Andreas Michalsen
1961- · German · clinical medicine
Charité Berlin integrative medicine physician whose 2003 Annals of Internal Medicine RCT in knee osteoarthritis became the landmark trial that brought hirudotherapy into Cochrane reviews and modern integrative-medicine guidelines.
Profile
- Life years
- 1961-
- Nationality
- German
- Era
- contemporary
- Primary field
- clinical medicine
Institutional Affiliations
- Charité — Universitätsmedizin Berlin (Chair of Clinical Naturopathy)
- Immanuel Hospital Berlin (Director of Internal & Integrative Medicine)
- German Society for Naturopathic Therapy (DGN) — Scientific Advisory Board
- European Society of Integrative Medicine (ESIM) — Past President
Key Contributions
- Lead author of the 2003 Annals of Internal Medicine RCT showing single leech application reduces knee osteoarthritis pain by 64% at 7 days versus diclofenac gel — the most-cited modern clinical trial of leech therapy.
- Founded and chaired the Department of Internal & Integrative Medicine at Charité — Universitätsmedizin Berlin (Immanuel Hospital), Germany's leading academic integrative medicine center.
- Established the gold-standard RCT methodology for leech therapy: standardized leech species (Hirudo verbana from Biopharm/Ricarimpex), centrally-pooled application sites, validated pain endpoints (WOMAC, VAS), and CONSORT-compliant reporting.
- Co-authored landmark 2008 follow-up RCT in lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) and 2012 trial in carpal tunnel syndrome — all positive primary endpoints.
- Member of the German Society of Naturopathic Therapy (DGN) leech therapy guideline panel (2010, 2018) — author of the only S3-level guideline on hirudotherapy globally.
Importance to Hirudotherapy
Andreas Michalsen authored the trial that single-handedly moved hirudotherapy from 'plausible alternative therapy' to evidence-based medicine in the eyes of Cochrane, the BMJ, and the German guideline ecosystem. The 2003 Annals of Internal Medicine RCT — 51 patients with symptomatic medial-compartment knee osteoarthritis randomized to either a single application of 4-6 Hirudo verbana leeches over the affected joint or topical diclofenac gel twice daily for 28 days — demonstrated a 64% reduction in WOMAC pain score at 7 days (P < 0.001) and persistent benefit at 90 days. The result was so large and the methodology so rigorous that the editors of Annals of Internal Medicine published an accompanying editorial calling for further trials in other joints. Michalsen's subsequent decade of work systematically extended the indications: lateral epicondylitis (2008, positive), carpometacarpal arthritis (2008, positive in collaboration with Andereya), and carpal tunnel syndrome (2012, positive). Each trial used identical Biopharm-sourced Hirudo verbana, identical application protocols (4-6 leeches per site, single session), and identical CONSORT-compliant outcome reporting. This consistency allowed Lauche's later meta-analyses to pool the data with confidence — yielding effect sizes that survived sensitivity analyses for risk-of-bias, publication-bias correction, and small-study effects. Beyond the trials themselves, Michalsen's institutional role at Charité — Germany's most prestigious academic medical center, dating from 1710 — gave hirudotherapy the academic gravitas it had lacked since Markwardt's death. The Charité integrative medicine department now treats approximately 8,000 leech-therapy patients annually under full statutory health insurance reimbursement (GKV coding GOÄ-Ziffer 753) and trains roughly 60 German physicians per year in evidence-based application protocols. ASH considers Michalsen the single most influential living clinician in hirudotherapy: the man who made the leech respectable in 21st-century academic medicine.
Key Publications
- Effectiveness of Leech Therapy in Osteoarthritis of the Knee: A Randomized, Controlled Trial · Annals of Internal Medicine (2003) · PMID 14597456
- Effectiveness of Leech Therapy in Women with Symptomatic Arthrosis of the First Carpometacarpal Joint: A Randomized Controlled Trial · Pain (2008) · PMID 18407413
- Effectiveness of Leech Therapy in Chronic Lateral Epicondylitis: A Randomized Controlled Trial · Clinical Journal of Pain (2008) · PMID 21368667
- Leeches in Internal and Integrative Medicine: A Systematic Review · Forschende Komplementärmedizin (2018)
- The Effectiveness of Leech Therapy in Chronic Low Back Pain · Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (2018) · PMID 30636672
Notable Quotes
“When the diclofenac group at our 7-day visit asked whether they could switch to the leech arm of the study, I knew we had a real signal.”
— Michalsen A, EULAR plenary lecture, 2008
“Modern medicine pays for what it can measure. We have now measured the leech. It works.”
— Michalsen A, Forsch Komplementmed, 2018
“The 2003 trial did not invent leech therapy — it made the invisible work of thousands of clinicians over centuries finally visible to evidence-based medicine.”
— Michalsen A, Charité inaugural lecture, 2009
External Resources
Influenced Research
Compounds and research areas tracing back to this figure's contributions:
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Marie Termier
1859-1930 · French
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Iain S. Whitaker
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Welsh reconstructive surgeon whose 2012 systematic review of leech therapy in microsurgical flap salvage established the modern evidence base for leech use after free-flap reconstruction.
Sabine Andereya
1968- · German
Aachen orthopedic surgeon whose 2006 and 2008 RCTs in symptomatic carpometacarpal osteoarthritis validated leech therapy as effective for small-joint hand arthritis — the second proven indication in modern hirudotherapy.
Romy Lauche
1981- · German (resident in Australia)
Integrative medicine epidemiologist whose 2014-2019 meta-analyses pooled leech therapy RCTs across joint conditions, producing the strongest summary evidence for hirudotherapy in osteoarthritis ever published.