Title: Understanding and treating chronic fatigue syndrome
1Understanding and treating chronic fatigue
syndrome
- Alison Wearden
- Senior Lecturer in Psychology,
- School of Psychological Sciences
- University of Manchester.
- Principal Investigator the FINE Trial
- alison.wearden_at_manchester.ac.uk
2What is chronic fatigue syndrome?
- Severe, long-lasting (more than 6 months) fatigue
which is unexplained by any medical condition - Other symptoms are usually present
- Diagnosed on basis of symptoms and history
- Several sets of diagnostic criteria exist
- A controversial condition!
3Evolving diagnostic criteria
- First modern diagnostic criteria 1988
- Since then, several further sets
- Restrictive versus inclusive?
- Early criteria specified more symptoms but did
not seem to define a more homogenous group - More symptoms associated with more psychiatric
morbidity/psychological distress - Katon Russo (1992), Arch. Int Med, 152, 1604-9.
4CFS diagnostic criteria
- Original CDC (Holmes et al 1988)
- Current CDC (Fukuda et al 1994)
- UK, Oxford (Sharpe et al 1991)
- London ME (National Task Force, 1994)
- Canadian (Carruthers et al. 2003)
5CFS and ME
- ME myalgic encephalomyelitis OR myalgic
encephalitis - Debate as to whether they are the same thing
- Lumpers and splitters
- ME different from CFS?
- Extent to which CFS distinguishable from other
functional somatic syndromes? - Wessely White, Br J Psychiat 200418595-96
6Fukuda inclusion criteria
- Self-reported persistent or relapsing fatigue
- of new and definite onset
- at least 6 months duration
- not the result of ongoing exertion
- does not improve with rest
- results in substantial reduction in previous
levels of occupational, educational, social or
personal activities
7Plus four or more of the following symptoms
- Self-reported concentration problems resulting in
substantial reduction in previous activity levels - Sore throat
- Tender neck or armpit lymph nodes
- Muscle pain
- Multi-joint pain without inflammation
- Headache of new type, pattern or severity
- Unrefreshing sleep
- Post-exertional malaise lasting gt 1 day
8Fukuda exclusion criteria
- Any active medical condition of which fatigue is
a symptom (asthma, hypothyroid) - Any unresolved previous medical condition
- History/current
- severe depression with psychotic/melancholic
features - bipolar/schizophrenia /dementia/delusional
disorders - anorexia/bulimia nervosa
- alcohol or substance abuse
- Severe obesity
9NOT excluded
- Depressive or anxiety disorders (e.g. dysthymia,
phobias, generalised anxiety) - Other medically unexplained conditions (e.g.
irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia) - Isolated and unexplained test results which are
not sufficient to suggest an alternative medical
explanation - Fukuda et al. (1994) Ann Intern Med, 121,953-959
10- Oxford criteria differ from Fukuda mainly in that
fatigue must - be the principal complaint
- affect physical and mental function
- No requirement for additional symptoms
- List of exclusions also includes organic brain
disease - Sharpe et al., 1991, J R Soc Med, 84, 118-121
11The nature and measurement of fatigue
- Fatigue a universal experience
- Multiple components
- Subjective feelings of fatigue (physical, mental,
phenomenologically complex.....) - Observable performance decrements
- Context and duration of fatigue
12Subjective vs observable fatigue
- Measures of subjective fatigue are self-report
- Often no 11 correspondence between subjective
feelings and observable decrements - Subjective does not mean not real or
imaginary!!!
13A continuum of fatigue?
- Pawlikowska et al., 1994, Br Med J, 308, 763-6
- 15000 UK adults in the community
- Fatigue scale 11 items, scores 0-33
- Fatigue is not something you have or dont have
it is something you have to some degree - In CFS, fatigue is chronic, not relieved by rest,
and not explained by the usual factors
14From Pawlikowsa et al., 1994.
15Prevalence of CFS?
- Prevalence estimates vary depending on diagnostic
criteria used, who is sampled, and how. - 1988 CDC criteria retrospectively applied,
community sample 0.01 (Price et al., 1992) - Oxford criteria, UK postal survey, 0.6 (Lawrie
et al., 1995) - Fukuda criteria, UK primary care, 2.6
16Prevalence in primary care?
