Monday, January 12, 2015

NIH Pathways to Prevention: Advancing the Research on ME/CFS: Day 1, Afternoon Sessions

The afternoon sessions of Day 1 of the P2P workshop revolved around two key questions the first of which asked how innovative research could be fostered to help develop treatment for patients, and the second of which asked what research could tell us about the presentation and diagnosis of ME/CFS in the clinic.

What was striking about the presentations is that none of them addressed those two key questions. Most of the speakers rambled quite a bit on topics which were only marginally related, rendering whatever point they were trying to make difficult to identify. In addition, it was clear that all of the speakers who were supposed to address the first question (Buchwald, Clauw and Afari) had an agenda, which was to promote the MAPP program. But, as a couple of members of the audience pointed out, proposing a network of coordinated centers is useless if there is no funding. (In fact, as Jenny Spotila observed, a similar proposal had been rejected by the NIH,) Even more confusing was the fact that two of the ME/CFS "experts" on this panel appeared to have little working knowledge of the illness.

The question and answer sessions revealed the weaknesses in both knowledge and expertise in some of the speakers. Jenny Spotila's cogent observation (addressed to Dr. Smith) that retiring the Oxford definition should also lead to retiring studies using the Oxford definition (i.e. PACE) was met with an answer so incoherent as to make it nearly incomprehensible. Dr. Friedman responded to the same question with the statement that "we need an empirical definition based on something as simple as symptom frequencies. Have we reached that point? No, we haven't." Apparently, Dr. Friedman did not listen to Leonard Jason's talk presented earlier that day in which Jason described an algorithm his group had devised which could identify patients with 90% accuracy based on the frequency of 15 symptoms. (Jason isn't the only one to have developed a highly sensitive and specific definition, Linder et al, also developed a highly accurate definition in 2002 using a similar model. Somewhat ironically, this study appeared in the AHRQ systematic review.)

Some of the gaffes during the Q&A were almost laughable. Dr. Kogelnik claimed that there was no ICD code for chronic fatigue syndrome, or if there was it wasn't used in clinical practice. (There is, and it is.) He also put his foot in his mouth when he claimed that his study on Valcyte was the first controlled clinical trial. (Suzanne Vernon called him out on that rather far-fetched claim.) Dr. Buchwald was prone to bouts of exaggeration. She claimed that over a two-year period her group published "dozens and dozens and dozens" of papers. (I was able to find a total of 89 papers naming Dr. Buchwald or her group as authors over a period of 26 years, many of which were reiterations of the same findings.) Both Dr. Buchwald and Dr. Clauw said they were "agnostic" about big data (whatever that is supposed to mean) immediately after giving presentations touting the benefits of gathering of large quantities of data. (To further add to the linguistic confusion, Dr. Afari said she wasn't "agnostic" meaning that she was "agnostic." ? ) Dr. Clauw claimed to have "invented" a device to measure pressure pain that was used in tactile research 40 years ago (when Clauw was in grade school). And so on.

That being said, some of the presentations were worth listening to. No, I take that back. Only one. Dr. Snell's discussion on the fundamental flaw of all CBT and GET studies had merit, but it probably went over the heads of the P2P panel. Unfortunately, in his discussion of leading questions (which was interesting but did not address the key question) he missed a golden opportunity to discount the PACE trial, not simply on its underlying assumptions, but on its complete lack of scientific rigor (e.g. changing outcome parameters half way through the trial in order to manufacture results consistent with their hypothesis. That alone should have prevented it from being published in any journal anywhere).
_______________________________________

First published on ProHealth.

By Erica Verrillo

On December 9 and 10, 2014, the Pathways to Prevention (P2P) workshop was held on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland. The workshop was sponsored by the Office of Research on Women’s Health (ORWH), which is the division of the NIH responsible for ME/CFS. The purpose of the workshop was to identify gaps in ME/CFS research, and to address key questions about incidence, prevalence, diagnosis and subtyping.

The afternoon sessions on December 9 focused on the unique challenges of ME/CFS research, and how innovative research can be fostered to enhance treatment for people with ME/CFS. Each presentation lasted approximately 20 minutes. At the end of the two afternoon sessions there were question and answer periods in which P2P panel members and the audience could address questions to the speakers.

The draft report of the meeting is available HERE. Members of the public can make comments, which will then be incorporated into the report, until January 16, 2015.

You can read the program book HERE.

You can read the meeting agenda HERE.

You can watch the December 9 presentations HERE.

You can read information about panel members HERE.

You can submit comments HERE. (Deadline is January 16, 2015.)

You can read a summary of the Day 1 morning presentations HERE.


NIH Pathways to Prevention: Advancing the Research on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Day 1, Afternoon)
Air date: Tuesday, December 09, 2014, 8:30:00 AM (EST)
Runtime: 06:38:17 VIDEO

Session 2: Given the unique challenges to ME/CFS, how can we foster innovative research to enhance the development of treatments for patients?

Dedra Buchwald, M.D. - Incorporating Multiple Study 
Designs Into ME/CFS Research

(20 minutes) (begins 3:09:49)
Professor of Epidemiology and General Internal Medicine
Center for Clinical and Epidemiological Research
University of Washington School of Public Health

Dr. Buchwald began by thanking Dr. Green, with whom she has had a long association. She then stated that she was going to use the term "CFS," rather than CFS/ME because it was “easier.”

Dr. Buchwald presented the fundamental question facing researchers as “What is fatigue, and how do we measure it?” In addition, where in the life cycle of fatigue are we taking a particular measurement, and what influences it? For example, there is fatigue from exertion, but there is also anticipatory fatigue. “If you are going to do a 20-mile run, you might have anticipatory fatigue.” She stressed that we have to keep in mind that fatigue is not sleepiness, which is the sine qua non of sleep disorders.

There are quite a few instruments to measure the perception of fatigue, some of which are better than others. Some of the instruments, for example, confound fatigue with pain, or with a particular behavior. Others only measure one dimension of fatigue, such as physical behavior, or physical activity. Of the many aspects of fatigue that can be measured there are physical measurements of fatigue, such as hormone levels or cytokines; mood, coping; and beliefs through psychometric testing, and subjective as well as objective measures. For example, a questionnaire measures self-reported physical impairment, whereas as a VO2Max test is objective.

Instruments can have a profound effect on the design of a study, as well as its outcome. For example, Dr. Buchwald cited a twin sleep study in which one twin had CFS and the other was healthy. According to the measurements used, the quality of sleep was essentially the same. But the twin with CFS had a different view about how he/she slept. The ill twin reported waking unrefreshed, and feeling as if he/she did not sleep well. “In our view, we think that there is a CNS mechanism that is unhinging perception from the actual behavior,” said Buchwald. In other words, people with CFS have an altered relationship between perception and behavior.

Another important measurement is the context in which fatigue occurs. Buchwald recalled one patient who had been sick for about a decade and then had a very sudden recovery. “They were telling me, I just can't do things like I used to. And I had to say, well, hey, you're ten years older.” [Editor's comment: Many ME/CFS patients have reported that uninformed doctors attribute their waning ability to perform tasks to aging.]

Another thing to consider in designing a study is the impact and severity of the illness. It's important to distinguish functional capacity from impairment and disability. Functional status is subjective, and is measured through questionnaires like the SF-36. Impairment is a physical limitation that alters a lifestyle. Disability is when an impairment results in an inability to perform specific functions. A person may be disabled in one area but not in others. For example, a person may be able to function at home but not hold a job.

Where in the life cycle of chronic fatigue syndrome do you measure fatigue? As you move from acute to chronic fatigue there are many things that may be happening simultaneously such as comorbidities, like fibromyalgia, or psychological dysfunction. Treatment is more difficult when there are overlapping conditions and there is a greater risk for psychiatric comorbidity.

What are you treating? Are you treating the syndrome, or the symptoms? In Clauw's study on milnacipran for treating fibromyalgia, the symptom of pain decreased with a twice a day dose, but overall wellbeing was the same. So, while the symptom diminished, the overall syndrome remained the same.

Another consideration in study design is the selection of control groups, which are hard to select because there is no biomarker for CFS. In addition, different control groups provide different answers, depending on whether they are sedentary, healthy, or have other illnesses. The advantage of twin studies is that the genetic factors are the same, so the control group is clearly defined. And for the most part you are also controlling for childhood exposures and family environment. To do a classical twin study, you need hundreds or thousands of pairs of twins. A second design in the co-twin study. Co-twin control studies use one twin in which one twin has a condition and the other doesn't. (This was the design of Buchwald's sleep study.) Co-twin control studies have the advantage of being able to focus on the contribution of a particular exposure in order to measure how it may be linked to a condition.

Dr. Buchwald recommended studying people who have recovered. “What is it above them that allowed them to recover?” she asked. Along these lines, we can look at functional or stimulus studies, do cognitive debriefing, or mechanistic studies looking at neurotransmitters. Dr. Buchwald's final recommendation was to “create a network of centers focused on CFS to all work together on issues we identify as critical.”

____________________

Daniel J. Clauw, M.D. - Maximizing Approaches and Results From the Study of Other Illnesses
and Complex Chronic Conditions

(20 minutes) (begins at 3:31:17) [sound is poor at the beginning]
Professor of Anesthesiology, Medicine, and Psychiatry, University of Michigan Medical School
Director Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center, University of Michigan Medical Center

Dr. Clauw began by pointing out that having FDA-approved drugs for fibromyalgia has established the legitimacy of the illness. He believes that the same thing could happen for chronic fatigue syndrome, but it will require an integrated effort to understand the underlying mechanism of the illness, as well as identifying subsets of patients who might require different treatments.

The focus of Dr. Clauw's presentation was on the MAPP ( Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Chronic Pelvic Pain ) network, which is a research program launched by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The MAPP Network includes researchers with clinical, epidemiological, and basic research expertise, all working collaboratively to identify the cause and underlying mechanisms of chronic pelvic pain, and to establish definitions. The MAPP Research Network is comprised of six Discovery Sites that conduct the research studies and two Core Sites that coordinate data collection, analyze tissue samples, and provide technical support. Each site receives about one million dollars a year in funding.

Dr. Clauw pointed out that chronic pelvic pain syndromes such as interstitial cystitis share a lot of symptoms with CFS, ME, and fibromyalgia. While definitions are important, the MAPP network researchers decided to cast a broad net in order to better identify subsets of patients. Controls consisted of healthy people, as well as those with overlapping conditions, such as chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia.

