阿育吠陀医学提高免疫力的性质和机制:随机对照试验的系统回顾。

B N Vallish, Dimple Dang, Amit Dang
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摘要

背景:目的:汇集有关阿育吠陀制剂在健康人和病人身上增强免疫系统的性质和机制的证据:在PROSPERO上登记了前瞻性研究方案后,我们使用适当的搜索策略搜索了PubMed、DOAJ、Google Scholar、三个专门的阿育吠陀研究门户网站、两个专业阿育吠陀期刊和参考文献列表中截至2021年2月6日发表的相关记录。从所有符合条件的记录中提取与免疫系统功能的性质和机制有关的基线特征和数据。使用 Cochrane RoB-2 工具对方法学质量进行评估:在筛选出的 12554 篇文章中,共纳入了 19 项研究,报告了 20 项 RCT(17 项为平行分组设计,3 项为交叉设计),涉及 1661 名患者;11/19 项研究的第一作者为印度人。9项研究纳入了健康人群,其中1项研究纳入了孕妇,2项研究纳入了儿科人群;其余研究纳入了不同健康状况的患者,包括1项关于2019年冠状病毒疾病患者的研究。共研究了 21 项阿育吠陀干预措施,其中 5 项为复合混合物。主要给药途径是口服;各研究的干预剂量和给药频率各不相同。对五种阿育吠陀干预措施进行探讨的五项研究性试验报告的结果不完整、含糊不清或令人困惑。在其余 16 项干预措施中,有 4 项干预措施报告了免疫增强的间接证据,有 2 项干预措施报告了缺乏免疫增强的间接证据。有报告称,三种和四种干预措施分别增强了 T 辅助细胞和自然杀伤细胞,而汇总结果并没有明确指出增强了免疫系统的其他成分,包括细胞毒性 T 细胞、B 淋巴细胞、免疫球蛋白、细胞因子、补体成分、白细胞计数和其他成分。根据RoB-2标准,20项RCT中有9项存在高偏倚风险,其余11项RCT存在一些问题:各种阿育吠陀制剂似乎都能增强免疫系统,特别是通过增强自然杀伤细胞和 T 辅助细胞。
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Nature and mechanism of immune boosting by Ayurvedic medicine: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials.

Background: Many Ayurvedic preparations are claimed to have immune-boosting properties, as suggested in various published randomized clinical trials (RCTs).

Aim: To compile evidence on the nature and mechanism of immune system enhancement by Ayurvedic preparations in healthy and sick individuals.

Methods: After prospectively registering study protocol with PROSPERO, we searched PubMed, DOAJ, Google Scholar, three dedicated Ayurveda research portals, two specialty Ayurveda journals, and reference lists for relevant records published until February 6, 2021 using appropriate search strategies. Baseline features and data pertaining to the nature and mechanism of immune system function were extracted from all eligible records. Methodological quality was assessed using the Cochrane RoB-2 tool.

Results: Of 12554 articles screened, 19 studies reporting 20 RCTs (17 parallel group design, three crossover design) with 1661 unique patients were included; 11/19 studies had Indian first authors. Healthy population was included in nine studies, of which one study included pregnant women and two included pediatric population; remaining studies included patients with different health conditions, including one study with coronavirus disease 2019 patients. A total of 21 Ayurvedic interventions were studied, out of which five were composite mixtures. The predominant route of administration was oral; dose and frequency of administration of the intervention varied across the studies. The results reported with five RCTs exploring five Ayurvedic interventions were incomplete, ambiguous, or confusing. Of the remaining 16 interventions, indirect evidence of immune enhancement was reported with four interventions, while lack of the same was reported with two interventions. Enhancement of T helper cells and natural killer cells was reported with three and four interventions, respectively, while the pooled results did not clearly point toward enhancement of other components of the immune system, including cytotoxic T cells, B lymphocytes, immunoglobulins, cytokines, complement components, leucocyte counts, and other components. Nine of the 20 RCTs had a high risk of bias, and the remaining 11 RCTs had some concerns according to RoB-2.

Conclusion: Various Ayurvedic preparations appear to enhance the immune system, particularly via enhancements in natural killer cells and T helper cells.

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