1.Analysis of the Evidence Map of Clinical Research on Treatment of Hyperlipidemia with Traditional Chinese Medicine
Wenjie HAN ; Chidao ZHANG ; Lanxin LI ; Yanze LIU ; Ruipeng WU ; Yipei AN ; Mingjun ZHU ; Xinlu WANG
Traditional Chinese Drug Research & Clinical Pharmacology 2024;35(10):1611-1620
Objective To comprehensively review the clinical research on the treatment of hyperlipidemia with traditional Chinese Medicine(TCM)through the evidence mapping,and to understand the distribution of evidence in this field. Methods Databases including CNKI,Wangfang,VIP,SinoMed,PubMed,Cochrane Library,and Embase were searched from January 2004 to December 2023 to collect clinical studies,systematic reviews/meta-analyses,guidelines and clinical pathways related to the treatment of hyperlipidemia with TCM. The results were analyzed and displayed in charts and graphs according to the screening criteria,and the Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews 2 (AMSTAR 2) tool and the Preferred Reporting Item for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Chinese herbal medicine (PRISMA-CHM) were used to evaluate the quality of the systematic review/meta-analysis. Results A total of 1223 studies were included in the analysis according to Population,Intervention,Comparison,Outcome and Study design(PICOS) principles,involving 920 RCTs,249 non-RCTs,49 systematic reviews/meta-analyses,and 5 guidelines/expert consensus. In recent years,the overall number of clinical research publications has shown a downward trend. Hyperlipidemia frequently occurs in middle-aged and elderly people,and age of onset tends to be younger. The sample size of randomized controlled studies is mostly concentrated in 60-300 cases. There are many types of clinical treatment regimens for the treatment of hyperlipidemia with TCM,among which TCM decoction (50.13%) and Chinese patent medicine (38.41%) account for a relatively high proportion,and TCM exercise therapy (0.51%) is the lowest treatment. Jiangzhi Decoction has attracted more attention in trial group of TCM decoction,while Xuezhikang Capsule has attracted more attention in trial group of Chinese patent medicine. In terms of methodological design,199 papers(21.63%) explicitly mentioned the method of generating random sequence,17 papers(1.85%) mentioned allocation concealment,37 papers (4.02%) mentioned blinding. The control group was dominated by the statins,including simvastatin and atorvastatin. The outcome indicators mainly include the total effective rate,TCM syndrome score,blood lipid level,coagulation index,and adverse reactions,while the attention of TCM characteristic efficacy,inflammation,oxidative stress,and vascular endothelial index were low. The methodological and reporting quality of the systematic review/Meta-analysis were generally not high. AMSTAR-2 evaluation was extremely low,and the average PRISMA-CHM score was 15. Conclusion TCM has certain advantages in the treatment of hyperlipidemia,but there is a lack of high-quality evidence-based proof,and more high-quality clinical studies are still needed to further provide evidence supports in the future. It has been suggested that more large-sample and multi-center clinical studies should be carried out in the future. We should formulate systematic reviews/Meta analysis and guidelines/expert consensus according to the guidelines of clinical practice issues,also consult international standards and regulations,enhance normativity and reliability to improve the quality of their evidence.
2.Regulation of Signaling Pathways Related to Myocardial Infarction by Traditional Chinese Medicine: A Review
Wenjun WU ; Chidao ZHANG ; Jingjing WEI ; Xue LI ; Bin LI ; Xinlu WANG ; Mingjun ZHU
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae 2025;31(6):321-330
The pathological changes of myocardial infarction (MI) are mainly characterized by progressive myocardial ischemic necrosis, decline in cardiac diastolic function, thinning of the ventricular wall, and enlargement of the ventricles. The clinical manifestations include myocardial ischemia, heart failure, arrhythmia, shock, and even sudden cardiac death, rendering MI one of the most perilous cardiovascular diseases. Currently, the clinical treatment for MI primarily involves interventional procedures and drug therapy. However, due to their significant side effects and high complication rates associated with these treatments, they fail to ensure a satisfactory quality of life and long-term prognosis for patients. On the other hand, traditional Chinese medicine has demonstrated remarkable potential in improving patient prognosis while reducing side effects. Research has elucidated that various signaling pathways such as nuclear transcription factor-κB (NF-κB), adenosine 5̒-monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β)/Smads, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), Wnt/β-catenin (β-catenin), and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/protein kinase B(Akt) play crucial roles in regulating the occurrence and development of MI. Effectively modulating these signaling pathways through its therapeutic interventions, traditional Chinese medicine can enhance MI management by inhibiting apoptosis, providing anti-inflammatory properties, alleviating oxidative stress levels, and resisting myocardial ischemia. Due to its notable efficacy and favorable safety, it has become an area of focus in clinical practice.