Abstract

Background. Tai Chi (TC) exercise has recently received wide attention for its efficacy in the management of cognitive impairment. The purpose of this overview is to summarize the available evidence on TC treatment of cognitive impairment and assess its quality. Methods. We retrieved relevant systematic reviews/meta-analyses (SRs/MAs) from 7 databases from the time they were established to January 2, 2022. Two reviewers independently evaluated the methodological quality, risk of bias, report quality, and evidence quality of the included SRs/MAs on randomized controlled trials (RCTs). The tools used are Assessment System for Evaluating Methodological Quality 2 (AMSTAR-2), the Risk of Bias In Systematic (ROBIS) scale, the list of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews And Meta-Analysis (PRISMA), and the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) system. Results. This overview finally included 8 SRs/MAs. According to the results of AMSTAR-2, all included SRs/MAs were rated as very low quality. Based on the ROBIS tool, none of the SR/MA had a low risk of bias. In light of PRISMA, all SRs/MAs had reporting deficiencies. According to the GRADE system, there was only 1 high-quality piece of evidence. Conclusion. TC is a promising complementary and alternative therapy for cognitive impairment with high safety profile. However, in view of the low quality of the included SRs/MAs supporting this conclusion, high-quality evidence with a more rigorous study design and a larger sample size is needed before making a recommendation for guidance.

1. Introduction

As the aging population continues to grow, global public health is facing the serious problem of age-related cognitive decline. It is noteworthy that more and more people suffer from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia [1]. MCI occurs on a continuum from normal cognition to dementia, and individuals with MCI have a higher risk of dementia [2]. A recent report showed a 10%–25% incidence of MCI in people over 65 years of age [3], and the risk of dementia in MCI patients (10–15%) is much higher than in healthy older adults (1-2%) [4]. As cognitive performance declines, most individuals develop neuropsychiatric or behavioral [5] abnormalities in activities of daily living [6], ultimately resulting in a decline in quality of life (QoL) and an increased burden for family caregivers [7], and health professionals [8]. However, there is currently no drug treatment approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat MCI or slow the long-term progression of MCI to dementia [9]. Therefore, complementary and alternative therapies have become a research hotspot in improving cognitive impairment in recent years [10].

In recent decades, increasing evidence suggests that exercise could be considered as a promising nonpharmacological intervention to improve cognitive performance [11]. As a traditional Chinese martial art, Tai Chi (TC) is a body-mind coordination exercise, and it perfectly integrates traditional philosophy and traditional Chinese medicine theory and pursues the unity of strength, shape, qi, and consciousness [12]. TC exercise mainly includes the stretching and relaxation of skeletal muscles, as well as various movements such as body coordination, regular breathing, and meditation [13]. TC has widely been accepted as a supplementary form of physical exercise in Western countries such as the United States and Britain [14], and there is now growing evidence that TC may help improve cognitive function and mental health in older adults with mild dementia [15, 16]. TC may be a potential treatment modality for patients with cognitive impairment.

Systematic reviews (SRs)/meta-analyses (MAs) are significant tools to conduct evidence-based clinical work. A growing number of SRs/MAs based on TC intervention for cognitive impairment suggest that TC can improve patients’ cognitive function, delay the development of cognitive impairment, and improve the quality of life. However, without objective and comprehensive assessment of their methodological and evidentiary quality, it remains controversial whether these findings provide credible evidence for clinicians [17, 18]. This overview aimed to objectively and comprehensively evaluate the scientificity of TC exercise in the treatment of cognitively impaired SRs/MAs.

2. Methods

2.1. Research Methods and Protocol Registration

The overview of SRs/MAs was based on the guidelines specified in Cochrane Handbook [19], and other overviews with high-quality research methodology [2022]. This overview protocol has been registered with the INPLASY website (Registration number: INPLASY202240055).

2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.2.1. Literature Inclusion Criteria

(a)Type of researchThis overview includes SRs/MAs of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of the effects of TC exercise on cognitive impairment.(b)Type of participantsSubjects were patients diagnosed with MCI or dementia by any international or national standard.(c)Type of interventionThe intervention for the control group was conventional treatment (CT) or daily life activities, and the intervention for the experimental group was TC exercise or TC combined with the treatments received by the control group. CT includes health education, routine care, attention control, or medication.(d)Types of outcomesAt least one measure of cognitive domains was reported, such as global cognitive function, memory, executive function, attention, verbal fluency, and visuospatial function. Also, other assessment results obtained from relevant scales were included as well.

2.2.2. Exclusion Criteria

(1) Animal studies and (2) network MAs, research protocols, narrative reviews, overviews, dissertation, and conference abstracts.

