Acupuncture

Acupuncture may help with the side effects of cancer and its treatment. There is evidence that it works for some symptoms. But we need more research.

Summary

  • Acupuncture is an East Asian medicine used in Western medicine.

  • It can work in sickness caused by chemotherapy.

  • It can work for some other symptoms.

  • Side effects are rare.

What is acupuncture?

Acupuncture involves putting fine needles into the body at particular points. The needles stay in place for a short time. The practitioner then removes it.

Acupuncture first started in traditional East Asian medicine. It became an important part of Chinese medicine about 2000 years ago. But we now know how it works in scientific terms as well.

Ancient Chinese medicine suggests that energy called Qi flows through the body. It moves along channels called meridians. Acupuncture alters this flow to restore or optimise good health.

Western medical acupuncture is a modern interpretation of acupuncture based on scientific research. Practitioners give treatments following a medical diagnosis. They can give it alongside conventional cancer treatments. These include cancer drugs or radiotherapy.

Acupuncture is used to treat a wide range of pain conditions and some other symptoms. Many doctors train in Western medical acupuncture. Other qualified health professionals also often train to use acupuncture alongside anti cancer treatments.

Why people with cancer use it

Medical research shows that acupuncture works by stimulating nerves. It releases the natural morphine-like substances (endorphins) in the spinal cord and brain. This relieves pain. Acupuncture also releases serotonin. Serotonin is a pain reliever which can promote a feeling of wellbeing. The release of these substances can reduce cancer symptoms.

People with cancer might have acupuncture to relieve sickness. This can be because of chemotherapy or other cancer drugs.

Acupuncture is available in most hospitals, hospices and clinics. Your doctor might refer you to have acupuncture because you have pain or other symptoms such as:

  • tiredness and weakness (fatigue)
  • a dry mouth
  • breathlessness
  • hot flushes due to anti cancer treatments

People say that acupuncture also helps them to feel relaxed. And it improves their feeling of wellbeing.

How you have it

Your practitioner will ask you general questions about your health and lifestyle. This can include how you're sleeping and eating. It might also be on how you’re feeling both physically and emotionally.

Tell your practitioner about:

  • any health problems you have 
  • any medicines you take
  • the cancer symptoms you have
  • the treatment side effects you have

They might need to change the treatment to suit your specific needs.

Discuss how many treatments you will need before you start having it because it will vary. Your practitioner might recommend that you have treatments once or twice a week at first.

You might need to go back every few weeks for a top up treatment if you have a chronic condition. You are likely to see an improvement in about 3 to 6 sessions if acupuncture is going to help you.

Treatment

Treatment usually starts with only a few needles. This might change depending on your response. And the symptoms that you have.

The practitioner puts fine, stainless steel, disposable needles in through your skin.

The needles shouldn’t cause pain, but you might feel a tingling sensation. They are left in place for between 10 to 30 minutes.

The practitioner might flick or turn the needles to stimulate your nerves. Or, they might attach a weak electrical current to the needles once they are in. This is called electroacupuncture.

Sometimes the practitioner will leave a special type of very small needle in the skin. This is to give ongoing symptom relief.

With ear (auricular) acupuncture the practitioner places needles or small beads (acupressure beads) onto the outer part of the ear. The beads might stay in place for a few days.

Your practitioner may also teach you a specific way of doing acupuncture yourself at home.

Check with your doctor before you start using any type of complementary or alternative treatment. Make sure your acupuncture practitioner knows your full medical and drug history. Discuss this at every visit, especially if anything has changed.

Finding a practitioner

You can have acupuncture in:

  • cancer hospitals 
  • cancer clinics
  • hospices 
  • GP practices

It is worth asking if it is available to you on the NHS. Many nurses, GPs, physiotherapists and hospital doctors have had training in acupuncture.

You can find a reliable acupuncture practitioner through the British Acupuncture Council. It has high standards for its registered members. It will make sure that you receive treatment from a highly qualified acupuncturist. They usually have undertaken a 3 year BSc honours acupuncture degree.

Side effects

Acupuncture is generally safe and gives very few side effects. That is if it is done by a professional and qualified practitioner. The most common side effect is minor bleeding and bruising. This happens to between 1 and 10 in 100 people (1 to 10%).

Some people have uncommon side effects which can include:

  • a temporary short term increase in pain symptoms followed by a decrease in pain
  • feeling dizzy or faint which rarely happens if you lie down to have the treatment

Acupuncture can have serious side effects. This might be a punctured lung or severe infection. But this is very rare and happens in fewer than 1 in 10,000 treatments.

Research into acupuncture for cancer

There is no evidence to show that acupuncture can help treat or cure cancer. But it can help relieve some cancer symptoms and side effects from treatment.

Research into acupuncture for cancer focuses on treating:

  • chemotherapy related sickness
  • tiredness
  • pain
  • anxiety and stress
  • depression and mood changes
  • quality of life
  • hot flushes

Most studies show that acupuncture is better than no treatment at all. And that it is as good as, or better than, standard treatment for these symptoms and side effects.

Because studies in people with cancer are often small, it is difficult to be entirely sure of the results. We must compare any evidence that acupuncture might help with standard treatment. This helps us to understand how it can help alongside conventional treatment. So, we need large, well-designed studies to help us learn more.

How much it costs

Most people who have acupuncture have to pay for it themselves. But, acupuncture is being used more and more within the NHS.

If you have private healthcare, ask them if they cover acupuncture. Some of them do.

A word of caution

Make sure that the person who treats you has had proper training. They should have experience in using acupuncture for people with cancer.

Do not go for treatment at shops on the high street. The practitioners there might not be familiar with treating cancer. Many traditional Chinese acupuncturists use herbs alongside acupuncture. Some of the herbs can interact with cancer treatments and stop them from working so well.

Useful organisations

Last reviewed: 
30 May 2022
Next review due: 
30 May 2025

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