I think I would have found this an interesting study if they presented it as a study of persisting fatigue that can be relevant for conditions like ME/CFS.
As Simon pointed out, persisting fatigue was not associated with psychosocial factors (history of depression, stressful life event, early life trauma etc.) but with immune factors like IL-6 and IL-10. The interesting thing is that the between group differences in cytokines were only visible in the beginning of the IFN-α treatment, even though the fatigue persisted for months afterwards. So if these patients were to go to a fatigue clinic, doctors would not be able to find differences in these immune markers. This study however showed that there were differences at the early stage, a time point that doctors normally can’t see.
The results very much contradict everything Wessely and Sharpe have been saying about patients with chronic fatigue. I guess psychosocial factors were only measured at baseline, but there would have to be some pretty dramatic psychological change for their cognitive behavioral model to be of any relevance to these patients. I think
White Buchwald,
Jason and the
Dubbo studies previously found similar results (psychosocial factors are irrelevant) in patients with postinfectious CFS, so their model seems to have been proven wrong by the data.
I agree that it’s dubious to see persisting fatigue in this study as a proxy for ME/CFS. For one, on the Chalder fatigue scale, they showed much less fatigue (17) than patients selected by the oxford criteria (26).
There was an interesting finding regarding the kynurenine to tryptophan (KYN/TRP) ratio, which was lower in the (Oxford criteria) 54 CFS patients compared to controls. A Maes study previously found KYN/ TRP ratio to be higher in patients with depression and somatization. The oxford criteria can be misleading but maybe it’s a good idea as Anton Mayer did, to get Periante interested into researching this into more depth, with reference to Phairs metabolic trap hypothesis?