2.3. Data Sources and Search Strategy

Two researchers searched seven electronic databases for inception date up to January 2, 2022, including PubMed, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Wanfang Database, CNKI, China Biomedicine (CBM), and Chongqing VIP, respectively. A literature search was carried out using a combination of key terms and free words, such as “Tai Chi,” “Cognitive Impairment,” “Systematic Review,” and “Meta-Analysis,” and the search strategy was finely adjusted according to different databases. The search strategy of PubMed database is shown in Table 1.

2.4. Literature Screening and Data Extraction

The literature screening (WW-L and LJ-C) and information extraction (H-C and MY-X) were independently performed by two researchers. The retrieved documents were imported into Endnote X9 document management software, and then, the duplicates were removed. The literature that potentially met the inclusion and exclusion criteria was then obtained by reading the titles and abstracts of the literature. Finally, we finalized the included MAs by reading the full text. All SRs/MAs were read by two independent researchers, and the following data were extracted from the SRs/MAs: first author, publication year, country, number of RCTs included, interventions for experimental and control groups, included RCT quality assessment tools, and main conclusion. The disagreement between the two researchers was resolved through discussion.

2.5. Quality Assessment for Inclusion in MAs

Two researchers (BQ-Y and D-W) independently assessed the methodological and evidence quality of the included SRs/MAs.

2.5.1. Estimate of Methodological Quality

The methodological quality of the included SRs/MAs was assessed by the Assessment System for Evaluating Methodological Quality 2 (AMSTAR-2) [23]. Seven (2, 4, 7, 9, 11, 13, and 15) of the 16 items in the tool were critical areas.

2.5.2. Estimate of Risk of Bias

The Risk of Bias In Systematic Review (ROBIS) [24] scale was used in this overview to evaluate the risk of bias of the inclusion of SRs/MAs. The scale was divided into three stages to assess the overall risk of bias in the inclusion of SRs/MAs.

2.5.3. Estimate of Reporting Quality

The quality of each SR/MA report was evaluated by the list of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) [25], which consisted of 27 items focusing on reporting methods and results that were incorporated into SRs/MAs.

2.5.4. Assessment of Quality of Evidence

The quality of evidence for each SR/MA outcome was evaluated by The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) [26], and five aspects will lead to the degradation of evidence quality, including limitations, inconsistencies, indirectness, imprecision, and publication bias. Evidence with less than one degrading factor (including one) was rated as high-quality evidence, while evidence with two degrading factors was rated as moderate quality, three degrading factors as low quality, and more than three (including three) degrading factors as very low quality.

3. Results

3.1. Results on Literature Search and Selection

Through our search strategy, a total of 146 articles were identified. After removing 43 duplicate articles, the researchers screened the remaining 103 articles by reading titles and abstracts. Subsequently, the 12 articles were obtained. After reading the full text, it was found that two articles were not about SRs/MAs in RCTs, and two SRs/MAs were not about people with cognitive impairment. Finally, a total of 8 SRs/MAs [2734] were finally included in this overview. The process of study selection is shown in Figure 1.

3.2. Description of the Included SRs/MAs

The characteristics included in the overview are shown in Table 2. These SRs/MAs were all published between 2017 and 2021, 5 [2731] of which were in English, and the remaining 3 [3234] were in Chinese, and all were written by Chinese authors. The number of RCTs was between 3 and 19, and the sample size was between 378 and 1,970. In 5 SRs/MAs [2731], the intervention method for the control group was CT or daily life activities, while that for the experimental group was TC or TC combined with the intervention methods for the control group. In 3 SRs/MAs [3234], the intervention method for the control group was CT or daily life activities, while that for the experimental group was TC exercise. In terms of quality evaluation scales, 6 SRs/MAs [27, 29, 30, 3234] used the Cochrane risk of bias standard, and 2 SRs/MAs [28, 31] used the Physiotherapy Evidence Database scale.

3.3. Results of the Methodological Quality

By using AMSTAR-2 to assess the methodological quality, all SRs/MAs were considered to be of very low quality because more than one key item was missing from the included SRs/MAs. The restrictions came from the following items: Item 2 (only 2 SRs/MAs [29, 30] have registered protocol), Item 7 (the list of excluded studies was not mentioned by any SR/MA), Item 10 (none reported the funding of RCTs included in SRs/MAs), and Item 15 (only one SR/MA [31] conducted publication bias assessment or discussed their impact on SR/MA). The AMSTAR-2 assessment breakdown for each SR/MA is shown in Table 3.

