Skip to main content
Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

Study Design

Type
Meta-Analysis
Population
adult RA patients diagnosed according to American College of Rheumatology or European League Against Rheumatism criteria
Methods
Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials comparing curcumin in any formulation with placebo or standard care; searches from inception to August 26, 2025 in PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Embase

Background

Curcumin has been proposed as a potential adjunctive anti-inflammatory therapeutic option in rheumatoid arthritis (RA); however, the evidence regarding its clinical efficacy remains inconsistent. This meta-analysis aimed to evaluate whether curcumin supplementation improves disease activity and systemic inflammatory parameters in patients with RA.

Methods

Following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses criteria, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and Embase were searched from inception to August 26, 2025. Eligible randomized controlled trials included adult RA patients diagnosed according to American College of Rheumatology or European League Against Rheumatism criteria and compared curcumin in any formulation with placebo or standard care. Two independent reviewers conducted study selection, data extraction, and methodological quality assessment using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tool. Pooled analyses were conducted using Review Manager, version 5.4 and Stata, version 18, with fixed-effect or random-effects models based on heterogeneity.

Results

Seven randomized controlled trials were included. Curcumin significantly reduced Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (weighted mean difference [WMD] -1.47; 95% confidence interval [CI] -1.68 to -1.26), rheumatoid factor (WMD -24.15; 95% CI -36.47 to -11.83), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (WMD -31.26; 95% CI -58.59 to -3.93), and C-reactive protein (WMD -0.93; 95% CI -1.33 to -0.53). Substantial heterogeneity was observed; nevertheless, leave-one-out sensitivity analyses confirmed stability of pooled estimates, and Egger tests revealed no significant publication bias.

Conclusion

Curcumin supplementation was associated with statistically and clinically relevant improvements in disease activity and systemic inflammatory markers in RA. These findings support curcumin as a promising adjunctive therapeutic strategy, though larger, exposure-verified trials with extended follow-up remain required to validate long-term treatment effects and inform clinical implementation.

Research Insights

Back to top