Week beginning 3rd December 2018
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News and commentary on Cochrane reviews
Re-positioning of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Cochrane is considering a re-positioning of the editorial oversight of CFS/ME reviews from "Common Mental Disorders" to "Long Term Conditions and Ageing". Final decision is anticipated to be made before the end of 2018.
Statement
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Cochrane Review 'Exercise therapy for CFS'
A comment by Mark Vink with a link to his paper reanalysing this review has been added on the Cochrane website with a reply saying it will be considered as part of the current process.
Cochrane link
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Trial by Error by David Tuller
"Some Good News on Cochrane"
About Cochrane's recent rejection of the revision of the review 'Exercise Therapy for CFS'.
Article
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Cochrane Review 'Exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome (individual patient data)'
This review based on individual patient data from trials has never been published. The protocol for the review, which was published in 2014, has now been withdrawn by Cochrane. (Note - The protocol lists the PACE and FINE researchers as part of the review team).
Cochrane announcement
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News
UK CFS/ME Research Collaborative (CMRC) Executive Board November meeting minutes published. Include report on the 2018 conference. Next conference March 2020. Also discussed research policy and progress towards appointing patient representatives.
Minutes
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The International Alliance for ME (IAFME) has published a good trans-national consensus document: "Recognition, research and respect: An agenda for change in M.E", and has sent it to the World Health Organisation asking for action on improving recognition, better diagnostic criteria and support, and more biomedical research.
Document
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#ME Action "Let's start the values and policies process!"
#MEAction has started a process of consultation including polls and social media discussions on its values and policies with a view to publishing a final document in April 2019.
Thread
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USA Solve ME/CFS Initiative: "Congress to HHS: What's replacing CFSAC?''
Solve, along with #MEAction and the Massachusetts ME/CFS & FM Association asked people to contact their Senators and Member of Congress and urge them to sign a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Thread
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UK Invest in ME Research has received a donation of £57k from the John Richardson Research Group.
Thread
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USA Graded Exercise Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy are no longer recommended in the Healthwise content for ME/CFS on the Kaiser Permanente website.
Website
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Australia ME/CFS Discovery Research Network (MDRN) - A collaborative network has been established of ME researchers based at five Australian universities including Chris Armstrong's group at Melbourne University. They held a closed workshop on Saturday 8th December to present their work and discuss future collaborations.
Thread
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Australia The research group based at the National Centre for Neuroimmunology and Emerging Diseases Research at Griffith University has received a $2m donation to fund two full Professorial Research Fellowships for four years.
Article
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Australia Sasha Nimmo reports on a meeting with the Australian Government Health minister Greg Hunt, along with Prof Paul Fisher, head of microbiology at La Trobe University and Dr Heidi Nicholl, CEO of Emerge Australia. They raised the need for more funding for biomedical research.
Article
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Trial By Error by David Tuller
"BMJ and Bristol's Ethics Exemptions"
David Tuller has sent an e-mail to Dr Fiona Godlee, editorial director of BMJ, about researchers from Bristol university having used a REC letter from 2007 to exempt several studies from ethical reviews, five of them published in BMJ journals. Carol Monaghan MP, Darren Jones MP, Nicky Morgan MP and Teresa Allen from the Health Research Authorities were cc'd.
Article
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Articles and blogs
Able Magazine ''Chronically-ill 37-year-old lands first ever job, thanks to ground-breaking UK charity'' describes the experience of Victoria Clutton, who has had severe ME for many years, being helped by a charity to find part time computer programming work she can do at her own speed from home.
Article
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Occupy M.E. ''NIH's Obstacle Course to Success for ME/CFS Researchers''
Jennie Spotila discusses six obstacles for researchers in achieving allocations from NIH for research into ME.
Blog article
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ME Australia ''Meet the Scientists: Prof Sonya Marshall-Gradisnik'' by Sasha Nimmo. Briefly describes her research on ME including immunology, brain function, developing a possible biomarker, and in vitro drug testing, as well as and 'myth busting' about ME with the media and politicians.
