Objective. This systematic review was able to evaluate the clinical evidence of JSBC in the randomized controlled trial (RCT) of diabetic nephropathy. Methods. The Chinese and English literatures published in PubMed, Cochrane Library, VIP, Wanfang Data, CNKI, and CBM before July 30, 2019, were retrieved. This study includes only randomized controlled trials of treatments related to diabetic nephropathy. We assessed the methodological quality of the subjects involved according to the assessment criteria in 5.3.3 of the Cochrane Assessment Manual. RevMan 3.5.5 software was used to analyze the relevant data, meta-analysis, and inverted funnel analysis chart. Results. This study included 26 RCTs, including 4676 patients in total (2342 cases in the experimental group and 2334 cases in the control group). The results of 8 randomized controlled trials showed that urinary microprotein excretion rate (UAER) significantly decreased (
P
<
0.0001
) before and after treatment of diabetic nephropathy. Conclusion. The available clinical evidence has suggested that JSBC combined with western drugs is differentially effective in the treatment of diabetic nephropathy. The combination of JSBC with western medicine is more effective. However, due to the small amount and low quality of the included literatures, the current evidence is not certain to be fully clinically applicable.