Early findings of the MAPP indicate that symptom duration has little impact on symptom severity. (That is, symptoms do not become more severe over time.) Another finding is that people with chronic pelvic pain conditions do not experience chronic pain elsewhere, which is quite different from FM and CFS patients. No salient psychosocial factors were involved in chronic pelvic pain patients. There is no psychiatric “smoking gun” or predictor of symptoms. (As an aside, Dr. Clauw commented that psychosocial factors have been “over studied” in CFS/ME, because often investigators have “nothing else to hang their hat on.”)

Over the course of a year, roughly a quarter of the patients demonstrated spontaneous improvement of symptoms. Roughly the same amount experienced a worsening of symptoms. Treatment trials were not begun until a year's worth of data had been collected, because patients tend to enter trials when they are the sickest, which skews final results (regression to the mean).

Some of the problems they encountered were that patients had different definitions of “flares,” which could last from minutes to days, and that pain thresholds vary widely in individuals. However, they did discover that the patients with the lowest pain thresholds tended to do worse over time. Neuroimaging techniques were extensively used, and not only did the patients with chronic pelvic pain differ from controls, but men and women differed from each other.

The MAPP group has conducted a number of promising studies looking at proteomics, the microbiome, and other areas, 15 of which correlate with symptoms, and thus may produce a biomarker.

In summary, experimental and neuroimaging studies have provided objective and reproducible characteristics which can distinguish CPP patients from controls. There are two distinct phenotypes, those with localized pain, and those with centralized pain (throughout the body), and these correlate with symptoms over time. Imaging studies can be used to assess the efficacy of a treatment.

Dr. Clauw suggested that the MAPP program would be a “wonderful way to study CFS/ME,” and could be used as a blueprint for studying chronic fatigue syndrome.
___________________

Niloofar Afari, Ph.D. - Using Research on Co-Morbidities 
to Understand ME/CFS
(20 minutes) (begins at 3:50:34)
Associate Professor, University of California, San Diego Healthcare System; Director of Clinical Research, Veterans Affairs (VA) Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health; Division Co-Director, Mental Health Integrative and Consultative Services, VA San Diego Healthcare System

Dr. Afari proposed that comorbidity research could move the field forward in terms of understanding, diagnosing and treating CFS, because there are many different co-occurring conditions. many of which not only share symptoms, but share immunological and other test results. Research on patients with and without comorbidities may help shed light on how to treat subgroups, as well as provide valuable clues as to the underlying mechanisms of the illness.

Dr. Afari observed that while patients with CFS are usually seen by internists, patients with overlapping conditions are seen by a variety of specialists. She pointed out that physicians and researchers bring their own training and expertise to bear on how these conditions are studied. For example, psychology has played a significant role for many of these conditions, as has anesthesiology. What Dr. Afari recommended was an increase in collaborative effort, which had, she said, not been sufficient to move the field of CFS forward.

Focusing on comorbidities may help reveal shared physiological pathways, shared risk and protective factors, as well as identify factors that can affect the course of the illness and potential interventions. Dr. Afari acknowledged that the study of comorbidities was not her own idea, but was pioneered by Helena Kraemer, who studied the relationship between psychiatric and physiological comorbidities.

Most studies on comorbidities have centered on epidemiological comorbidities, in which people with one condition are more likely to develop a second. For example, women with breast cancer are more likely to develop depression that women without breast cancer. Dr. Afari asked the question: “Why are these conditions happening together?”

It is well known that CFS occurs with fibromyalgia. It is also known that central sensitization of pain is a key factor in fibromyalgia pain. Dr. Afari proposed that putting these two things together and studying the role of central sensitization in CFS could move us forward in understanding the pathophysiology of CFS.

Clinical comorbidities may also help with developing interventions. Dr. Afari suggested that treatment for one condition could lead to treatment for CFS. For example, a study showed that fatigue self-management was useful for MS, therefore fatigue self-management might be useful for CFS. [Editor's comment: Clinical studies of self-management in ME/CFS have not shown it to be particularly effective (Meeus, 2010).] In another example, reclined exercise is helpful for POTS. “So,” she asked, “Could it be that reclined exercise could be a treatment for ME/CFS?”

Those with comorbidities may have a different course, prognosis, and require different treatment. Future research, she concluded, should be based on MAPP-style collaborations, clinical trials that address comorbidities and twin studies to identify genetic and environmental contributing factors. [Editor's comment: Most of the comorbidities mentioned in this talk were either somatic “functional” disorders or psychiatric.]


Question and Answer Session (begins at 4:12:40)

[No questions from the panel]

Q: Wilhemina Jenkins, parent of patient: I was here 20 years ago at NIH, talking about this illness. I'm back today to make sure the panel understands about this illness, and to make sure that 20 years from now my daughter will not be here asking the same questions that we have been asking for the past 20 years. My daughter came down with this illness at the age of 14. My concern when we're talking about innovative research is that we move away from the idea that this is a fatiguing illness. We tend to have this under an umbrella of fatigue because of the name, and because of the history. You heard this morning how the various and sundry definitions, some of which are based solely on fatigue, have resulted in some very confusing conclusions about this illness. But from the day I walked into my first support group meeting, the major element that people talked about was not fatigue but post-exertional malaise. All illnesses deal with fatigue, but post-exertional malaise is the important issue and along with that neuro-cognitive disorders. I hope that there's a way to get more patient input so you can see what's important to patients. Post-exertional malaise is the fundamental key element in this illness and it's not included in a number of definitions that have been used in the report the panel has received. If we do not restrict our research to the illness that we know, the one that involves post-exertional malaise, unrefreshing sleep and neuro-cognitive problems, I am afraid we will be looking at the wrong illness for another 20 years. The first thing we have to do is make sure we are looking at the right population. Contradictory research results are the result of contradictory patients.

A: Dr. Clauw: I don't want to weigh in on post-exertional malaise but I do think it is important to tell you that in the MAPP we start with focus groups of patients. If you don't do that what you're talking about will happen. We didn't know that cognitive problems were part of fibromyalgia until we did the first cognitive interviews 12 or 13 years ago. They had coined the term “fibrofog” in advance of any of us knowing about it or thinking that it was an important domain. Stiffness is another symptom. When I was trained as a rheumatologist we were trained that stiffness was a marker for an inflammatory disease, but we don't think of fibromyalgia as being an inflammatory disease. Contemporary networks should begin with qualitative research and with focus groups, asking patients about what bothers them.
___________________

Q: Jennifer Spotila, patient and advocate (4:18:09): I was glad to hear you talk about the MAPP initiative today, but I'll note that we discussed it at a CFSAC meeting three years ago. NIH declined to fund an initiative like that for this disease. The other thing I want to bring to the panel's attention is a number of innovative research concepts that we have not yet discussed: big data, systems networking analysis, what we can learn from neurological diseases, autoimmune diseases, and even anti-antibody diseases, like anti-NMDA encephalitis. We've discussed none of that today, and yet there are so many promising results littering the scientific landscape that need investigation. So I would urge the panel to think about innovative solutions truly, not covering something we discussed three years ago. NIH said no then, and I'll note that two months ago NIH said no to a big data initiative for ME/CFS. And they said no to a recommendation for an RFA [request for application – for a grant] two months ago. I urge you to look at the reasoning NIH offered for why they declined those recommendations.
___________________

Q. Dr. Green (4:20:00): What has been left on the table that could inform the science that could lead to better treatments and improved wellbeing for people with this disease?

A: Dr. Buchwald: I would go back to the recommendation of creating a network. Because you've got to understand the mechanisms before you understand what treatments might work the best. I guess I'm a little agnostic about big data because in big data you're going to end up with administrative data or self-reported data, and I think you actually have to examine patients, you have to lay your hands on patients, you have to hear their stories. Big data isn't going to give us the answer until we have done the necessary mechanistic and treatment studies that will allow us to correctly classify patients in the big data.

A: Dr. Clauw: I would agree. I'm less than agnostic about big data. I'm unexcited about big data, because I think that one of the problems with using big data is that most people with CFS … I don't know if there's a formal diagnostic code for it. And if there is, it's never used in clinical practice. [Editor's comment: The 2014 ICD-9-CM Diagnosis Code for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is 780.71. It is used in clinical practice.] So, it would really be hard to use big data in the classic sense that it is with classic diagnoses where people are making the diagnosis in clinical practice with some level of accuracy. I don't think that exists now. You brought up a lot of really good ideas, I'm just not sure that big data is one of them.

A: Dr. Afari: I completely agree. I'm also not agnostic on big data. There are so many different factors contributing to a physician using an ICD-9 code, whatever data we get from that is not going to be as useful I don't think.

Dr. Green: But it does bring up the potential for registries.

A: Dr. Clauw: I think registries would be helpful. One of the nice things about MAPP is that for every patient that comes in … and you may not agree with what criteria for CFS we use … but we categorize people for all these comorbidities. We know if they have vulvadynia, we know if they have headache, we know if they have CFS, and so as these networks grow where these conditions are being studied, like the network that is focused on temperomandubular joint disorder and the MAPP, you're starting to get bigger and bigger data sets, and registry-type data, where you actually do know … but the problem is those people were not brought in with chronic fatigue syndrome as their primary diagnosis, they were brought in with interstitial cystitis, and they had that as a comorbidity. Mining that material for people who have CFS would not be nearly as helpful as setting up a network on people who have that as a primary diagnosis. But as the networks get bigger, and you can share data, there really is strength in numbers.
___________________

Q: Dr. Klimas, researcher (4:25:37): With the complexities of the many case definitions, the lack of post-exertional relapse in many of those case definitions, we're never going to have a big umbrella biomarker thing that describes everybody because the way we describe the illness is too loosey goosey. But we do have very nice studies that correlate biology to evidence, to severity, to symptom complexes. The evidence is there. And others, not just this group, have done reviews, and said it's real and useful. So we need to stop saying big things that we said 20 years ago, like “There's no biomarkers,” or “It's so heterogeneous we just can't get there.” It's not that way. We really have to work at defining clearly who we are talking about, who's in the group, and why we are looking at that group with this set of methods. And that's a very doable and rational design. So I would ask the panel and the speakers how we might be able to help get behind and press the concept of using an NIH strategy to develop consortia to look at this. And I am also going to say that the speaker who was talking about big data [Jenny Spotila], she wasn't talking about big data the way you were. You are thinking about mining ICD-9 codes, Dan [Clauw] has got big data, and it's really more about the computational approach.

