

Protocol, design, and randomisation
ART-TTH was a randomised multicentre trial comparing acupuncture, minimal acupuncture, and a no acupuncture waiting list condition. Minimal acupuncture served as a sham intervention; we included the additional no acupuncture waiting list control because minimal acupuncture is not a physiologically inert placebo. Patients were blinded to treatment in the acupuncture and minimal acupuncture arms of the study. Two blinded evaluators analysed headache diaries. The methods of the trial have been described in detail elsewhere.
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After a baseline phase of four weeks, we used a centralised telephone randomisation procedure (random list generated with sample size 2.0 by the statistician) to randomise patients, stratified by centre (block size 12 unknown to trial physicians), in a 2:1:1 ratio (acupuncture:minimal acupuncture:waiting list). We used the 2:1:1 ratio to facilitate recruitment and increase the compliance of trial physicians. All study participants provided written, informed consent, and the study conformed to common guidelines for clinical trials (Declaration of Helsinki, ICH-GCP, including certification by external audit).

Participants
Inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of episodic or chronic tension-type headache according to the criteria of the International Headache Society,
1 at least eight days with headache a month in the previous three months and in the baseline period, age 18-65 years, duration of symptoms at least 12 months, completed baseline headache diary, and written informed consent. Main exclusion criteria were additional migraine headache, secondary headaches, start of headaches after age 50, use of analgesics on more than 10 days a month, prophylactic headache treatment with drugs during the previous four weeks, and any acupuncture treatment during the previous 12 months or at any time if done by the participating trial physician. Most participants were recruited through reports in local newspapers; a minority were patients who spontaneously contacted trial centres.

Interventions
We developed the study interventions in a consensus process with German acupuncture experts and societies.
4 Physicians trained (at least 140 hours, median 500 hours) and experienced (median 10 years) in acupuncture delivered the interventions. Both the acupuncture and minimal acupuncture treatments consisted of 12 sessions of 30 minutes, given over eight weeks (preferably two sessions in each of the first four weeks, followed by one session a week in the remaining four weeks).

Acupuncture treatment was semistandardised. All patients were treated at “basic” points bilaterally unless explicit reasons for not doing so were given; additional points could be chosen individually (box 1). We instructed physicians to achieve “de qi” (an irradiating feeling considered to be indicative of effective needling) if possible and to stimulate needles manually at least once during each session. The total number of needles was limited to 25 per session.

The number, length, and frequency of the sessions in the minimal acupuncture group were the same as for the acupuncture group. In each session, physicians needled at least five out of 10 predefined distant non-acupuncture points (box 2) bilaterally (at least 10 needles) and superficially using fine needles. Physicians avoided “de qi” and manual stimulation of the needles.

Patients in the waiting list control group did not receive any prophylactic treatment for their headaches for a period of 12 weeks after randomisation. After that time, they received 12 sessions of the acupuncture treatment described above.

All patients were allowed to treat acute headaches as needed. Treatment was supposed to follow current guidelines
5 and had to be documented in the headache diary.

Patients were informed with respect to acupuncture and minimal acupuncture as follows: “In this study, different types of acupuncture will be compared. One type is similar to the acupuncture treatment used in China. The other type does not follow the principles of traditional Chinese medicine, but has also been associated with positive outcomes in clinical studies.”

 Box 1: Acupuncture points used in the trial
 All physicians used sterile, disposable, single use needles but were free in their choice of length and diameter of needle
 Basic points

- Gall bladder (GB) 20
- GB 21
- Liver (LIV) 3
 Optional points

- Mainly frontal headache: large intestine (LI) 4, Du Mai (DU) 23, extra points Yintang and Taiyang, stomach (ST) 44, GB 2
- Headache mainly in the vertex: DU 20 or 23, extra point Si Shen Cong
- Mainly neck pain: bladder (BL) 10, 60, or 62; DU 14 or 19; small intestine (SI) 3 or 6
- Holocephalic pain with fatigue: extra point Taiyang, spleen (SP) 6 or 9, ST 36 or 40, Ren Mai (REN) 12
- Worse with wet or cold weather: LI 4, DU 14, GB 3, Sanjiao (SJ) 6, GB 39
- Modalities wind, dampness, cold: LI 4, DU 14, SJ 6, GB 34
- Modalities cold, wind: LI 4, lung (LU) 7, SJ 5, DU 14
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Outcome measurement
All patients filled in headache diaries in the four weeks before randomisation (baseline phase), the 12 weeks after randomisation, and weeks 21 to 24 after randomisation. In addition, we asked patients to fill in a pain questionnaire before treatment, after 12 weeks, and after 24 weeks.
6 This included the following validated scales: the German version of the pain disability index,
7 a scale for assessing sensoric and affective aspects of pain (Schmerzempfindungs-Skala SES),
8 the ADS depression scale,
9 and the German version of the SF-36 to assess health related quality of life.
10 The primary outcome measure was the difference in number of days with headache between the four weeks before randomisation (baseline phase) and weeks nine to 12 after randomisation.

To test blinding to treatment and assess the credibility of the different treatment methods, patients filled in a credibility questionnaire after the third acupuncture session.
11 At the end of the study, patients were asked whether they thought that they had received acupuncture following the principles of Chinese medicine or the other type of acupuncture.

Statistical methods
We based confirmatory testing of the primary outcome measure and all main analyses (with SPSS 11.5) on the intention to treat population and used all available data. We used SOLAS 3.0 (Statistical Solutions, Cork, Ireland) to do sensitivity analyses for the primary outcome measure, replacing missing data with baseline values or multiple imputation. We tested a priori ordered two sided null hypotheses by using Student's
t test (significance level 0.05). In the first step we investigated whether acupuncture reduced the number of days with headache more than no treatment, and in the second step (only if the first null hypothesis was rejected) we investigated whether acupuncture was more efficacious than minimal acupuncture. We give exploratory analyses (analysis of covariance adjusting for baseline differences and χ
2 tests) for predefined secondary outcome measures. We did an additional per protocol analysis including only patients without major protocol violations until week 12.

We made the original sample size calculation for one sided testing. Under this premise we planned the study to have 80% power to detect a group difference of two days with headache assuming a standard deviation of five days (thus an effect size of 0.4) and a 20% dropout rate.
4 However, we later decided to use two sided testing to comply better with common standards. Before starting the analysis, and on the basis of the recommendation of the ethical review board, we decided to exclude the data from one centre that had included 26 patients, owing to repeated severe protocol deviations and the suspicion of data manipulation in some patients. We decided to do a sensitivity analysis including this centre's data.

 Box 2: Minimal acupuncture points used in the trial

- “Deltoideus”—in the middle of the line insertion of M deltoideus (LI 14) and acromion
- “Upper arm”—2 cun laterally of LU 3
- “Forearm”—1 cun ulnar of the proximal third of the line between heart (HE) 3 and HE 7
- “Scapula”—1 cun laterally of the lower scapular edge
- “Spina iliaca”—2 cun above spina iliaca anterior superior in vertical line to the arch of left ribs
- “Back I”—5 cun laterally of the spine of lumbar vertebrum IV
- “Back II”—5 cun laterally of the spine of lumbar vertebrum V
- “Upper leg I”—6 cun above the upper edge of the patella (between the spleen and stomach meridians)
- “Upper leg II”—4 cun above the upper edge of the patella
- “Upper leg III”—2 cun dorsally of GB 31 (avoiding bladder meridian)
 A cun is defined according to the rules of traditional acupuncture as the width of the interphalangeal joint of the patient's thumb |