Needle-based acupuncture is used in some detoxification settings. However, its efficacy for illicit drug use disorders remains uncertain because prior reviews often mixed comparator types, co-interventions, or non-needle modalities. This review aimed to evaluate needle-based acupuncture monotherapy using comparator-stratified meta-analysis.
The authors searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, CNKI, CBM/SinoMed, trial registries, and supplementary sources from inception to September 12, 2025. The quantitative synthesis was restricted to randomized trials of manual acupuncture, electroacupuncture, or needle-insertion auricular acupuncture delivered without concomitant pharmacotherapy or psychotherapy. Although the registered protocol allowed non-randomized comparative studies, none were pooled because of insufficient comparability and a higher risk of confounding. Sensitivity analyses excluded trials with moxibustion co-treatment.
Thirteen randomized trials (n = 1,027) were included in the meta-analysis. For the prespecified primary outcome of withdrawal severity at the end of treatment, acupuncture favored blank/no-acupuncture controls [g = −2.089, 95% confidence interval (CI): −2.869 to −1.309; τ² = 0.712; I² = 82.9%], but the prediction interval (PI) crossed the null (PI: −4.306 to 0.128). Against active non-acupuncture comparators, the pooled effect was imprecise (g = −1.70, 95% CI: −5.43 to 2.02; PI: −23.49 to 20.09). Against sham acupuncture, two comparisons yielded an imprecise estimate (g = −1.45, 95% CI −9.41 to 6.51), and no PI was estimated. Among secondary outcomes, anxiety favored acupuncture over blank/no-acupuncture controls (g = −1.537, 95% CI: −2.047 to −1.026; PI: −2.939 to −0.134), whereas evidence from sham-controlled studies was less certain (g = −0.998, 95% CI: −1.744 to −0.252; PI: −2.828 to 0.832). For depression outcomes, PIs crossed the null in both blank- and sham-controlled analyses. The certainty of the evidence was low to very low.
The authors concluded that acupuncture exhibited favorable average effects on withdrawal severity, but null-crossing PIs limited confidence in the reproducibility of these effects across different settings and treatment protocols. Anxiety was interpreted as a secondary finding. No serious acupuncture-related adverse events were explicitly reported, although surveillance was often passive or insufficiently described.
The review treats acupuncture as “effective” for illicit drug disorders by highlighting short-term improvements in craving or anxiety, while the outcomes that matter for addiction – abstinence, relapse, use frequency, and retention – show no reliable benefit.
This, I think, is a classic case of presenting a negative result as a positive finding!
The review explicitly found no consistent difference between acupuncture and comparators for substance use endpoints, and the apparent positive outcomes were limited by low-quality evidence and publication bias. By foregrounding surrogate outcomes and obscuring the lack of clinically decisive effects, the paper misleads readers into perceiving acupuncture as a viable monotherapy for drug use disorders. Yet the evidence does clearly not support that conclusion.
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