A: Dr. Clauw: I don't know that I could any more strongly endorse a MAPP-type thing. One thing I will say is that whatever the NIH is spending now on CFS/ME, if that was all put towards a network ... I would actually say that right now, spending money on R01s, or R21s, is a waste of money. You can't study these complicated illnesses with a grant that gives you $150,000 a year for three years because you can only look at a tiny element of that person, you can only look at a tiny number of participants, and you can only look at one particular domain. So, it may be that the NIH is already an aggregate with the different R series spending millions of dollars a year, and it might be somewhat unprecedented for the NIH to say we're not going to give money for the R series, but instead we are going to give money to centers, but if NIH did this, this would be a disease they should contemplate doing it in.

A: Dr. Buchwald: They did have center grants for two rounds. We got all of our twin work funded, and we never could have done that work with just R01s. As Dan said, in those studies we and others looked at multiple levels of disease and multiple kinds of psychological, sleep studies, viralogic studies, immune studies, and so on. So I totally agree. You've got a complicated, multi-level disease, you need a multi-level approach to try and understand it.

Dr. Klimas, researcher: Just to object for a moment. R01s and R21s have a place. I think you're suggesting that there's one pie, and we're going to move it from here to here, instead of saying “Oh my God, there's not enough money in the pot.” There's not enough money in the current pot to create a single center. There's not enough money currently in NIH-funded work to do any serious, comprehensive, large-end study. You can't just reallocate it over to there. New money will have to be found. That's terribly important. [Applause]
__________________

Q: Mary Dimmock, parent of patient: It may not have been your intention, and perhaps I am not interpreting it correctly, but I came away thinking that you are proposing a MAPP-style initiative that would look at overlaps with things like interstitial cystitis, fibromyalgia, chronic back pain, etc. The most exciting research that's going on in this field today is on energy production, and on immunological studies. It's on overlaps with autoimmune diseases. It's on antiviral treatments and virology. And to not study the overlaps with those conditions is not leading us where we need to go at this point in time. I know none of you are allowed to speak about treatments, but I am. My son is on rituximab, and I spoke with someone here today who is on an antiviral, and it's made a difference in their lives. None of the other treatments, the psychological treatments, CBT, GET are cutting it. So unless the treatment and research recommendations are really looking at innovative areas that need to be investigated for this disease, we're not going to make any progress. We're not going to make progress by being lumped in with all these different conditions that you talked about. I think that it's critically important for the panel to understand what the doctors who actually treat the disease are saying about it. You've gotten some information from AHRQ evidence review which lumped all these disparate definitions together, and came up with conclusions based on those. Those are not the way patients are being treated today. And finally, Lisa Petrison has put together a fantastic summary of all the research that's been done in this area that I would recommend the panel look at, as well as the IACFS/ME Primer. I will give these to the panel later. [Applause]

A: Dr. Clauw: Let me just clarify. If the NIH were to set up a MAPP-like network for ME/CFS, they should be pursuing all of those areas. When we started studying interstitial cystitis, we didn't start with what was promising in fibromyalgia and then apply that to interstitial cystitis. We started with what are the most promising area for interstitial cystitis and I would hope that the same thing would be done for CFS, that it wouldn't just borrow from what is found in fibromyalgia and irritable bowel, or these other diseases, it would really look at all the areas that you talked about.
____________________

Q: Dr. Jason (4: 33:22): I want to support what the panel and Nancy have mentioned about the importance of this type of network. I think it would absolutely revolutionize the type of work that's being done. But the question I'd like to ask the panel members is the secondary suggestion that R01s and R21s, individual investigators, might not be as beneficial. The two questions I'd like them to help us think through is right now there is a limited number of investigators, and from what I understand, fewer applications come in to the CFS special emphasis panel. The younger investigators often don't apply with the frequency in other disease areas. So, the question is, if we didn't have R01s, or R21s or R03s as mechanisms to bring in young investigators to this field, would it be possible that those few centers that exist might discourage the innovations that could occur and need to occur with the larger number of researchers? And second, is it possible that there are maverick investigators who are not really part of the network, who possibly don't come to these meetings, who wouldn't put a grant application in, who might have brilliant ideas that need to have a venue for funding, and if we weren't funding those R21s that they might come in from left field with something truly imaginative? Would that be a loss for the field as well?

A: Dr. Clauw: You can have it both ways. In the second phase of the MAPP, although there are six discovery sites, there is a real aggressive effort to have other ancillary studies be added to the MAPP. And all the ancillary studies have to do is use the same type of phenotyping we use so that when you get your data we can all make sense of it. People can write R01s and R21s, and be part of the network, or they can just come to the meetings, and at least understand what we're all doing. I wasn't really meaning what I said, literally, that they should get rid of it, but that you can actually have it both ways.

A: Dr. Buchwald: I think the issue of junior people coming into the field is really huge, because as I look around I see all the same people I saw 20 years ago doing the work. I think part of the issue is that there is enough funding for someone to envision a future. In chronic fatigue syndrome, how do you garner enough support to make a career out of this topic? I think having centers might actually energize the field.

A: Dr. Afari: I'll add to that because I was once a junior person. I completely agree with Dedra that having the CFS centers way back when was really instrumental for bringing me in, and I actually see that happening with the MAPP network as well having access to lots of data. And having access to lots of expertise, really gives a leg up to folks who are new to the field.

A: Dr. Buchwald: And I would say that “new to the field” is different from junior people. Because new to the field means you bring in people from different fields, with different perspectives. For 25 years MAPP was run by urologists and nothing the treatments they tried worked. MAPP is now open to other research areas. For example, now we have an expert on quality of life, and how do you really measure quality of life in people with CFS?
__________________

Q: Betsy Lawrence, neuropsychologist (4:39:42): I was very interested to hear you [referring to Dr. Clauw] say that you didn't know that certain groups of patients had cognitive issues until 13 years ago, because clinically that shows up when neuropsychologists are doing testing. They other thing I thought about was mining the blogs. People may be self-identified when they go to a blog, they may not meet the classification of chronic fatigue syndrome, but if they themselves are talking about their symptoms, there may be many ways that the disease gets expressed.
__________________

Q: Suzanne Vernon, Solve ME/CFS Initiative: The NIH has been finding CFS research for over 20 years, and as you indicated, there were centers, four or five centers, for two cycles. Where is all that data? Is it possible that that data may inform the way forward for CFS?

A: Dr. Buchwald: I don't know where anyone else's data are, but we published dozens and dozens and dozens of papers. [Editor's comment: In a Pubmed search of Dr. Buchwald's papers, I was not able to find “dozens and dozens and dozens” of papers published during the 2-year period in which centers were funded. There were total of 87 papers by Dr.  Buchwald on CFS spanning the years 1987-2014.] We are still using that data. One of the issues with those centers was that we didn't all use the same definition, and we didn't work closely together. We didn't combine data or protocols. It might be hard to try to combine the data at this point, but it's probably worth thinking about.
____________________

Q: Robert Miller, patient (4:43:23): The three of you have been talking about being creative about trying to pursue the cause and treatments for this illness. In my 15 years of advocating for this illness, it's the same thing I've heard for 15 years. It's “Let's get creative and figure out a different way of attacking chronic fatigue syndrome.” As I said in my presentation, nothing is going to happen in this field until funding comes. You're talking about centers of excellence – that was on minimal funds – a million or a million and a half for each one of the centers. Were there three of four centers:?

A: Dr. Buchwald: I think there were four, there might have been five. [Audience member: “Three”]Were there three?

Robert Miller: So three or four centers, and you say that you feel there was progress made. Until the funding comes you can get as creative as you want, you're not going to get anywhere. [Applause]

A: Dr. Clauw: That same amount of money invested now would be more fruitful than in the past, because of the ways we put together a MAPP-type network where we would be sharing protocols and really working together, while those were really centers that did their own thing. They were reviewed based on the science that each center was proposing.

[BREAK]

Session 3: What does research on ME/CFS tell us about the presentation and diagnosis of ME/CFS in the clinic?


Beth Smith, D.O. - Evidence-based Practice Center II: Studies of Diagnostic Methods

(20 minutes) (begins 4:46:29)
Associate Professor, Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center, Oregon Health & Science University

Dr. Smith's presentation focused on the literature review for studies of diagnostic methods for ME/CFS. She covered limitations of the research, discussed the relevance of the research and future research needs.

She began by saying that the literature on diagnosing ME/CFS in this area is very broad. The biggest limitation in this area is the lack of a gold standard, that is, an accepted test that can reliably distinguish between patients with and without a specific condition. Of the eight case definitions used to diagnose ME/CFS none is considered a gold standard.

Of the 36 diagnostic studies included in the literature review, many were descriptive, and not amenable to a quality rating (excellent, good, poor). Sample sizes were small, and consisted mostly of white females between the ages of 35 and 57. We are not seeing rural patients, or those who are home bound and not able to get to appointments.

Seven studies compared ME/CFS patients diagnosed using different case definitions. These studies found that patients identified with the ME or ME/CFS criteria (CCC and ICC) had more functional impairment than those diagnosed with the Fukuda criteria. Three studies compared patients using the Fukuda criteria to patients with fatiguing illnesses other than CFS (including psychiatric conditions, autoimmune diseases, and other chronic diseases). In general, patients without CFS were less impaired. The four studies of biomarkers used for diagnosis were too small to support conclusions.

Diagnostic variations by patient subgroups revealed that patients diagnosed later in life were more impaired. Certain subscales of the SF-36 were able to predict failure to recover after exercise, but no studies evaluated the accuracy of different case definitions among patients with specific sets of symptoms.

In terms of harms, five studies identified stigma associated with the diagnosis, including loss of work opportunities, negative character judgments, social isolation, and changes in interactions with the medical profession (e.g. prejudice from physicians, stereotyping). There was also the burden of waiting for diagnosis, and harm associated with long delays in diagnosing the illness.

