MD, PhD, MAE, FMedSci, FRCP, FRCPEd.

The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of spinal manipulation and clinician-supported biopsychosocial self-management vs medical care for adults with increased risk of chronic disabling LBP.

This 2 × 2 factorial randomized clinical trial enrolled participants in 3 research clinics at the Universities of Minnesota and Pittsburgh from November 2018 to May 2023; final follow-up was in June 2024. Adults with acute or subacute LBP at moderate to high risk of chronicity based on the STarT Back tool were randomized to 1 of 4 groups, with interventions lasting up to 8 weeks. Statistical analysis was conducted from November 2024 to June 2025.

These interventions were:

  1. Spinal manipulation therapy (n = 201),
  2. supported self-management (n = 305),
  3. combined supported self-management with spinal manipulation (n = 193),
  4. guideline-based medical care (n = 301).

Physical therapists and chiropractors provided spinal manipulation and supported self-management.

The 2 primary outcomes averaged over a follow-up of 1 year were monthly low back disability (Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire) and weekly pain intensity (numerical rating scale). Secondary analysis examined the proportion of participants achieving a 50% or higher reduction in the primary outcome measures.

Among the 1000 participants randomized (mean [SD] age, 47 [16] years; 58% female), 93% completed the trial. The omnibus test for differences across the 4 treatment groups was statistically significant for disability (P = .001; supported self-management, 4.7; spinal manipulation, 5.5; combined supported self-management with spinal manipulation, 4.8; medical care, 5.9) but not pain intensity (P = .16; supported self-management, 2.8; spinal manipulation, 3.0; combined supported self-management with spinal manipulation, 2.8; medical care, 3.0). Averaged over 12 months, LBP disability was significantly lower compared with medical care for supported self-management (mean difference, −1.2 [95% CI, −1.9 to −0.5]) and supported self-management with spinal manipulation (mean difference, −1.1 [95% CI, −1.9 to −0.3]) but not spinal manipulation alone (mean difference, −0.4 [95% CI, −1.2 to 0.4]). Group differences in pain intensity were not statistically significant; point estimates ranged from −0.2 to 0. Both supported self-management groups had higher proportions of patients achieving a 50% or greater reduction in disability (supported self-management, 67%; spinal manipulation, 54%; combined supported self-management with spinal manipulation, 65%; medical care, 54%).

The authors concluded that for patients with acute or subacute LBP at increased risk of chronic disabling LBP, clinician-supported biopsychosocial self-management showed statistically significant but small reductions in disability, but not pain, vs medical care over 1-year follow-up, and spinal manipulation alone showed no significant difference for either outcome.

These findings are very bad news for chiropractors (the profession that uses spinal manipulations more than any other): spinal manipulation does not generate effects that are in the least convincing. This is particularly remarkable, since the study was not blinded. It means that, even the undoubtedly powerful placebo effect associated with spinal manipulation did not render the outcome more favourable.

I said it many times, and I will say it again: For LBP, many therapies generate similarly marginally positive effects but no treatment is truly convincing. In this situation, we should choose one that is at least inexpensive and free of severe adverse effects. And that evidently cannot be spinal manipulation!

One Response to Spinal Manipulation and Clinician-Supported Biopsychosocial Self-Management for Acute Back Pain

  • “chiropractors (the profession that uses spinal manipulations more than any other):”

    Respectfully, Dr. Ernst, it disturbs me to see that you refer to chiropractic as a “profession.” Professions are for what we call, well, professionals. Chiropractors, as I see it based on my 40 plus years of investigation, are pretty much simply businessmen with a product to sell, and a defective one at that. Bill Jarvis, one of the founders of the National Council Against Health Fraud, phrased it quite well: “The National Council Against Health Fraud (NCAHF) finds it remarkable that the chiropractic profession has existed for a century without having made a single notable contribution to the world’s body of knowledge in the health sciences.” OK, he used the word profession also, but I’ll have to live with it since he’s no longer with us and able to defend himself…

    My suggestion, for what it may be worth, is that you refer to chiropractic as just that – chiropractic.

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