3.4. Risk of Bias of the Included SRs/MAs

By means of ROBIS, we evaluated the relevance of Phase 1 of the research theme, and all SRs/MAs were rated as low risk of bias. In Phase 2, Domain 1, all SRs/MAs were rated as low risk of bias. In Domain 2, 5 SRs/MAs [27, 28, 30, 31, 34] were rated as low risk. In Domain 3, 6 SRs/MAs [27, 28, 3134] of which were rated as low risk of bias, and none of one SR/MA was rated as low risk of bias in Domain 4. In Phase 3, all SRs/MAs were rated as low risk of bias. The included ROBIS evaluation details of SRs/MAs are shown in Table 4.

3.5. Report Quality of the Included SRs/MAs

Table 5 lists the details of the PRISMA checklist for each SR/MA. Although the title, abstract, introduction, and discussion were reported in full, some reporting flaws were still found in other sections. In the methods section, Item 7 (search strategy), Item 14 (reporting bias assessment), and Item 15 (certainty assessment) were insufficiently reported (<50%). In the results section, Item 16b (study selection), Item 20d (results of syntheses), Item 21 (reporting biases), and Item 22 (certainty of evidence) were reported as less than 50%. In addition to this, the Item 24 a, b, c (registration and protocol) reports for the included SRs/MAs were missing.

3.6. Evidence Quality of the Included SRs/MAs

The 42 outcomes included in the 8 SRs/MAs were assessed using the GRADE system. In the evaluation results based on the outcome indicators, 1 SR/MA was rated high, 8 moderate, 19 low, and 14 very low in terms of the quality of evidence. Publication bias (n = 36) was the most common downgrading factor, followed by imprecision (n = 24), inconsistency (n = 21), risk of bias (n = 12), and indirectness (n = 0) (Table 6).

3.7. Summary Results of the Included Studies

The result indicators extracted from the included studies are listed in Table 6.

3.7.1. Global Cognitive Function

All the included SRs/MAs reported the effect of TC on the overall cognitive function of the included population, and the results of 7 SRs/MAs [2733] indicated that TC could significantly improve the overall cognitive function of the cognitively impaired population.

3.7.2. Memory and Learning

7 SRs/MAs [2834] reported the effect of TC on memory and learning, and the results of 6 SRs/MAs [2832, 34] indicated that TC could significantly improve the memory and learning performance in people with cognitive impairment.

3.7.3. Visuospatial Ability

4 SRs/MAs [28, 30, 31, 34] reported the effect of TC on visuospatial ability of which 3 SRs/MAs [28, 30, 34] reported that TC could significantly improve the visuospatial ability of patients with cognitive impairment.

3.7.4. Executive Function

5 SRs/MAs [27, 2931, 34] reported the effect of TC on executive function of which 3 SRs/MAs [27, 30, 31] reported that TC could significantly improve the executive function of patients with cognitive impairment.

3.7.5. Verbal Fluency

3 SRs/MAs [28, 30, 34] reported the effect of TC on verbal fluency of which 2 SRs/MAs [28, 34] reported that TC could significantly improve the verbal fluency of patients with cognitive impairment.

3.7.6. Psychological Evaluation

3 SRs/MAs [30, 32, 34] reported on psychological assessments, and only 1 SR/MA [32] showed that TC could improve the mental activity of patients with cognitive impairment.

3.7.7. Other Outcome Indicators

A SR/MA [28] reported that TC can significantly improve mental speed and attention and ideas, abstraction, figural creations, and mental flexibility in patients with cognitive impairment. A separate SR/MA [30] reported that TC could improve the physical activity and attention [31] of patients.

3.7.8. Adverse Reactions

The narrative descriptions in 5 SRs/MAs [2731] indicated that TC was a safe treatment modality.

4. Discussion

Currently, drug treatments have limited effectiveness in improving cognition or slowing disease progression [35]. Physical activity is a well-studied behavioral intervention for cognitive function [36], and TC may be a good one. A literature search revealed that although several SRs/MAs on the impact of TC on cognitive impairment have been published, the quality of these publications has not been assessed. Therefore, we carried out this overview to evaluate the multiple SRs/MAs that meet the inclusion criteria in a bid to provide clinicians with higher-quality evidence.

4.1. Summary of the Main Findings

This is the first overview of SRs/MAs on the effects of TC on cognitive impairment, including 8 SRs/MAs on TC for cognitive impairment, published between 2011 and 2021, and 7 of the SRs/MAs (7/8, 87.5%) were published after 2020. This may indicate that TC, as a complementary and alternative therapy for cognitive impairment, has drawn increasing attention from people.