Directions for future research:
  • Establish a single case definition and retire the Oxford case definition. 
  • Evaluate diagnostic testing for a diverse group of patients 
  • Report established measures of diagnostic accuracy as outcomes 
  • Address biases inherent in current research, e.g. patients recruited from specialty clinics may represent the medical specialty of the clinic 
  • Consider subgroups in reporting results of diagnostic tests 
  • Establish an international ME/CFS registry
Christopher R. Snell, Ph.D. - Leading Questions Always Collect Inaccurate Information:
Lessons From Current Treatment and Clinical Trials
(19 minutes) (begins at 5:06:52)
Scientific Advisory Committee Chair, The Workwell Foundation

Dr. Snell began by saying that according to the AHRQ review, GET and CBT were effective in reducing fatigue in ME/CFS patients, and that “nothing else works.” “This really does not fit with my experience,” said Dr. Snell. “I do not conceive of CBT ever being a cure for ME/CFS.” Fortunately, the AHRQ review picked up on one of the major issues with graded exercise therapy: not only is it not helpful to a great number of patients, it can actually be extremely harmful. So, the question is how did GET come about as beneficial in the review?

The best funded research with the most subjects is on GET, which is the cheapest treatment option. The reason these studies show benefits is, in part, poor patient selection. Because the case definitions used have poor specificity, they may include patients with other conditions. But there is a more insidious reason why GET is shown to be beneficial in these studies, and that is the use of leading questions, which, in Florence Nightingale's words, are “a means of obtaining inaccurate information.”

Leading questions are a way of influencing how people will answer by including assumptions about issues and cutting off unwanted answers. The underlying assumption of studies showing GET to be beneficial to CFS/ME patients is that patients are deconditioned, and that there is an altered perception of effort resulting from reduced physical activity.



In cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), physical effort can be objectively measured. Dr. Snell used the example of a 33-year-old patient diagnosed with CFS. On her first and second day of CPET, she exerted maximum effort (measured as 1.3), but her VO2Max (peak oxygen consumption) decreased on the second day by 14% to 17.4, which is roughly equivalent to someone with cardiovascular disease. Her VAT (oxygen consumption during submaximal exercise) was 56% and 55%. In people with deconditioning, this value is around 30%, which means the patient with CFS was not deconditioned. Predicted heart rate was also lower than expected, which suggests possible autonomic dysfunction. Ventilation was also considerably lower than expected, which also supports autonomic dysfunction. Based on other simular findings. Dr. Snell proposed that the 2-day CPET could be used as a biomarker for at least a subset of CFS patients.

The next leading question is that CBT assumes that fatigue, fear of activity, and avoidance of activity are linked. Therefore, by modifying one response, it is anticipated that others will be affected (i.e. by overcoming fear of activity, there will be an increase in activity and a reduction in fatigue.) Again, this does not fit with the data.

To test this assumption, Dr. Snell's group administered exercise testing to patients with ME/CFS and controls. In both groups, perceived exertion and workload were correlated, although the ME/CFS group had to work harder. Essentially, there were no differences between objective and subjective measures of exertion for either patients and controls. Dr. Snell concluded that the assumptions underlying both GET and CBT are not supported by objective scientific research.

Andreas M. Kogelnik, M.D., Ph.D. - Comparative Effectiveness Research
(20 minutes) (begins at 5:25:26 )
Founder and Director, Open Medicine Institute

According to Dr. Kogelnik, one of the biggest challenges for researching the comparative effectiveness of treatment is that there are different subgroups, or, at least “one big heterogeneous group.” Kogelnik asked, “How do we bridge the gap between one size fits all to personalized therapies?” - especially when there are no FDA-approved treatments for chronic fatigue syndrome.

Dr. Kogelnik claimed that there have been only three major placebo-controlled therapeutic studies on “chronic fatigue.” The first of these was a study on valganciclovir (Montoya et al. 2006 and 2013). “This was the first placebo-controlled study in the field that had been published in a long time … which, in many ways, stunned me.” [Later Suzanne Vernon challenged that statement saying that there were many placebo-controlled therapeutic studies prior to the Valcyte study.] Dr. Kogelnik then went on to explain that Valcyte had been used a decade or two earlier, but physicians had stopped prescribing it because patients often flare two weeks into therapy.

The second major study Dr. Kogelnik discussed was the rituximab placebo-controlled study on patients who had both chronic fatigue syndrome and cancer (Fluge et al. 2011)

After discovering that CFS patients treated for cancer with rituximab recovered Fluge et al. Launched a trial for CFS. In a trial of 30 patients, they showed that there was improvement, although there was a delayed positive response to rituximab. This is typical also of Valcyte, in which there can be delays of up to five months.

These two trials should be “screaming to the NIH” that this needs further investigation and merits funding.

The third study investigated Ampligen (Strayer et al. 2012)A number of standardized measurements were used in the trial to measure outcome. Nevertheless, the drug was rejected by the FDA on safety and efficacy concerns.

Dr. Kogelnik concluded by saying that the studies on CBT have not pointed in as clear a direction as the three studies he cited in his talk. “We are at the same place as when we started the Valcyte study almost ten years ago,” he said. This is because syndromic definitions are too broad, there is no single biomarker, the disease is heterogeneous, and symptoms wax and wane. But, he concluded, there are glimmers of hope.

Fred Friedberg, Ph.D. - The Future of Self-Management 
in ME/CFS

(20 minutes) (begins at 5:47:20)
Research Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stony Brook University

The way Dr. Friedberg conceives of it, self-management in severe CFS/ME has three interactive principles:
  • Activity patterns that are maladaptive, because they are either too much, too little, or alternate between the two 
  • Emotional distress (too much) 
  • There are far too few pleasant activities, and very little positive affect 
All of these are malleable, controllable factors in prescribing self-management for these patients. The goal is to correct activity patterns that are leading to symptom flare-ups, reduce emotional distress, and incorporate more pleasant experiences in the patient's daily life.

Self-management studies in ME/CFS have been based on CBT principles, except that you are asking patients to perform them on their own, rather than in face-to-face visits. In an early UK study by Chalder et al. (1997) self-management booklets were compared to no treatment in a group of patients with chronic fatigue. There was an improvement in fatigue after three months. Although Dr. Friedberg pointed out that these were patients who did not necessarily have full-blown chronic fatigue syndrome. In two studies by Powell there were improvements in fatigue after two and nine face-to-face visits. Dr. Freidberg noted that because there was no difference between having two vs nine visits “How much do you really need face-to-face visits?” [Editor's comment: Handing a self-management brochure to patients would be even cheaper than consults with a trained professional.]

In Knoop et al. (2008) patients received CBT via a manual and and emails. The authors concluded that “Guided self-instructions are an effective treatment for patients with relatively less severe chronic fatigue syndrome.” [Note: patients were selected according to the Fukuda criteria.] Dr Friedberg notes that clinical improvement is more meaningful than statistical improvement.

In one of Dr. Friedberg's studies, there was clinical improvement in 53% of a group using self-management. However, there was a high drop-out rate at follow-up (42%-53%) and, again, the patients with six months of chronic fatigue were lumped together with chronic fatigue syndrome.

Dr. Friedberg stated that about 60% of patients do not improve with behavioral intervention. This is because: 1) behavioral interventions are not that effective, and 2) the underlying pathophysiological process remains unaffected. One possible conclusion is that self-monitoring is simply not effective. But Dr. Friedberg suggested that improved self-management techniques, such as ambulatory monitoring, could be helpful to physicians and should be included as part of physicians' packets. In addition ambulatory monitoring recorded several times over the course of a day could yield more accurate phenotyping of the illness, and perhaps help to identify subgroups.

(Interestingly, Dr. Friedberg pointed out that when actigraphy is used in CBT studies it does not support the claim that fear of activity leads to lower levels of activity. Improved patients do not do more, and fatigue improvement is not accompanied by more activity.)

Other uses for home monitoring include measures of heart rate variability. Dr. Friedberg cited a study by Burton et al. (2010) in which reduced heart rate variability was correlated with poor sleep. Burton concluded that “Low HRV strongly predicted sleep quality-suggesting a pervasive state of nocturnal sympathetic hypervigilance in CFS.” (Dr. Friedberg says that this indicates autonomic dysfunction.)

In a study by Stringer et al. fatigue severity was significantly correlated with pro-inflammatory cytokine (i.e. leptin) levels in six out of ten participants with CFS. Fatigue and variation leptin levels tracked each other over 25 days. (Normal levels of leptin were found in the CFS group, but they were more variable.) In conclusion, Dr. Friedberg stated that “mobile devices will help capture the biobehavioral data we are all looking for.”

______________________



Question and Answer Session (begins at 6:08:18)

Q: Angela L. Rasmussen, panel member: I have a question for Dr. Kogelnik about trans-genomic data (that's what I work on). In terms of future directions for research, what do you think are some of the challenges in terms of applying omics [genomics or proteomics] for development of biomarker panels and direct repurposing using pharmacogenomic approaches?

A: Dr. Kogelnik: We spend a lot of time applying omic technologies to patient groups. The challenge for us has been a funding issue. We have some very interesting pilot results that need to be expanded to larger groups. And I agree that big data, not insurance mining data, but omics data, is the way to go.

Dr. Rasmussen: I agree completely. I think it would be tremendously helpful to collect data and biological samples that could be applied to genomic or proteomic studies.
____________________

Q: Suzanne Vernon, Solve ME/CFS Initiative: I have a couple of points of clarification for the panel. Andy, you are forgiven for your comment that you didn't know of any randomized controlled trials before your trial. You were probably still in high school. There were randomized clinical trials before yours. I agree that the rituximab trials are very interesting, but the primary outcomes that the Norwegians used were self-reported symptoms and physician-reported symptoms. So, although that study is very intriguing and important, not using standardized validated instruments is a problem. But, since they didn't know much about CFS, they couldn't plan. Which brings me to my question: How can we get information to MDs so we don't have this dearth of physicians, and so we can conduct the research that needs to be done for CFS?

A: Dr. Kogelnik: I didn't mean to imply there were no studies, I really meant to highlight the high-impact studies … from my perspective. I think you're right, the standardization of metrics is a problem. But even with studies that are not very large, we have traction. There are measurements, questionnaires, physical measurements, molecular measurements, and that's what NIH needs to step up to in terms of funding. Frankly, most of what we have done on the therapeutic front has come from private money.
___________________

Q: Carol Head, Solve ME/CFS Initiative (6:13:50): I have a question for the P2P panel. You found that 1% of the studies were worthy to be included, and even within that, most of the studies were poor or fair. Much of what we have done today is explain why there is so little research and why the results of those research have been dismal. We have low funding, we have a heterogeneous illness, which explains no biomarkers and all the other problems. I, for one, have been a supporter of this P2P process because I think there is value in shining a very bright public light on the dearth of research for this. Have there been other illnesses of this magnitude in which you have found such a low figure, and how would you recommend that be handled?