Blog article
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BottomLineInc ''Is your Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Treatments Making You Worse?'' Article about ME with some useful, general advice for patients with MD Lucinda Bateman and Bateman Horne Center as source.
Article
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Webinars
Bateman Horne Center "New findings suggest that multiple mitochondrial mutations create susceptibility for ME/CFS" by Professor Alan Light.
Prof Light's team have studied genetic variants in both chromosomal and mitochondrial DNA relating to immunology and energy metabolism in over 17O ME patients and 120 controls. He hypothesises being homozygous for some of these increases susceptibility to non-recovery after infection or other challenges.
Webinar
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SMCI "You + M.E.: A community resource, built by the community"
Sadie Whittaker, Chief Scientific Officer of SMCI described new developments to enhance the SMCI biobank, including data collection from patients via a symptom app and wearables, home visits for blood draws from severely affected patients, and more collaboration.
Webinar
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Biomedical research
Metabolites
''Prospective Biomarkers from Plasma Metabolomics of ME/CFS Implicate Redox Imbalance in Disease Symptomatology'' by Maureen Hanson et al.
Studied 832 plasma metabolites in 32 ME patients and 19 healthy controls, all female. Abstract concludes: ''We report on 14 metabolites with differences in abundance, allowing us to develop a theory of broad redox imbalance in ME/CFS patients, which is consistent with findings of prior work in the ME/CFS field.''
Paper
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Epigenetics
''Genome-epigenome interactions associated with ME/CFS'' by McGowan et al.
Studied DNA methylation profiles of T-cells and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from 61 ME/CFS patients and 48 controls. The abstract concludes that their findings ''suggest several genetic and epigenetic elements potentially involved in the mechanisms of disease in ME/CFS.''
Paper
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University of Sussex
''Persistent fatigue induced by interferon-alpha: A novel, inflammation-based, proxy model of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'' by Pariate et al
Abstract labelled 'accepted for publication'.
Higher levels at baseline and after treatment of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL 10 found in those who developed persistent fatigue. Also studied cytokines and kynurenine to tryptophan ratios in this cohort, CFS patients and controls.
Abstract
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Other research
Journal of Biological Physics and Chemistry
''Bodily distress syndrome: Concerns about scientific credibility in research and implementation'' by Diane O'Leary.
BDS is a construct without supporting evidence. It brings to the fore questions about the quality of research in psychosomatic medicine, including the PACE trial. This has implications for WHO classifications of diseases. O'Leary provides a detailed analysis of the problems.
Paper
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Chronic Illness
''Patients’ hopes for recovery from ME/CFS: Toward a “recovery in” framework'' by Jason et al.
Semi-structured interviews with 10 women aged over 50 with ME/CFS aimed to understand how patients conceptualize the definition and possibility of recovery. The abstract highlights 'personal empowerment' and 'living a fulfilling life'.
Paper
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Journal of Translational Medicine
''Increased risk of CFS following burn injuries'' by Tsai et al
Used data from the Taiwan National Health Insurance system for a large retrospective study that found a higher risk of subsequently developing CFS in people who had suffered burns.
Paper
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BMJ Paediatrics Open
''Adolescent’s descriptions of fatigue, fluctuation and payback in CFS/ME: interviews with adolescents and parents'' by Crawley et al.
Described as part of a larger study. Based on semi-structured interviews with 21 children and their parents. Concludes that some adolescents with CFS are sicker than others. No new insights. Not a recommendation.
Article
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Patient Education and Counselling
''Could disease labelling have positive effects? An experimental study exploring the effect of the CFS label on intended social support'' by Noble et al.
University students responding to a questionnaire based on hypothetical situations. Not a recommendation.
Article
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Coming events
SMCI Webinar Thursday 13th December
''ME/CFS Involves Brain Inflammation: Results from a Ramsay Pilot Study'' with Jarred Younger.
Register for webinar
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