- UK, patients attending GP surgery
- CF 11.6 CF no psych Dx 4.1
- CFS 1.2-2.6 CFS no psych Dx 0.5-0.7
- These figures generally higher than GP reports of
CFS - Presenting problem may not be fatigue
- Note that fatigue associated with psychiatric
disorder - Wessely et al., 1997, Am J Pub Health871449-55
17Who is fatigued?
- Walker et al., (1993) J Gen Intern Med 8436-40.
- Household sample
- Fatigue associated with
- being a woman
- never having been married
- fewer years of education
- What about social class?
18Health Lifestyle surveyCox et al.,
1987Percentage of people feeling tired all the
time during the previous month
female male
Professional, managers 27.0 17.9
Other non-manual 29.1 17.8
Skilled manual 29.2 18.6
Semi- and un-skilled manual 33.8 22.0
19- So fatigue shows a slight social gradient whereby
people of lower socio-economic status are more
likely to be fatigued - What about CFS?
- Yuppie flu an illness affecting middle class,
middle aged women?
20Conclusions from CFS/ME report
- A population prevalence of at least 0.2-0.4
- Commonest age of onset is early twenties to
mid-forties - In children commonest age of onset 13-15
- CFS/ME about twice as common in women than men
- Affects all social classes similarly
- Affects all ethnic groups
- (Report to the Chief Medical Officer of
Independent CFS/ME Working Group, 2002)
21Data taken from Euba et al., 1996, Br J
Psychiatry, 168121-6People with a diagnosis of
CFS in UK tertiary and primary care
Tertiary Primary
women 68 82
social class 1 36 3
previous psychiatric diagnosis 21 74
psychological attribution 7 58
22Is CFS a serious illness?
- CFS compared with 6 other patient groups and
population norms, using SF-36 - CFS patients scored far lower on all scales than
general population - CFS patients more functionally impaired than
acute MI patients, Type II diabetes or
hypertension - CFS patients more emotionally distressed and
impaired than all patients (including MS, CHF)
except depressed patients - (Komaroff et al (1996) Am J Med101281-9)
23Prognosis of CFS?
- Untreated, prognosis for adults is poor
- 54-94 children recover over several years
- Adults with CFS by case criteria - 10 recover
fully in 3 years - Adults with CF (not CFS) 40 recover
- (Joyce et al., 1997, Q J Med90223-233)
- Recent systematic review no more optimistic....
24Cairns Hotopf, Occupational Medicine,
20055520-31
- 28 articles included in systematic review
- Median full recovery rate was 5 (0-31)
- Median improvement rate was 40 (8-63)
- Return to work highest figure was 30
- Predictors of good response less severe
fatigue, belief in control over symptoms, not
attributing to physical cause.
25Associations of fatigue
- Fatigue is associated with distress
- CFS is associated with other medically
unexplained conditions - CFS also associated with psychiatric diagnoses
26Fatigue and distressFrom Pawlikowska et al
(1994), BMJ 308763-6
27CFS and other medically unexplained conditions
- CFS patients have elevated life-time and current
rates of - irritable bowel syndrome
- food intolerance
- fibromyalgia
- these conditions are all symptomatically defined,
share common key symptoms - Aaron Buchwald (2001) Ann Int Med134(2)S868-81
28CFS psychiatric disorder
- 40-70 CFS patients in specialist clinics have a
diagnosable psychiatric disorder, mainly
depression, also anxiety disorders - (David, 1991, Br Med Bull, 47966-88)
29Do people become depressed or distressed as a
result of CFS?
30- (Data on previous slide extracted from Wessely,
Hotopf and Sharpe (1998) Chronic Fatigue and its
Syndromes, OUP, p227) - the statement that a CFS patient has a
depressive illness is merely a statement about
their symptoms. It has no causal implications.
Kendell, 1991, Lancet. - What other possible causal explanations have
been considered?
31CFS and viruses
- Early research suggested CFS results from
persistent viral infection, e.g. Epstein-Barr
virus, herpes viruses, enteroviruses (e.g. polio) - no viral specificity (same illness after
different infections) - selected samples of CFS patients?