A: Dr. Smith: Often when we perform a systematic review we throw a wide net so we're not missing anything. It's not uncommon when we are looking at 6,000 abstracts to whittle it down to a very small number that will inform our conclusions about the evidence. We set strict inclusion criteria so we are not giving misleading information, so that we are not interpreting evidence in a way that people may take that as accurate when in reality the data is so flawed or so subjective that it's filled with biases and would lead to a wrong interpretation.

Q: Jennifer Spotila, patient and advocate (6:17:50): I would like to go back to Dr. Smith’s suggestion that the Oxford definition should be retired. The evidence review rated at least one Oxford study, the PACE trial, as good quality. And Dr. Snell quoted from the PACE trial manual about the assumptions behind CBT and GET treatments and the inappropriate patient selection in those types of studies. So as a former attorney, I hope you will forgive my leading question: If the Oxford definition should be retired – and it should – doesn’t that lead to the obvious conclusion that Oxford studies should also be retired, at least as they apply to the ME/CFS population? [Applause]

A: Dr. Smith: Since I kind of opened that can of worms, I'll start speaking. When we rate the quality of a study we are rating it based on specific methodological standards and the methodology that the PACE trial underwent was actually good. It fulfilled those methods that we're looking at. And I think thinking about its inclusion criteria as far as the Oxford case definition, I think that's a totally different question than “was the PACE trial well conducted?” I mean there's a lot of things we can talk about that one trial regarding other forms of biases and such but I think the two are very different questions. As far as retiring the Oxford case definition and therefore retiring all studies that were associated with it, I'm not sure that that's the best way to move the research forward because, again, sometimes as they spoke about this morning, or was it earlier this afternoon, on the MAPP network sometimes it's important to spread, to put out a wider net. To get some information before getting it to a narrower spectrum. And some of the Oxford studies may give a clue, but that said, and where do we go from here, what I spoke today about diagnosis and methods of diagnoses and when you're using a case definition as a reference standard that may be including other patients with other fatiguing illnesses and not just ME/CFS patients, but that's the reference standard that's being used, then these new diagnostic methods may not be as good or as specific and sensitive as we really want them to be. When we look at those studies comparing different case definitions, none of them were comparing using the Oxford case definition. So I think there's a fair bit of suggestion here that we may be including patients that have other fatiguing illnesses by continuing to use the Oxford case definition, but I certainly would want to make sure that we're still looking at the evidence that currently exists and seeing what we can gather from it.

A: Dr. Friedberg: Definitions up to this point have been based on consensus, they are not empirically derived. Consensus definitions are fine as a good start-off point so you can standardize how you screen people into studies. On one end you have Oxford, which is extremely broad and includes diagnoses that shouldn't be in there. On the other hand you have very narrow definitions requiring a lot of symptoms and that present its own problems. Also you're going to fold in other high-symptom conditions other than CFS/ME. [Editor's comment: Dr. Friedberg did not specify which other high-symptom conditions could be included in the ICC and CCC.]I don't think we’ve reached an endpoint with any of them. I think we need an empirical definition based on something as simple as symptom frequencies. What are actually the most frequent symptoms? That's what should be in there. And the low frequency symptoms should not be in there. Have we reached that point? No, we haven't [Editor's comment: Leonard Jason's group has devised an algorithm based on 15 major symptoms. It has 90% accuracy, which is more accurate than any of the case definitions currently in use. You can read the study HERE.]

Q: Nancy McGrory, outreach director for Hemispherx Biopharma: I want to bring up a point that I didn't see in the review. We didn't talk about quality of life too much. Using the example of obesity drugs, they proved to the FDA that the 5% reduction in weight in someone who is morbidly obese, although it didn't seem like a big number, that the quality of life improvement had great impact on their lives. I think that we know from the people that have been in this field for some time that sometimes the numbers won't reflect what the patient is experiencing.

A: Dr. Kogelnik: I do think that's important as well.

A: Dr. Smith: When we talk about intervention trials tomorrow we'll be talking about quality of life outcomes.

Q: Nancy Klimas: Earlier there was talk about biorepositories and genomics, and larger data sets to do these more comprehensive studies. These technologies are hugely expensive. Coming up with a funding mechanism that allows us to do these well-designed studies would be very helpful. I can put my fingers on 2,000 well-characterized patients. The work could be done, so why haven't we done that yet? Because of every single one of the things I have just described, not one of them is receiving federal dollars.

Dr. Kogelnik: We do get some federal dollars from CDC but it's limited.

Q: Mary Ann Fletcher, NOVA (6:28:06): I am addressing this to Dr. Smith. I really take issue with using the Oxford case definition which defines a group of tired, fatigued people - and that's about it - as being more admirable than the trials that have been done measuring a lot of other things in ME/CFS. To someone who has been in this field for 30 years to have this kind of a statement made in a NIH-sponsored workshop really is distressing to me and to the patients. This is not the way we should carry out clinical trials. The behavioral protocols and exercise have a role in clinical care but they're not going to cure a single patient. [Applause]

A: Dr. Smith: I think that there are some issues with the PACE trial. That trial does talk about recovery, and there's a lot of issues with that as a measure. But I think it does contribute to what we know on our evidence base and we put that into the mix with everything else. [Editor's comment: This statement is inconsistent with Dr. Smith's previous explanation of how 6,000 abstracts were “whittled down” to a few dozen.]

A: Dr. Snell: I've spoken at length about the outcome measures which are problematic. The study is well conducted. The problem is that they didn't control for confounding variables. Two of the prevailing conditions in the developed world are low fitness and mental illness. And not only did they not control for it, they knew they weren't controlling for it because they'd already assumed that that was a major underpinning of the disease they were supposed to be measuring. That knocks everything they do out of the boundaries as far as I'm concerned. It makes it [PACE] almost worthless because they didn't start with the right premise.

Q: Matina Nicholson: I'm having a problem with everyone focusing on fatigue. That is the wrong kind of description for how complex this disease can be.

A: Dr. Kogelnik: I don't think the term chronic fatigue syndrome is a useful one. In my clinical practice I don't use the code or the term other than when people come to me asking about it. [Editor's comment: Dr. Kogelnik repeatedly referred to the illness as “chronic fatigue” during his presentation.]

Matina Nicholson: I keep hearing the non-experts referring to fatigue. I appreciate people who are outside who can give us perspective, but that part is very frustrating for someone who struggles with it.

Q: Claudia Goodell, patient advocate (6:33:18): Dr. Friedberg, as the director of the international organization for patients with this disease [IACFSME], how would you recommend that the NIH get buy-in from a medical association like the AMA to provide research on the topic of ME/CFS so that this can make it to the clinic and also to the patients now?

A. Dr. Friedberg: As far as I know we don't have any influence on the AMA. I'm not even sure how we would go about doing that. Their endorsement of the seriousness and validity of this problem would certainly be important. What I hope will be the outcome of P2P and IOM is that new funding programs will be initiated.

A: Dr. Kogelnik: Given where we are sitting, it would be far more important to have NIH's attention. I haven't seen much representatives from the NIH here other than the panel itself. It would be great to have more engagement from the Institute. [Applause]

Dr. Green: The panel has been struck by the stories of those who have this disease, as well as those who have to care for them. We thank you for sharing.

[End Day 1, December 9, 2014]

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

NIH Pathways to Prevention: Advancing the Research on ME/CFS: Day 1: Morning Session

Left to right: Kathleen M. O’Neil, Penney Cowan, Carmen R. Green, Ronit Elk,
Angela L. Rasmussen
For those who did not have a chance to watch the video of the P2P Workshop, I have written a summary of the Day 1 (Dec 9) morning presentations below. 

I would encourage everyone to watch Dr. Jason's excellent presentation on case definition. He not only demonstrates how imprecise definitions capture people who do not have ME, he explains why criteria which don't require all core symptoms can never work. 

I also encourage everyone to read the Draft Summary, and to make comments during the open comment period, which closes on January 16. The Draft Summary was written in a rush, and missed some of the salient points raised by the speakers. The Summary will be published and disseminated widely, so this is your chance to tell NIH that the diagnosis of "chronic fatigue syndrome" needs to be retired, and the Canadian Consensus Criteria for ME adopted.
__________________________

Originally published on ProHealth.

On December 9 and 10, 2014, the Pathways to Prevention (P2P) workshop was held on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland. The workshop was sponsored by the Office of Research on Women’s Health (ORWH), which is the division of the NIH responsible for ME/CFS. The purpose of the workshop was to identify gaps in ME/CFS research, and to address key questions about incidence, prevalence, diagnosis and subtyping. (See Dr. Green's presentation below.)

The P2P Workshop has received sustained criticism from ME/CFS advocates because P2P panel members are not experts in the illness, nor do they necessarily need to have a medical background. Advocates and experts have pointed out that not having a background in an illness as complex as ME/CFS is a detriment, especially if the NIH bases future research funding on the recommendations of the panel.

The morning sessions on December 9 consisted of an overview of the workshop, the patient perspective (Robert Miller), case definition (Dr. Leonard Jason and Dr. Lea Steele), social determinants of health (Abigail Brown), and epidemiology (Dr. Luis Nacul). Each presentation lasts 20 minutes. At the end of the morning session there was a question and answer period in which P2P panel members and the audience could address questions to the speakers.

The draft report of the meeting is available HERE. Members of the public can make comments, which will then be incorporated into the report, until January 16, 2015.

You can read the program book HERE.

You can read the meeting agenda HERE.

You can watch the December 9 presentations HERE.

You can read information about panel members HERE.

