the
mean costs of care were $437 for the physical-therapy group, $429 for the chiropractic
group, and $153 for the booklet group.
Conclusions. For patients with low back pain, the McKenzie method of
physical therapy and chiropractic manipulation had similar effects and costs, and patients
receiving these treatments had only marginally better outcomes than those receiving the
minimal intervention of an educational booklet. Whether the limited benefits of these
treatments are worth the additional costs is open to question. (N Engl J Med
1998;339:1021-9.)
|