- current opinion - no convincing evidence that CFS
is due to persistent viral infection
32Does CFS occur more often after (viral) infection?
- Need prospective studies to answer question, as
recall bias in retrospective studies - Minor infections do not pre-dispose (Wessely et
al., 1995, Lancet, 3451333-8) - Increased risk of fatigue syndromes after
glandular fever (x5), hepatitis, meningitis - Infection as a trigger
33CFS and immune dysfunction
- The cytokine hypothesis
- Suggestion that there may be low levels of NK
cells in CFS not well supported by the evidence - Recent systematic review suggested that there is
no consistent pattern of immunological
abnormality - (Lyall, Peakman Wessely, J Psychosom Res,
20035579-90) - Scant evidence for change in immune function as
patients improve clinically more research needed
34CFS, muscles and activity levels
- fewer mitochondria, reduced oxygen transport,
post-exercise lactic acid in some studies - other studies have found near-normal aerobic
capacity, normal muscle fucntion and normal
postexercise lactate concentration - decreased muscle strength and endurance due to
de-conditioning after inactivity? - need sedentary comparisons
35- on exercise testing, CFS patients reach
subjective exhaustion before physiological many
dont reach predicted maximum heart rate - decreased activity tolerance due to central
mechanisms? - sub group of very inactive patients
- no simple relationship between activity levels
and other aspects of illness
36HPA axis
- Suggestion of an altered physiological response
to chronic stress. - Most studies show that a proportion (1/3?) of
patients exhibit mild hypocortisolism, not of
adrenal origin, and blunted HPA axis responses to
challenge. - Cause or consequence?
- Prospective studies suggest that HPA axis changes
may not be seen early in the illness - (Cleare, Endocrine Reviews, 200324236-52.)
37Neuroendocrinological changes in CFS - serotonin
- Tests of 5HT reactivity suggest different
responses in patients with primary diagnosis of
depression and patients with CFS - Enhanced serotonergic response in non-depressed
CFS patients may be inversely related to basal
cortisol levels
38Cognitive problems
- Concentration problems common, very disabling
- Early work using neuropsychological test
batteries, found few or mild objective deficits
but many methodological problems - CFS patients have difficulty with complex speeded
tasks - Cognitive complaints correlated with mood
- Mode of onset?
39The role of illness beliefs
- Some studies have found that illness beliefs
predict outcome - Strong belief that illness has a physical cause
(illness attribution) - Belief that symptoms are uncontrollable
- Belief that exacerbation of symptoms damage
40CFS and ME
- ME - myalgic encephalomyelitis -
- A medically unexplained, fatiguing condition,
with many other symptoms - Regarded as an organic illness for which the
cause has yet to be found - In Pawlikowska (1994) study, 38/15000 people in
the community stated they had ME
41ME vs other fatigue conditions
- From Pawlikowska study, matched
- 38 fatigue cases with ME explanations
- 40 fatigue cases with psychological
explanations - 38 fatigue cases with social explanations
- Measures at baseline (T1) 18 mos (T2)
- Who were most fatigued, most disabled, most
distressed? - Chalder et al. (1996) Psychol Med,26791-800
42Beliefs and impairment
- ME explanations
- most severely fatigued at T1
- most functionally impaired at T2, but
- least psychologically distressed at both times
- Social explanations
- least fatigued and
- least functionally impaired at follow up
- Beliefs drive vs reflect illness?
43- Beliefs about the cause of the illness have been
shown to predict natural prognosis and response
to treatment - But Deale et al. (1998) showed that patients who
did well on CBT changed beliefs about the meaning
of symptoms rather than about the cause of the
illness
44A cognitive behavioural model of CFS
- CFS is probably best explained in terms of a
combination of interacting factors - physiological dysregulation,
- cognitive,
- behavioural,
- emotional
- social
- These can be seen as different levels of
explanation for the illness -
45Predisposing, precipitating and maintaining
factors
- The factors which
- predispose to the development of CFS (e.g.
previous illness), - precipitate it (e.g. trauma, infection, overwork,
stress), and - maintain it (e.g. lowered activity levels,
somatic focussing) - may differ.