You can submit comments HERE. (Deadline is January 16, 2015.)
____________________________________________________________

NIH Pathways to Prevention: Advancing the Research on Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Day 1)
Air date: Tuesday, December 09, 2014, 8:30:00 AM (EST)
Runtime: 06:38:17   VIDEO
____________________



James M. Anderson, M.D., Ph. D. - Opening Remarks
(7 minutes) (begins at 0:05)
Director, Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives, NIH

Dr. Anderson opened by describing the purpose of the P2P, which is to identify gaps and priorities in the research and take steps towards “focusing on the research that will result in improved treatments for patients and ultimately a cure.” Dr. Anderson stressed that to take these steps, biomedical research is required, and that NIH is the nation's premier source of funding, which is awarded through competitive grants. Dr. Anderson stated several times that scientific rigor is a priority in selecting grants, which are expected to meet the highest scientific standards. Dr. Anderson pointed out that because ME/CFS occurs with other comorbid conditions, such as IBS, FM, chronic headaches, and TMJ disorder, there may be a common underlying cause, and that understanding comorbid conditions may shed some light on the cause of ME/CFS and help define targets for specific therapy. Dr. Anderson closed with the statement that “ultimately it is the voices of the patients that will help advance research on ME/CFS.”

Dr. Anderson then thanked the panel members, saying “This will be a productive event.”
____________________


David M. Murray, Ph. D. - Charge to the Panel
(7 minutes) (begins at 8:11)
Director, Office of Disease Prevention. Division of Program Coordination, Planning, and Strategic Initiatives, NIH

Dr. Murray explained that the mission of the Office of Disease Prevention (ODP) is to improve public health by “increasing the scope, quality, dissemination, and impact of prevention research funded by the NIH.” One of the ODP's priorities is to identify gaps in areas of research that could benefit from additional investment. Dr. Murray explained that the outcome of the P2P Workshop is a panel report that will identify research gaps based on an “unbiased and evidence-based assessment of this complex issue.” In addition, the report will detail “methodological and scientific weaknesses and suggestions for research needs.”

Murray mentioned that “people sometimes complain in advance of these workshops that there is no one who is an expert on the panel. That's on purpose,” he said. “We don't want people coming in with preconceived notions ... we have an independent and unbiased panel.” Dr. Murray went over the two-year process for holding a P2P workshop, and stressed the importance of having a panel with no relationship to the illness they would be addressing. Dr. Murray closed his presentation with thanks to everyone involved, including the Trans-NIH ME/CFS Research Working Group, which sponsored the P2P Workshop, the speakers, and the panel who would be “getting very little sleep over the next two days.”
____________________

Carmen R. Green, M.D. - Workshop Overview and Panel Activities
(9 minutes) (begins at 15:17)
Associate Vice President and Associate Dean for Health Equity and Inclusion; Professor of Health Management and Policy, Anesthesiology, and Obstetrics and Gynecology, Office for Health Equity and Inclusion, University of Michigan Health System

Dr. Green began by thanking Paris Watson for shepherding everyone through the process, and described ME/CFS as a multi-faceted disorder characterized by “fatigue that can last many days, a lifetime, making daily activities impossible for over a million adults.” Like the previous two speakers, she stressed the fact that there is no single test to confirm ME/CFS, or approved treatment, and funding is lacking. Dr. Green then presented the questions the panel would address:
What is the incidence and prevalence of ME/CFS, and whom does it affect? 
Given the unique challenges to ME/CFS, how can we foster innovative research to enhance the development of treatment for people living with the disease? 
What does research on ME/CFS tell us about the presentation and diagnosis of ME/CFS in the clinical setting? 
What tools, measures, and approaches help define individuals with ME/CFS? 
How are tools and measures used to distinguish subsets of patients with ME/CFS?
Dr. Green stated that on Thursday, December 18, 2014 the report would be posted on the website, and would be open for comments for 30 days (until January 16). In March the report will be finalized. Dr. Green stressed that the panel is not an advisory board to the NIH. Dr. Green then asked the panelists to introduce themselves. (You can read their bios HERE.)
____________________

Susan E. Maier, Ph. D. - Overview of Topic 
(15 minutes) (begins at 25:07)
Deputy Director, Office of Research on Women’s Health, NIH

Dr. Maier introduced ME/CFS as a “complex chronic condition, no known cause and no cure.” Research, she said, is both necessary and urgent because “this is an unmet public health need.” “Why is it necessary?” she asked. “People are sick, okay?” Like other presenters Dr. Maier reiterated that there many problems facing the ME/CFS patient population:

  • There is no validated diagnostic test so physicians have to rule out other illnesses to achieve a diagnosis.
  • There are few specialists to access to health care is limited.
  • The current treatment paradigm is to treat symptoms, not treat the core pathology of ME/CFS because we don't know what that is.
In spite of these obstacles, Dr. Maier stressed that biomedical research could be useful, and gave a few examples of how research can be used for diagnosis and treatment.
  • Abnormalities in brain function can be easily observed in MRIs.
  • Fatigue can be measured by using daily tracking measures of pro-inflammatory cytokines.
  • Energy metabolism is also affected in ME/CFS, so fatigue in ME/CFS may be due to a defect in cellular energy produced by mitochondria. Enhancing mitochondrial function may be useful for improving energy in ME/CFS individuals.
We need to move the science into the clinic, Maier said, and then transfer clinical observations back to the bench. The question is, how do we know who has the illness? Findings are inconsistent because there is a lack of consistency in case definition. Comprehensive understanding is lacking, and results are not broadly reflective of all subjects in the group. Dr. Maier pointed out that Ampligen trials were successful, but not all patients responded to the drug. [Editor's comment: a 100% response rate is not found in any drug.] Studying both sexes in a clinical design is important.

Dr. Maier recommended that researchers seek out funding in alternative fields – for example, research in chronic pain conditions. Dr. Maier exhorted researchers to seek NIH funding. “How many people play the lottery?” she asked. “If you don't buy a ticket you can't win.” [Editor's comment: Dr. Nancy Klimas has remarked that although she has submitted numerous grant proposals to NIH, they have not been approved.] Dr. Maier encouraged collaboration. “We need to nail down the cause of ME/CFS. We need to understand the pathology, identify therapies, and get the treatments to market.” She closed with the statement that NIH is committed to funding scientifically rigorous research into ME/CFS, “which is a complex medical condition.”
____________________

Robert Miller - Patient Perspective
(20 minutes) (begins at 41:25)
Patient and Advocate

Robert Miller began by stating that in some ways his 25-year experience with ME/CFS mirrored that of most patients – being dismissed, ridiculed and outcast, especially by doctors who do not believe ME/CFS patients are truly sick. But he went on to call himself one of the “lucky ones,” because in 1997 he was treated by Dr. Daniel Peterson, who used more sophisticated tests to diagnose the illness than most doctors use today. According to Miller, Dr. Peterson, who has treated over 9,000 patients, also has the highest treatment success rate, because he identifies patient subgroups and treats them accordingly. Miller emphasized that there is much to learn from Dr. Peterson's and a few other expert clinicians' experience.

Miller issued a challenge to the P2P panel. “You on this committee have a powerful responsibility,” he said. “You hold patients' lives in your hands. You can change the prevailing attitude of medical research that ME/CFS is not a serious or productive research field. You must change that. You can do it by identifying a strong and serious direction for future research that builds on immunological abnormalities and more clinical trials. That is the charge our patient community gives to you.” Miller pointed out that for 30 years casting a wide net of “unwellness” to define CFS and negligent levels of research funding have prevented medicine from solving CFS.

Miller went on to explain why people with ME/CFS are truly afraid that a panel of scientists who have no understanding or experience in the complexities of ME/CFS could possibly do more harm to “our underfunded and neglected research field.” He warned that if the panel recommends continuing the ineffective research focus on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), graded exercise and psychological traits, they will repeat a 30-year history of ineffective research that harms the patient. Miller pointed out that the AHRQ literature review missed the most promising new research on ME/CFS. It purposely excluded biomarker research, for example, which is the most important area of investigation needed for diagnosis. He explained that while the AHRQ review is correct in stating that the bulk of ME/CFS research is mediocre, it is because NIH only funds $6 million per year of research for an illness that costs an estimated loss of $20 billion annually. Miller pointed out that “scientists won't work in this illness if NIH doesn't support it.”

Scientific research directions to prioritize:
  • Removing antidepressants from the recommended first line of treatments for ME/CFS. “If you give antidepressants to patients with no abnormal brain chemistry, it's dangerous and even deadly,” Miller said.
  • NIH needs to devote resources at a substantial level, comparable to the severity of the illness.
  • The government must fund clinical trials because the private sector and FDA has failed patients with ME/CFS.
  • Follow recommendations made by CFSAC to focus research on biomarkers, immunity, clinical trials, etiology, and establish Centers of Excellence.
____________________

Leonard A. Jason, Ph. D. - Case Definition
(22 minutes) (begins at 1:01:17)
Professor of Psychology, Director Center for Community Research, DePaul University

Dr. Jason began his presentation by explaining the importance of having a good case definition. He explained that ambiguities in case definitions can result in difficulty replicating research findings, estimating prevalence, identifying biomarkers, and determining which treatments help patients.

The problem faced by ME/CFS researchers, and clinicians is that over 20 ME/CFS case definitions have been developed, but these have only rarely been guided by the scientific method. The challenge to researchers is to identify which case definition to use so that the core symptoms are identified. This means that decisions need to made in order to establish whether a core symptom is severe enough to meet the definition, and standardized procedures need to be in place for assessing symptoms.

Fatigue is particularly problematic as a defining symptom because it is widely experienced. Short-term fatigue is experienced by 15-25% of the general population. However only 4% of the population experiences fatigue for six months or longer. Half of those can be explained by clear-cut illnesses (e.g. cancer). The key question is to identify how many of the remaining 2% have CFS or ME.

Dr. Jason then went on to review case definitions: The first case definition (Holmes, 1988) was so broad that it inadvertently selected a large number of patients with psychiatric conditions (i.e. depression). The second case definition developed in the US (Fukuda) was intended to rectify this problem, but several cardinal symptoms of CFS were not required, such as post-exertional malaise (PEM), neuro-cognitive problems, and unrefreshing sleep. The drawback of the Fukuda definition is that by using polythetic criteria (criteria in which not all symptoms are required for a diagnosis), patients with the illness may be excluded, while patients without the illness may be included.


For example, in the Wichita study (CDC, 2003), 78.5% of the participants had PEM, and 76.9% had cognitive problems (thinking, concentrating, and remembering). When patients were followed up three years later, 70% of them no longer had CFS. This figure is substantially higher than the 5% complete recovery rate reported by specialized care clinics. Why were recovery rates so high? Dr. Jason suggested that it is possible that the broad Fukuda definition identified patients who were less disabled and more likely to recover. [Editor's comment: All of the patients in the Wichita study were working full time.]

