The present study was a systematic review to divulge the effectiveness of vitamin B6 in managing breast pain. The PRISMA checklist (2009) was used to conduct the review (
16). The review was done in four stages, including designing the study and determining the search strategy, collecting articles, evaluating inclusion and exclusion criteria, and finally, the qualitative evaluation of articles.
Keywords were extracted from the MeSH, and searches were performed in the databases of IRCT, Iran Doc, SID, and MagIran for Persian articles and Medline, Cochrane, Google Scholar, Embase, PubMed, Scopus, Science Direct, and Web of Sciences for English articles from 1980 up to July 2019. The keywords included "Pyridoxol", "Rodex", "PLP", "Pyridoxal-5-Phosphate", "Pyridoxine Hydrochloride", "Pyridoxol Hydrochloride", "Vitamin E", "Pyridoxine", "Vitamin B6", "Vitamin B 6", "Mastodynia", "Mammalgia", "Breast Pain", "Breast Pains", (Pain AND Breast), "PMS", "Premenstrual Syndrome mastalgia", "Mastalgia", "Cycle Mastalgia", and "Non-Cycle Mastalgia".
The search was conducted by two experts, and 338 articles were found after the primary search. Upon an initial check, 54 repetitive articles were removed. After reading titles and abstracts, 243 irrelevant articles and 8 articles were the sampling stage which recorded at Cochrane Library database and four articles that had no full texts, were removed. Finally, 29 related articles were analyzed. The study selection process was performed according to the PRISMA flowchart (
17).
Inclusion criteria were conducting the study on the women of reproductive age with cyclic mastalgia, having a clinical or semi-experimental design, and investigating the effects of vitamin B6 on mastalgia. The studies conducted on breast tumors, case reports, case series, the studies assessing vitamin B6 effects with other therapies, and conference statements were not included. Also, the studies that hadn’t full texts, those with a sample size of fewer than 20 subjects per group, and the PMS (premenstural syndrom) studies that had not reported breast pain were removed.
From 29 articles, four studies due to a sample size of less than 20 in each group, four articles due to the simultaneous use of vitamin B6 and another supplement, and two articles due to the lack of transparency in results and statistical analyses were removed from the study. In addition, 11 articles performed on women with premenstrual syndrome were removed as they had not mentioned breast pain as a premenstrual symptom in their findings. Finally, seven articles entered the final review process. The data of these articles, including the first author’s name, year of publication, control group, age of participants, study design, sample size after randomization, patients’ characteristics, treatment period, blinding process, details of the intervention, measurement methods, statistical tests, and their findings were extracted (
Figure 1).
The PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process.
In order to assess the quality of the articles, the Jadad Scale was used (
18,
19), which included five questions about randomization, the probability of bias, Study blindness, following up of patients, and the criteria of the discontinuation of the trial. Answering “Yes” to each question was scored one while “No” was scored zero. The maximum score is 5, and the minimum is zero. The processes of selecting and qualifying articles were done by two of the authors. Disagreements were resolved through group discussions. The articles’ qualitative evaluation scores have been shown in
Table 1.
| Studies (Year) | Jadad Scale |
|---|
| Was the Study Randomized? | Was the Randomization Scheme Described and Appropriate? | Was the Study Double-Blinded? | Was the Method of Double-Blinding Appropriate? | Was There a Description of Dropouts and Withdrawals? | Total Jadad Score |
|---|
| Soltani et al. (2016) (20) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| Jahdi et al. (2018) (21) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| Shobeiri et al. (2015) (22) | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Soltani et al. (2014) (23) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Koleini et al. (2017) (24) | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Diegoli et al. (1998) (25) | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
| Williams et al. (1985) (26) | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |