A structured collection of systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and randomised controlled trials examining the clinical effectiveness of manual acupuncture β excluding electroacupuncture and moxibustion β across eight medical domains.
All references in this report are drawn from peer-reviewed journals including The Lancet, JAMA Internal Medicine, BMJ, PLOS ONE, Frontiers in Medicine, and the Cochrane Database. Only manual acupuncture evidence is included. Studies covering electroacupuncture or moxibustion exclusively have been excluded.
Systematic Reviews (SR), Meta-Analyses (MA), Randomised Controlled Trials (RCT), and Cochrane Reviews β the highest tiers of clinical evidence.
Evidence covers 8 major disease categories across 70+ individual studies published primarily between 2019 and 2025, with landmark earlier studies included.
Evidence levels are noted honestly. Where studies note limitations, these are flagged. The goal is accuracy, not advocacy.
The most extensively studied domain. Evidence consistently shows acupuncture outperforms sham treatment and, in several trials, outperforms oral medication for both acute and chronic pain with fewer side effects.
Growing evidence supports acupuncture as both standalone and adjunct therapy for depression and anxiety, often matching pharmaceutical outcomes while avoiding dependency and withdrawal effects.
Migraine prevention and stroke rehabilitation are among the best-evidenced applications of acupuncture. Multiple large RCTs and meta-analyses confirm significant benefits across neurological conditions.
Post-operative nausea and chemotherapy-induced nausea/vomiting are among the best-validated applications. The 2025 umbrella review confirmed evidence of positive effect for IBS-diarrhoea predominant type.
Five conditions in women's health β including female infertility and menopausal symptoms β are among the 10 confirmed "positive evidence" conditions in the largest ever acupuncture evidence review.
Acupuncture has demonstrated superiority over antihistamine drugs in chronic urticaria β one of the most remarkable findings in recent evidence. It modulates IgE levels, mast cells, and immune signalling pathways.
Emerging and confirmed evidence supports acupuncture in cardiovascular contexts β from reducing angina frequency to modulating autonomic pathways that regulate heart rate and blood pressure.
Cancer-related fatigue is among the 10 confirmed positive evidence conditions. ASCO guidelines now include acupuncture recommendations. Evidence covers pain, nausea, fatigue, neuropathy, and psychological burden.
This document compiles peer-reviewed evidence from journals including The Lancet, JAMA, PLOS ONE, BMJ, Frontiers in Medicine, and the Cochrane Database, summarising acupuncture research across 8 major disease categories.
The 2025 review of 862 systematic reviews across 184 conditions identified 10 conditions with "Evidence of Positive Effect," including chronic pain, migraine, postoperative nausea, cancer-related fatigue, menopausal symptoms, and female infertility. A further 82 conditions showed "Evidence of Potential Positive Effect."
Across multiple domains, research suggests acupuncture may offer measurable benefit for selected patients, including pain, urticaria, cancer-related fatigue, CIPN, endometriosis, and neurological recovery measures. Evidence strength and individual outcomes vary by condition, study design, and patient context.
Critically, the number of clinical trials registered in the Cochrane Database grew from 2,015 in 2009 to 21,499 by 2025 β a tenfold increase β representing extraordinary scientific momentum. Germany's national health insurance, Medicare in the US, and 2,189 clinical guidelines worldwide now recognise acupuncture's evidence base.