Dr. Jason also pointed out that prevalence rates are also affected by using polythetic criteria. In another use of the Fukuda criteria (Wessely et al. 1996), only 63% of patients experienced PEM, and only 64% had sleep disturbances. Wessely et al. found a prevalence rate of 2.6%, but if psychological disorders had been removed, the prevalence would have been substantially lower, at .5%.

Because of these problems, the CDC tried to operationalize the Fukuda definition by including
standardized instruments for symptoms, fatigue, and disability. This definition is known at the Empiric criteria. However, because of the inclusion of emotional problems (role emotional), every clinically depressed patient could be diagnosed with CFS using the Empiric criteria. While the Empiric criteria could correctly diagnose patients with CFS (sensitivity), its ability to correctly identify patients without CFS (specificity) was low. The result is that many people without CFS have been incorrectly diagnosed using the Empiric criteria.

As a case in point, the prevalence of CFS using the Empiric criteria is 2.4%, but, as it turns out, the incidence of major depressive disorder is 2.2%. Thus it is possible the Empiric criteria may include many people with MDD.

Dr. Jason stated that it is possible to distinguish ME/CFS from MDD, but you have to use the right
predictors, i.e. PEM, unrefreshing sleep, confusion or disorientation, shortness of breath and severity of self reproach (which is more typical of MDD than ME/CFS).

Because the Fukuda and Empiric criteria capture people who do not have ME/CFS, the Canadian Consensus Criteria (CCC - 2003) was developed to address specificity. It requires PEM, unrefreshing sleep and other cardinal symptoms of the disease. A subsequent set of criteria, the International Consensus Criteria (ICC - 2011) required that symptom severity must result in a 50% reduction in the patient's pre-morbid activity. The problem with the ICC is that there is no scientific basis for the choice of 3 out of 5 symptoms, and the choice of symptoms is quite similar to the Holmes criteria.


In the patient sample Jason used to demonstrate this point, 95% met the Fukuda criteria, 75% met the CCC, while only 60% met the ICC. The increasing selectivity corresponded to increased physical disability. And in a recent study, Jason et al. found only three core symptoms, post-exertional malaise (PEM), neuro-cognitive problems, and unrefreshing sleep, could be used to correctly identify patients.

In summary, Jason stated that the CFS case definition needs to reduce unreliability in order to select those with the illness, while excluding those without. CFS is a broad category - it is vague and imprecise - while ME can refer to either the CCC or ICC. Consensus for explicit criteria must be reached by researchers, with clear rules for assessing core symptoms so that findings can be replicated and operationalized. To this end there is a need for standardized questionnaires. (The DSQ is one such instrument.) And there is need for an open transparent process.

[Note: The PeDaul Symptom Questionnaire for ME/CFS can be found HERE.]

__________________

Session 1: What is the incidence and prevalence of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and whom does it affect?

Heidi D. Nelson, M.D., M.P.H. - Overview of Systematic Review Methodology
(19 minutes) (begins at 1:24:33)
Medical Director of Cancer Prevention and Screening, Providence Cancer Center; Vice-Chair and Research Professor, Departments of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center, Oregon Health & Science University

Dr. Nelson began her presentation by explaining that the evidence review adhered to guidelines developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (AHRQ) and the Institute of Medicine (IOM). The AHRQ Evidence-based Practice Centers Program (EPC) involves 11 centers around the US, one of which is the Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center in Oregon, which is the center Dr. Smith and Dr. Nelson are associated with.

The first step of the systematic review involved the development of key questions. The next defined the scope of the review, which was followed by definition of inclusion criteria. Key questions were then refined by the NIH and the Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center.

The key questions were:

1. What methods are available to clinicians to diagnose ME/CFS and what conditions are required to be ruled out or excluded before assigning a diagnosis of ME/CFS?
a) What is the accuracy and concordance of methods used to diagnose ME/CFS? 
b) How does the use of these methods vary by patient subgroups?
c) What harms may be associated with undergoing or being assigned a diagnosis of ME/CFS?
2. What interventions are available for treating ME/CFS?
a) What are the benefits of therapeutic interventions for patients with ME/CFS and how do they vary by patient subgroups? 
b) What are the harms of therapeutic interventions for patients with ME/CFS and how do they vary by patient subgroups?
c) What are the characteristics of responders and non-responders to interventions?
Inclusions: Clinical trials of at least 12 weeks, in which the outcome measures were based on symptoms experienced by patients.

Exclusions: Intermediary results, such as blood tests, and any symptoms common to other illnesses, such as pain (but not fatigue).


The selection of studies received guidance from the Technical Expert Panel, including patients, a literature search, and examination by two reviewers. The randomized controlled trial (RCT) was considered the most reliable. Out of 6,175 abstracts, 71 were included, of which 36 related to diagnosis. There were three quality ratings:
  1. Good – likely to be valid.
  2. Fair – Some methodological deficiencies.
  3. Poor – Significant flaws that may invalidate results.
Applicability to “real world” situations, which Dr. Nelson described as “Main Street, USA” rather than a lab, was a very important consideration for the usefulness of the studies. Grading the strength of the evidence was based on study limitations, consistency of results, how directly the evidence links the intervention and health outcome, precision (same results across studies), and publication bias.
____________________

Lea Steele, Ph. D. - Quantifying ME/CFS in the Population: Consideration of Case Definition and Insights From Gulf War Illness and Other Symptom-Defined Conditions
(20 minutes) (begins at 1:43:20)
Director, Veterans Health Research Program Institute of Biomedical Studies, Baylor University

Dr. Steele introduced herself as a researcher for Gulf War Illness, but stated that ME/CFS and GWI share some of the same problems in establishing a case definition. According to Dr. Steele the “elephant in the room” is quantifying patients. Establishing prevalence is contingent on a case definition. The lack of general consensus on a case definition for ME/CFS makes it difficult to establish prevalence rates, neither is there general consensus on what to call it. To add to the complexity, prevalence (how many people have the illness at a specific time) and incidence rates (how many people are contracting the illness yearly) can vary widely, depending on whether they are established using sporadic cases or outbreaks. Dr. Steele pointed out that there have been numerous outbreaks and clusters since the 1950s, and recommended that the panel read those early accounts.

Of the 20 case definitions, 8 have been used to assess the prevalence of ME/CFS, with the broader case definitions finding higher prevalence rates. There is also a broad range of incidence rates. However, most of these studies did not make clear how ME/CFS was established in the patients. Occupational settings, such as GWI and “sick building syndrome” can lead to ME/CFS, as can infectious diseases.



Case definition alone does not account for the broad range of prevalence rates. Although, overall, the Holmes definition and CCC give lowest prevalence rates, while the Reeves (Empiric) definition gives the highest. Sampling also influences prevalence rates. For example, in population-based studies people are asked to take a survey or fill out a questionnaire with no clinical assessment. These studies produce prevalence rates that are much higher. Using the Fukuda definition, there are 600,000 to a million people with ME/CFS in the US.

Steele concluded with a recommendation to rely on expert consensus combined with a comprehensive analytic effort to devise a case definition.
__________________

Abigail A. Brown, M.A. - Social Determinants of Health 
(21 minutes) (begins at 2:01:53)
Doctoral Candidate, Clinical-Community Psychology, DePaul University

Social determinants of health is a broad area that refers to all the personal, social, economic and environmental factors that can affect health as well as the societal mechanisms that are used to manage health problems. Risk factors can be either prospective (established before patients develop an illness) or regressive (established after people develop an illness). In ME/CFS only 11 studies using an accepted case definition have looked at risk factors, but of these, only two produced the same results (Hempel 2008).

Studies have identified the following risk factors: female, higher childhood socioeconomic level, low education (Brown pointed out that these two factors appear to be in conflict), and ethnic minority. Ultimately, risk factor studies have found that socioeconomic status does not affect prevalence, which indicates that ME/CFS affects a wide group of people. Brown did not spend mush time reviewing the literature on psychosocial risk factors, except to point out that a White et al. study (2001) using an empirical case definition found that pre-morbid psychological conditions did not predict who would develop ME/CFS following mono and/or upper respiratory conditions. However, when using the Oxford or Fukuda case definition, mood disorders as played a role. [Editor's comment: This would seem to indicate that both the Oxford and Fukuda definitions are capturing patients with depression.] Some of the health risk factors included childhood illnesses, fatigue following a viral illness, and severity of the triggering viral illness (rather than psychological factors).

Variables associated with prognosis

Most studies find that severity of symptoms and disability are the best predictors of how long a patient will be ill. Brown's group found that severity of symptoms, such as unrefreshing sleep, headaches, and cognitive problems, contributed to poor prognosis, but not psychological comorbidity. Early management of symptoms is predictive of improved prognosis over time.

Some of the problems with risk factor studies are a reliance on self-reported diagnosis (i.e. “Do you have ME/CFS?”) rather than a physician's evaluation. A further complication is that case definitions are inconsistently applied. Prospective methods are not used, so we often end up with a prognosis of a “CFS-like” illness. There is also a psychogenic bias in the literature, as well as a lack of transparency, with researchers not reporting exactly how they analyzed their data. But the real problem is definition. If we can't agree on what defines ME/CFS, how can we predict who will get it?

At this point in her presentation, Brown took a moment to argue against the psychogenic model, and proposed an empirically-driven and consistently applied case definition, while taking into account subtypes of the illness.

Systems that are in place to manage ME/CFS

Coverage in medical school is insufficient, with only 40% including ME/CFS. In a survey conducted by Brown and Peterson, out of 71 medical schools in the US, only 30% reported that their institutions treated patients with ME/CFS, and only four schools reported that they not only treated patients, but conducted research, as well as including ME/CFS in their curricula.

The problem is that because qualified doctors do not get trained, they can't treat patients with ME/CFS. They then develop negative attitudes, which are passed on to their trainees in a vicious cycle. As a consequence, doctors question the legitimacy of the illness, with half not familiar with criteria for diagnosis. (28% did not accept ME/CFS as a clinical entity.)

