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Meta-analysis finds pharmacologic therapies improve RLS in hemodialysis patients

Meta-analysis finds pharmacologic therapies improve RLS in hemodialysis patients
Photo by National Cancer Institute / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider gabapentinoids for RLS in hemodialysis patients, noting modest adverse event risks with dopaminergic agents.

This is a systematic review and meta-analysis of pharmacologic therapies for restless legs syndrome in adults undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. The analysis included 1,324 participants and evaluated Western medications and TCM-derived pharmaceutical preparations, though TCM treatments could not be quantitatively synthesized due to inconsistent diagnosis and reporting.

The authors found a significant improvement in International Restless Legs Scale scores, with a mean difference of -7.84. Sleep quality showed a significant improvement with a standardized mean difference of -0.82, and quality of life improved with a standardized mean difference of 0.48. Dialysis adequacy was not affected by these therapies.

Safety data indicated that adverse events increased modestly, with a relative risk of 1.28, and were highest with dopaminergic agents. Iron therapy offered moderate benefits with good tolerability. The authors noted that GRADE assessments were performed, but specific certainty levels are not reported.

Limitations include the inability to quantitatively evaluate TCM pharmacologic treatments due to lack of standardized RLS diagnosis, inconsistent outcome reporting, or mixed non-pharmacologic interventions. The meta-analysis reports associations, not causation, as it includes randomized, quasi-experimental, and observational studies.

Practice relevance is restrained: Western pharmacologic agents, particularly gabapentinoids, are effective for managing RLS in hemodialysis patients, while dopaminergic agents are beneficial but limited by higher adverse event risks.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BackgroundRestless Legs Syndrome (RLS) is highly prevalent among adults receiving maintenance hemodialysis and significantly impairs sleep, psychological well-being, and quality of life. While Western pharmacological treatments such as dopaminergic agents, gabapentinoids, and iron therapy are commonly studied, Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is also widely used in clinical practice—particularly for syndromes corresponding to RLS such as blood deficiency (Xue Xu), liver–kidney yin deficiency (Gan Shen Bu Zu), and blood stasis (Xue Yu). However, the evidence base for TCM pharmacologic interventions in hemodialysis-related RLS remains unclear. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the efficacy and safety of pharmacological therapies, including any available TCM-related pharmacologic treatments, in adults undergoing hemodialysis.MethodsA comprehensive search of PubMed, EMBASE, CENTRAL, Scopus, Web of Science, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Chinese-language databases was conducted from inception to January 2025. Eligible studies included randomized, quasi-experimental, and observational studies of pharmacologic therapies—Western medications or TCM-derived pharmaceutical preparations—administered for RLS in adults on hemodialysis. The primary outcome was change in International Restless Legs Scale (IRLS) scores; secondary outcomes included sleep quality, quality of life, dialysis adequacy, and adverse events. Random-effects meta-analyses, subgroup analyses, and GRADE assessments were performed.ResultsSixteen studies (n = 1,324) met inclusion criteria, with nine included in the quantitative analysis. Pharmacologic therapy significantly improved IRLS scores (MD –7.84), sleep quality (SMD –0.82), and quality of life (SMD 0.48). Gabapentinoids produced the largest symptom reductions, followed by dopaminergic agents and iron therapy. No treatment affected dialysis adequacy. Adverse events increased modestly (RR 1.28), highest with dopaminergic agents. Although the search identified several TCM-related clinical studies, none met criteria for inclusion in the meta-analysis due to lack of standardized RLS diagnosis, inconsistent outcome reporting, or mixed non-pharmacologic interventions. Thus, TCM pharmacologic treatments could not be quantitatively evaluated. Subgroup analyses by drug class demonstrated that gabapentinoids produced the largest reductions in RLS symptom severity, followed by dopaminergic agents and iron therapy. Bar plots illustrate these comparative effects on RLS severity, sleep quality, and quality of life. A heatmap further revealed that dopaminergic agents were associated with the highest frequency of adverse events, particularly nausea, hypotension, and augmentation.ConclusionWestern pharmacologic agents—particularly gabapentinoids—are effective for managing RLS in hemodialysis patients. Dopaminergic agents are beneficial but limited by higher adverse event risks, while iron therapy offers moderate benefits with good tolerability. Although TCM is widely used for symptom patterns associated with RLS and shows theoretical promise, high-quality, hemodialysis-specific pharmacologic TCM trials are lacking. To support integrated Chinese–Western clinical practice, rigorous future RCTs of standardized TCM formulations are urgently needed. This study provides evidence to guide clinical decision-making and emphasizes the importance of individualizing treatment approaches to balance efficacy and safety for patients undergoing hemodialysis.
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