Controversy: hirudotherapy (leech therapy) as an alternative treatment for osteoarthritis
Gunawan F, Wibowo YR, Bunawan NC, Turner JH (2015) · Acta Medica Indonesiana · n=0
Study Profile
- Design
- narrative review article on the role of hirudotherapy in osteoarthritis management (Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Atma Jaya, Jakarta, Indonesia)
- Sample size (n)
- 0
- Intervention
- Discussion of hirudotherapy as an alternative or complementary treatment for OA in the context of AAOS-recommended pharmacologic options (acetaminophen, NSAIDs, tramadol, capsaicin, corticosteroids)
- Comparator
- Conceptual comparison to AAOS-recommended pharmacologic options with attention to long-term side-effect profile
- Primary endpoint
- Qualitative assessment of hirudotherapy efficacy and safety in osteoarthritis
- Primary result
- Hirudotherapy described as a therapeutic modality with purported analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties, presented as one of several investigational alternatives motivated by long-term safety concerns with NSAIDs and other pharmacologic OA treatments
- Follow-up duration
- not applicable (review)
- PMID
- 26260562
Key Findings
- Indonesian academic review introducing hirudotherapy as an alternative to AAOS-recommended pharmacologic OA treatments
- Frames hirudotherapy within the context of concerns about long-term NSAID, acetaminophen, and corticosteroid side-effects
- Synthesizes purported analgesic and anti-inflammatory mechanisms of leech saliva
- Useful international reference for the position of hirudotherapy in OA management outside the European tradition
- Notes ongoing need for higher-quality investigative work to establish leech therapy in OA practice
Limitations
- Narrative review only - no systematic search, quality grading, or quantitative synthesis
- Short paper in a regional journal - limited depth on individual trials
- Includes general mechanistic discussion that is not primary evidence
- No GRADE rating
- Cites earlier trials without independent quality assessment
Clinical Implications
Gunawan 2015 provides an Indonesian academic-medicine framing of hirudotherapy as one of several alternative OA treatments to be considered given long-term NSAID concerns. The review's principal value is as international context: it shows that the European leech-OA literature has received critical engagement in Southeast Asian academic medicine. For ASH editorial purposes, this review is cited only as contextual evidence of cross-cultural interest in hirudotherapy as an OA option, not as primary evidence. Effect-size estimates and recommendations should continue to draw on underlying RCTs and meta-analyses (Lauche 2014, Wang 2018).
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