As indicated by the assessment for method quality, report quality, risk of bias, and evidence quality, the included 8 SRs/MAs were not satisfactory. In AMSTAR-2, all the included SRs/MAs are considered to be of very low quality, and the main defects are pointed out as follows: (1) only two SRs/MAs [29, 30] were registered with the study protocol, which may affect its standardization and sophistication, and increase the possibility of selective reporting bias; (2) none of the SR/MA provided a list of excluded literature, which may reduce the transparency of the SRs/MAs and affect the credibility of the results; (3) only one SR/MA [31] assessed publication bias in the included RCTs, which would reduce confidence in the results. In addition, this was also related to the insufficient number of RCTs included in the relevant outcome measures; (4) in addition, no SR/MA reporting was included in the RCT funding resources, which may increase bias in clinical trials since the results of corporate-funded studies may be biased in favor of the funder. All of the above methodological flaws limit the accuracy of SRs/MAs. In the ROBIS assessment, insufficient assessment of publication bias was the main reason for the high risk of final results, which was consistent with the AMSTAR-2 scale. Moreover, the absence of sensitivity analysis was also an important factor leading to high risk of bias, which would affect the stability of the SRs/MAs results. Regarding the results of the PRISMA checklist, lack of protocol registration and publication bias in SRs/MAs was the main cause of underreporting, as shown in AMSTAR-2. However, none of the SRs/MAs provided comprehensive search strategies, which reduced the reproducibility and credibility of the study.

For GRADE, publication bias was the most common downgrading factor included in SRs/MAs. Insufficient assessment of publication bias in the outcome measures was the main downgrading factor, which was also related to the inadequate number of RCTs included in the relevant outcome measures. In addition, the insufficient study population included in a single effect size was also an important reason for the decline in the quality of the evidence. Although almost all SRs/MAs showed that TC had a positive effect on cognitive function in patients with cognitive impairment, the conclusions of SRs/MAs may deviate from the real results due to the inadequate methodological and evidence quality of the included studies. Caution should be exercised in recommending TC as a complementary intervention for cognitive impairment.

4.2. Implications for Future Study

Our overview may have some reference value for future research. Authors should pay attention to the registration of research protocols before proceeding with SRs/MAs to ensure the rigor of their procedures. In terms of literature search and selection, information on excluded literature and complete search strategy for all databases should be listed and elaborated on to ensure transparency. In the quantitative calculation of effect size, care should be taken to exclude the results of a single study one by one to ensure the stability of the results. In addition, a complete assessment of publication bias would also improve the accuracy of the meta-analysis results. TC is not only easy to learn and practice but also has many advantages in physiology and psychology, and it has clinical significance for further research. Although TC originated from traditional Chinese medicine theory, the duration, frequency, and mode of TC movement vary greatly in different studies. Therefore, we propose to use a standardized TC training program, including fixed duration, frequency, and pattern, to better study the impact of TC on cognitive performance. In addition, the assessment of cognitive function should identify areas of cognition specifically improved by TC in patients with cognitive impairment, as indicated by as physiological outcomes, such as circulating biochemical markers and neuroimaging structure and function. With the evolution of evidence-based medicine, it is hoped that researchers will continue to promote the standardization of relevant individual RCTs in the future. A well-designed, rigorously implemented, and complete reporting RCT with complete reporting can minimize or avoid bias. It is the gold standard for evaluating interventions [37].

4.3. Strength and Limitations

Our overview is the first to use AMSTAR-2, ROBIS, PRISMA, and GRADE to evaluate SRs/MAs regarding the impact of TC on cognitive impairment. Based on the current results, TC may be an effective adjunctive replacement therapy for cognitive impairment. Furthermore, the evaluation process revealed clear limitations of the current relevant SRs/MAs and RCTs, which may help guide high-quality clinical studies in the future. However, this overview has certain limitations because of the subjectivity of the assessment. Although our assessments were reviewed by two independent assessors, different assessors may have their own judgment on each factor, so the results may vary.

5. Conclusion

Based on current evidence, TC appears to have a positive effect on cognitive impairment with a high safety profile. However, the low quality of the SRs/MAs supporting these results is concerning, and we should therefore approach this conclusion with caution. In the future, RCTs with more stringent TC interventions for cognitive impairment should be performed. At the same time, more rigorous, standardized, and comprehensive SRs/MAs in related fields are needed to provide stronger evidence.

Data Availability

The datasets analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Disclosure

Hongshuo Shi and Chengda Dong are the co-first authors.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Authors’ Contributions

SHS, YTT, and SGM participated in the research design. SHS, CLJ, LWW, CH, XMY, and DCD conducted a literature search and screened data extraction. SHS and DCD analyzed the data, did a statistical analysis, and wrote the manuscript. DCD, SGM, and SHS participated in the correction of the manuscript. All authors reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final version of the manuscript.

Acknowledgments

This project was funded by the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (ZR2020MH349).