What is needed?
  • Informed health care providers (e.g. coverage in medical schools and continuing education)
  • More funding for basic research
  • Centers of Excellence, and an increased number of affordable specialists
  • A solidified case definition really must be the foundation for understanding risk factors
Contact information: abrown57@depaul.edu
DePaulMECFSresearch@gmail.com
@DePaul_MECFS (mortality study)
https://redcap.is.depaul.edu/surveys/?s=DHxuYxScEn (mortality study survey)

____________________

Luis Nacul, M.D., Ph. D., M.F.P.H. - Epidemiology of ME/CFS: Making Sense of What We Know
(20 minutes) (begins at 2:22:38)
Chief Investigator, CURE-ME, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Dr, Nacul began by stating that contrary to popular opinion, ME/CFS is not a disease of developed nations, but is a worldwide problem, affecting all age groups. (Although it peaks in the late teens and 30s, which Dr. Nacul suggested may have something to do with hormones.)

What is ME/CFS?

There is very little agreement on what constitutes ME/CFS. The Fukuda criteria, for example, is non-specific. It is a negative criteria (i.e. not relieved by rest, not explained by other conditions, not due to exertion, or co-morbidity, etc.) In addition, not all criteria need to be met. This results in a possible 163 combinations of symptoms that may define a person with ME/CFS. There would be an advantage in having more restrictive criteria. For example, if PEM were added as a requirement the the Fukuda definition, the number of symptom combinations would drop to 35.

If there are patients who do not have the condition being studied, due to a case definition that is not specific, they may “contaminate” the pool, yielding results that are spurious.

How a diagnosis evolves

Parkinson's is a good example of how a diagnosis evolves over time. For over 100 years Parkinson's had no treatment, but once a marker was found, treatment was rapidly developed (2 years). The same was true of diabetes. Once insulin was discovered, a treatment was developed within one year.

What should be happening with ME/CFS is to evolve from ill-defined syndromes to stratified, more specific, syndromes, after which we should invest heavily in finding a marker – whether it is diagnostic, or pathophysiological.

Dr. Nacul proposed the following research priorities:
  • Discovery of biomarkers, followed by
  • Treatment studies
  • Specific case definitions must be adopted in order to identify biomarkers
Dr. Nacul recommended using a combination of criteria, for example the Fukuda with CCC, in order to identify phenotypes for both research and clinical trials. This would also open the door to testing a wide range of individuals, identifying subgroups, and devising effective treatments for different subgroups.

____________________


Question and Answer Session (begins at 2:43:17) (20 minutes)

Q: Dr. Rasmussen, P2P panelist: I have heard that viral infections are associated with the diagnosis of ME/CFS. Have any studies looked specifically at herpes viral infections or any viral infections as disease markers that could potentially be used for diagnosis?

A: Dr. Jason: There certainly are a number of studies that have looked at that particular possibility. I might suggest Ron Glaser, who is one of the preeminent authorities in the world. Glaser has been doing research on this for a number of years. There are also studies of early proteins that are more marked in individuals with ME/CFS than controls. Dr. Lerner has authored some of those papers with Ron Glaser. (See press releasehttp://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/chronfatigue.htm) The best studies in that area might be prospective. What you really want to do is get a large group of people, and follow them over time. If they do get an infection like mono, gather data on them prior to the infection, find out what happens to them during the infection, and follow them over time. A college age population is perfect for that. Currently, in Chicago, we have a study going on that is following 6,000 students. Hopefully, in a couple of years we will have a better association between viral titers and the illness.

A: Dr. Lea Steele: It used to be called Chronic Epstein-Barr in the 1980s, so there are many studies that looked at EBV antigens. Later HHV6 became a prominent player in the research. One of the take-home messages is that you have to look longitudinally. If you do a cross-section, you don't see the same things that you do if you look at patients over time. As the symptoms wax and wane, so do the viral titers. More recently there have been treatment studies looking at treatment of herpesviruses that have shown an improvement in patients after herpesvirus treatment.

A: Dr. Nacul: One of the attractions of herpesvirus is their ability to become latent. This could help explain fluctuations in symptoms.
___________________

Q: Dr. Green, moderator: How confident are you that we are treating one disease?

A: Dr. Lea Steele: I think that there could be different triggers and etiologic pathways that come together in the cascade of events. For example, you could have an infection, then your body responds in a certain way, and there is a cascade of immunological and neurological events. Or you could have a different inciting factor that also brings you to the same cascade of events through a different pathway. I don't think we are looking at one etiology but we could be looking at a common pathophysiology.

A: Dr. Jason: To expand on that, certainly environmental toxins could be implicated with some individuals, particularly mold. I think it is very important to differentiate what kicked off the illness, what predispositions might have occurred in genetic factors, and what is maintaining the illness now.
___________________

Q: Dr. Jon Kaiser, patient (2:48:42): Isn't it possible that the different diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS are identifying patients with different severity levels across the same disease spectrum? For instance, while all CFS patients are required to have debilitating fatigue for six months or greater not due to any other medical cause, the presence of severe sleep disturbance or PEM might be more prevalent in patients with a more severe manifestation of the same disease process. Finally, CFS/ME might be more properly considered as a disease continuum, with CFS representing a more mild or moderate stage of the disease, and ME representing a more progressed, disabling stage of the condition. The treatment implications of not excluding patients with an early or mild form of the disease are profound, especially given the data that intervening early in the disease process has more positive outcomes.

A: Dr. Jason: I would agree that severity is a critical issue as well as symptoms such as PEM, and memory and cognitive problems. There is a group called the 25% Group, which refers to the patients who are home bound or bedbound. We often don't bring severely ill patients into our studies because it's hard to get to them. There is an incredibly important push right now to include the most severely affected, because if all our research is focusing on those who are healthier, that is those who can come to clinics and research settings, then we are missing a large group of individuals. In Chicago we've been able to include patients who are home bound. What is fascinating is that when we looked at our data set, that group was 25%. It is critically important for us to focus research on that high-risk group because they might be very different from the groups we have been studying all these years.
___________________

Q: Suzanne Vernon, Scientific Director, Solve ME/CFS Initiative (2:52:09): I'd like to make a point of clarification on one of the studies that Abigail cited, and that was the post-infection fatigue study from Australia. That study included three different types of pathogens, so it wasn't limited to viruses. It included an RNA virus, a DNA virus and a rickettsial agent. The finding was that the post-infectious response was highly stereotyped, and was associated with the severity of the acute infection rather than the agent itself.
___________________

Q: Mary Ann Fletcher, researcher, NOVA (2:52:57): This question is for Dr. Nelson. How much did this review cost, and who paid the bill? Also, there seems to be a failure on the part of the committee to realize that exercise and psychosocial behavioral interventions are not nearly as expensive as trials of drugs. It should also be realized that NIH has never funded a clinical trial of a drug for ME/CFS.

A: Dr. Nelson: I'm not sure what the exact price tag is. Evidence reviews are a fairly modest, efficient form of research and I'm sure we could find that out for you. The funding was provided through the federal offices, I'm not sure how that flowed between NIH and AHRQ, so I'll have to defer to the programs officers of those two programs as to how that actually worked.
___________________

Q: Matina Nicholson, patient (2:54:58): I would like to clarify what disease we are studying, are we studying ME or CFS? Because in 2010 the CDC said CFS is not ME. Now they are educating doctors, and the doctors are confused. CFS has a lot of stigma, and chronic fatigue is just one symptom. I don't care what the name is, but it seems as if they are merging two diseases together.

A: Dr. Steele: I agree. It's a problem.
___________________

Q: Denise Lopez-Majano, parent of patients (2:56:20): My younger son got sick at the age of 12. My older son got sick at the age of 14. (At this point, she presents to the panel an informally gathered list of 140 people who got sick under the age of 18.) People get sick very young. I do not see them addressed in the evidence review, or in the agenda. In excluding pediatric cases from the evidence review, most of the work on orthostatic intolerance was also excluded. OI is a very severe problem for a number of patients. How is that going to be addressed? It's like giving the panel an incomplete puzzle.

A: Dr. Jason: There's a lot of reasons for an adult focus for this panel. But I must say that by understanding what's going on in youth, we gain an incredible vantage point that we don't get with adults. Let me tell you why. With adults you often get people who have been sick for a long time. You also get people who have tried many different types of treatments. With youth you have a chance to study the illness better, because it's the initial manifestation of the illness. I would argue that in terms of our priorities, we should be focusing on youth to really understand this illness. Another point is that people generally say that onset is in the 30s and 40s, but there is another peak, and that is in youth. This is an underinvestigated area. In reference to the other question, I think that the term CFS has done considerable harm to many patients. We ought to understand, not just illnesses, but how people perceive illnesses. Clearly, there is research out there now that names do make a difference. There are many examples of how a name can change people's attributions of what an illness is (such as MS, and AIDS).
___________________

Q: Rene Taylor, researcher (2:59:57): I will be presenting on adolescents tomorrow.

A: Robert Miller: On Denise's comment, there has to be more emphasis on the pediatric side of this.
___________________

Q: Mary Dimmock, parent of patient (3:01:24): The real elephant in the room is what disease we are talking about. Patients and experts have both endorsed the CCC because it requires PEM. This morning we heard from Dr. Nacul that there can be 163 combinations of Fukuda. We heard from Dr. Jason that as few as 25% of patients in Fukuda studies have PEM. Because of definitional issues and confusion around the name, I think it is critically important that you ask the question differently. Do Oxford and Fukuda CFS represent the same disease as ME ICC and Canadian Consensus Criteria? Until you really come to grips with that question, you can't really come to grips with the problem. So I would ask, do the definitions of CFS and ME encompass the same group of patients?

A: Dr. Nacul: The syndrome is the same. The disease may be different. Sometimes the same disease can have a huge spectrum. In lupus, for example, there are complications, there are severe cases, who will need one type of treatment, but in others there will be mild cases. We have one syndrome, but we have different subgroups. What is important is that we stratify all the people with the same syndrome.
___________________

Q: Dianne Lewis, patient (3:04:33): I've heard that there are 2-4 more females than males with this disease. I would like to know if the females were moved through the system faster. Are the men just not showing up with the symptoms, or are we only targeting women with this disease so we can stigmatize them further?

A: Dr. Steele: It appears to be a real biological fact that women have a much higher rate of chronic fatigue syndrome than men. This illness affects people of all socioeconomic statuses. We see there is a slightly higher rate among people of lower socioeconomic status and racial minorities. Lower income does not mean higher risk, however. They can actually have a lower income because they are ill. [Editor's comment: Socioeconomic status refers to an individual's or group's position within society. It depends on a combination of variables, including occupation, education, income, wealth, and place of residence. Reduced income does not necessarily affect socioeconomic status if all the other variables remain constant.]

[End morning session]
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...