Neural Regeneration Research (Jan 2015)
Effcacy and safety of nerve growth factor for the treatment of neurological diseases: a meta-analysis of 64 randomized controlled trials involving 6,297 patients
- Meng Zhao,
- Xiao-yan Li,
- Chun-ying Xu,
- Li-ping Zou
Affiliations
- Meng Zhao
- Xiao-yan Li
- Chun-ying Xu
- Li-ping Zou
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.156989
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 10,
no. 5
pp. 819 – 828
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: China is the only country where nerve growth factor is approved for large-scale use as a clinical medicine. More than 10 years ago, in 2003, nerve growth factor injection was listed as a national drug. The goal of this article is to evaluate comprehensively the efficacy and safety of nerve growth factor for the treatment of neurological diseases. DATA RETRIEVAL: A computer-based retrieval was performed from six databases, including the Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMBASE, Sino Med, CNKI, and the VIP database, searching from the clinical establishment of nerve growth factor for treatment until December 31, 2013. The key words for the searches were "nerve growth factor, randomized controlled trials" in Chinese and in English. DATA SELECTION: Inclusion criteria: any study published in English or Chinese referring to randomized controlled trials of nerve growth factor; patients with neurological diseases such as peripheral nerve injury, central nerve injury, cranial neuropathy, and nervous system infections; patients older than 7 years; similar research methods and outcomes assessing symptoms; and measurement of nerve conduction velocities. The meta-analysis was conducted using Review Manager 5.2.3 software. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The total effective rate, the incidence of adverse effects, and the nerve conduction velocity were recorded for each study. RESULTS: Sixty-four studies involving 6,297 patients with neurological diseases were included. The total effective rate in the group treated with nerve growth factor was significantly higher than that in the control group (P < 0.0001, RR: 1.35, 95%CI: 1.30-1.40). The average nerve conduction velocity in the nerve growth factor group was significantly higher than that in the control group (P < 0.00001, MD: 4.59 m/s, 95%CI: 4.12-5.06). The incidence of pain or scleroma at the injection site in the nerve growth factor group was also higher than that in the control group (P < 0.00001, RR: 6.30, 95%CI: 3.53-11.27), but such adverse effects were mild. CONCLUSION: Nerve growth factor can significantly improve nerve function in patients with nervous system disease and is safe and effective.
Keywords
- active zone stability
- Drosophila
- neuromuscular junction
- dephosphorylation
- Liprin-α
- Syd-1
- PP2A
- GSK-3ß
- living scaffolds
- neural tissue engineering
- cell transplant
- biomaterials
- regeneration
- neurotrauma
- neurodegeneration
- axon pathfinding
- cell migration
- injury
- plasticity
- neurodegenerative disease
- brain
- therapy
- neuron
- microglia
- neural progenitor
- tissue engineering
- neuroregeneration
- repair
- central nervous system
- biomaterial
- regenerative medicine
- nanotechnology
- spinal cord injury
- axonal regeneration
- exosome
- extracellular vesicle
- microRNA
- microvesicle
- nerve gap
- neurite outgrowth
- peripheral nerve injury
- Schwann cell
- stem cell
- hemodynamic phases
- cerebral subarachnoid hemorrhage
- metabolic crises
- nerve regeneration
- hypoxic-ischemic brain damage
- ginsenoside Rg1
- neural stem cells
- cell transplantation
- cell differentiation
- cognition
- nerve reconstruction
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- brain injury
- neuroimaging
- functional magnetic resonance imaging
- regional homogeneity
- apoplexy
- subacute
- ischemia
- participants
- healthy
- volunteers
- brain activity
- NSFC grants
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- brain injury
- neuroprotection
- cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury
- lateral intracerebroventricular injection
- Apelin-13
- nerve apoptosis
- Bcl-2
- caspase-3
- NSFC grants
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- fractalkine
- CX3 chemokine receptor 1
- neuronal maturation
- dendrites
- doublecortin
- synaptic maturation
- newborn neurons
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- neurodegenerative diseases
- Alzheimer′s disease
- transgenic animal models
- mice
- epimedium herb
- milkvetch root
- kudzuvine root
- divalent metal transporter 1
- ferroportin 1
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- microRNA-124
- neurogenesis
- neuronal survival
- Huntington′s disease
- SRY-related HMG box transcription factor 9
- brain-derived neurotrophic factor
- peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha
- mutant huntingtin
- nerve regeneration
- Ras/Raf/Erk1/2 signaling pathway
- spinal cord injury
- apoptosis
- repair
- regulation
- inhibition
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- neurogenic bladder
- bibliometric analysis
- Web of Science database
- visualization analysis
- CiteSpace III
- citation analysis
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- sciatic nerve injury
- autologous nerve grafting
- epineurial suturing
- three-dimensional finite element models
- load
- stress
- displacement
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- brain injury
- facial palsy
- Bell′s palsy
- comparison
- methodological quality
- therapy
- fixed effect model
- acupuncture
- incomplete recovery
- randomized controlled trials
- electroacupuncture
- NSFC grants
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- peripheral nerve injury
- thalidomide
- ankylosing spondylitis
- adverse reactions
- peripheral neuropathy;prospective study
- treatment
- dose
- treatment time
- age
- sex
- neural regeneration
- nerve regeneration
- neurological diseases
- nerve growth factor
- randomized controlled trials
- meta-analysis
- adverse effects
- nerve conduction velocity
- neural regeneration