46Predisposing factors
- Difficult to study (need prospective studies)
- Some evidence for genetic predisposition
- Childhood experience of illness or illness in
parents? - Evidence for personality factors rather mixed and
weak
47Precipitating factors
- Certain infections (e.g. glandular fever) may act
as a trigger - May need a combination of factors (e.g. illness
episode, plus life events)
48Physiological dysregulation
- The deleterious effects of excessive rest on
healthy people include - Cardiovascular deconditioning
- reduced exercise tolerance
- muscle pain (may be delayed) on activity
- weakness, dizziness, postural hypotension
- changes to body temperature regulation
- loss of concentration and motivation
49Cognitive maintaining factors
- Fear of activity doing damage - catastrophic
beliefs - focusing on symptoms - hypervigilance - leads to
increased arousal - feeling out of control
50Behavioural maintaining factors
- avoiding activity
- doing activity in bursts
- sleeping at irregular times
- excessive resting
- monitoring of bodily symptoms
51Social and emotional factors
- Social
- feeling disbelieved
- unhelpful responses on the part of others
- unhelpful advice (e.g. to rest)
- Emotional
- demoralisation, depression, frustration
52Treatment of CFS
- The majority of treatment trials have been
carried out in specialist settings - Types of treatment tried
- pharmacological
- antidepressants
- immunological
- hydrocortisone
- anti-viral/anti-histamine/immunoglobulin
53- behavioural and cognitive-behavioural
- cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)
- graded exercise therapy (GET)
- pragmatic rehabilitation (PR)
- Systematic review by Whiting et al., (2001),
JAMA,2861360-8
54Which are the effective treatments?
- CBT most consistently effective treatment
- GET and PR also effective, but GET may be
unacceptable to patients - Hydrocortisone may improve some outcomes, but
adrenal suppression a problem - Immunoglobulin sometimes beneficial, but risks
- Antidepressants not very helpful (but may be
useful to treat depression in CFS patients)
55Which outcomes to measure?
- Fatigue
- Physical functioning by self-report and or
exercise tolerance - Return to work
- Mood symptoms
- Other symptoms
- Global improvement
- All problematical to some extent
56CBT, GET and pragmatic rehabilitation
- What are the essential components?
- Patient engagement important
- PR frontloading educational approach versus CBT
- more individualised formulations - Belief change as consequence of behaviour change
in GET? - Activity capacity vs activity tolerance?
57- CBT most effective approach to date
- But shortage of trained CBT therapists
- Many patients cant access specialist services
- Need for readily communicable, generalisable
treatments, deliverable in primary care
58Principal Investigator Dr. Alison WeardenTrial
manager Dr. Lisa Riste0161 275 2686
fine-trial_at_manchester.ac.ukwww.fine-trial.net
59- Randomised controlled trial of treatments for
chronic fatigue syndrome / ME - Patients fulfilling study criteria recruited from
Primary Care, referred by GP - Therapists are specially trained general nurses
with experience of working in primary care (not
mental health nurses)
60- Patients entering trial are randomly allocated to
ONE of three interventions - Nurse led self-help (Pragmatic Rehabilitation)
- Supportive Listening
- Treatment as usual by GP
61- Treatment period 18 weeks
- Pragmatic Rehabilitation and Supportive Listening
take place in patients own homes - Assessments by research assistant, in patients
homes, at weeks - 0 (pre-treatment)
- 20 (post-treatment)
- 70 (1 year follow up)
62- Study criteria
- Aged 18 and over
- Fulfil Oxford inclusion and exclusion criteria
(Sharpe et al., 1991) - Not currently receiving systematic
psychological/behavioural therapy for CFS/ME - Not received pragmatic rehabilitation in past
year - Currently recruiting in about 40 PCTs
- Recruiting NOW to mid 2007
63- If you come across patients who might be
interested in entering the FINE Trial, they can
ask their GPs to refer them - To refer to trial
- GPs may refer new patients/patients from lists
- Use our checklist to aid diagnosis
- Complete and fax us a referral form
- Referral must come from GP