BMC Med. 2011 Jul 28;9:91. doi: 10.1186/1741-7015-9-91.
Prevalence of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in three regions of England: a repeated cross-sectional study in primary care.
Nacul LC1, Lacerda EM, Pheby D, Campion P, Molokhia M, Fayyaz S, Leite JC, Poland F, Howe A, Drachler ML.
Author information
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) or chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has been used to name a range of chronic conditions characterized by extreme fatigue and other disabling symptoms. Attempts to estimate the burden of disease have been limited by selection bias, and by lack of diagnostic biomarkers and of agreed reproducible case definitions. We estimated the prevalence and incidence of ME/CFS in three regions in England, and discussed the implications of frequency statistics and the use of different case definitions for health and social care planning and for research.
METHODS:
We compared the clinical presentation, prevalence and incidence of ME/CFS based on a sample of 143,000 individuals aged 18 to 64 years, covered by primary care services in three regions of England. Case ascertainment involved: 1) electronic search for chronic fatigue cases; 2) direct questioning of general practitioners (GPs) on cases not previously identified by the search; and 3) clinical review of identified cases according to CDC-1994, Canadian and Epidemiological Case (ECD) Definitions. This enabled the identification of cases with high validity.
RESULTS:
The estimated minimum prevalence rate of ME/CFS was 0.2% for cases meeting any of the study case definitions, 0.19% for the CDC-1994 definition, 0.11% for the Canadian definition and 0.03% for the ECD. The overall estimated minimal yearly incidence was 0.015%. The highest rates were found in London and the lowest in East Yorkshire. All but one of the cases conforming to the Canadian criteria also met the CDC-1994 criteria, however presented higher prevalence and severity of symptoms.
CONCLUSIONS:
ME/CFS is not uncommon in England and represents a significant burden to patients and society. The number of people with chronic fatigue who do not meet specific criteria for ME/CFS is higher still. Both groups have high levels of need for service provision, including health and social care. We suggest combining the use of both the CDC-1994 and Canadian criteria for ascertainment of ME/CFS cases, alongside careful clinical phenotyping of study participants. This combination if used systematically will enable international comparisons, minimization of bias, and the identification and investigation of distinct sub-groups of patients with possibly distinct aetiologies and pathophysiologies, standing a better chance of translation into effective specific treatments.
PMID:
21794183
PMCID:
PMC3170215
DOI:
10.1186/1741-7015-9-91
[Indexed for MEDLINE]
Free PMC Article
So participants seemed to be pre-selected by the NICE criteria as the PACE-trial did with the Oxford criteria.All of the participants were diagnosed with CFS in accordance with the NICE guidelines (Turnbull et al., 2007) and assigned to CBT based on a clinical assessment. At pre-treatment assessment, all participants fulfilled the NICE guidelines for the CFS criteria (having fatigue for the last 4 months), 72.7% met the Oxford criteria and 52.6% of the participants met the CDC criteria.
Perhaps it was this one?
Flo E, Chalder T. Prevalence and predictors of recovery from chronic fatigue syndrome in a routine clinical practice. Behav Res Ther. 2014 Dec;63:1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2014.08.013.
So participants seemed to be pre-selected by the NICE criteria as the PACE-trial did with the Oxford criteria.
Perhaps it was this one?
Flo E, Chalder T. Prevalence and predictors of recovery from chronic fatigue syndrome in a routine clinical practice. Behav Res Ther. 2014 Dec;63:1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2014.08.013.
So participants seemed to be pre-selected by the NICE criteria as the PACE-trial did with the Oxford criteria.
Yes but NICE 'criteria' should never be used for research anyway. Given that they are there to help medical staff diagnose potential ME then they should be broader than research criteria, though due to some researchers having used NICE in isolation previously as a research selection criteria perhaps a note needs to be added to the new guidelines warning against this practice.It is so important that the new NICE guidelines abandon their old criteria, and that studies using either the Oxford criteria or the old NICE are consigned to research landfill.
When I read this the first time, I was surprised that fewer patients met Oxford than NICE as I had assumed it would be broader. Perhaps an artifact of selecting by NICE first.
Yes but NICE 'criteria' should never be used for research anyway. Given that they are there to help medical staff diagnose potential ME then they should be broader than research criteria, though due to some researchers having used NICE in isolation previously as a research selection criteria perhaps a note needs to be added to the new guidelines warning against this practice.
When I read this the first time, I was surprised that fewer patients met Oxford than NICE as I had assumed it would be broader. Perhaps an artifact of selecting by NICE first.
yes, it lists PEM specifically as a characteristic of the fatigue. Then exacerbation after activity is one of the ten symptoms listed, of which at least one must be present. So PEM is required but exacerbation after activity is optional. Very ambiguous and confusing. No one ever seems to have explained this--including all those who found these 2007 guidelines fit for purpose.If I understand correctly, NICE says the disease is characterized by "post-exertional malaise and/or fatigue" but then lists the worsening of symptoms following exertion as optional.
Are there actually any NICE diagnostic criteria? The paper talks of referral in line with guidelines but the guidelines do not give diagnostic criteria as far as I can see. Diagnostic criteria are by and large irrelevant to clinical management.
So PEM is required but exacerbation after activity is optional. Very ambiguous and confusing. No one ever seems to have explained this--including all those who found these 2007 guidelines fit for purpose.
Doesn't Esther Crawley say she uses the NICE criteria for her research?
I understand the idea that this is supposed to be a first stage for GP's to decide ME is a possibility, and pass on for specialist diagnosis in theory. Trouble is, for a lot of us, it's all we get. Or if there is a next stage it's straight on to a bunch of therapists in a fatigue or IAPT clinic with the only doctor input being another GP.
The only reference to 'NICE criteria' in relation to ME/CFS that comes up for me on Google is a comment by the ME Association on the NICE review. If papers quoted 'NICE criteria' I would have thought that would flag up.
How about this one:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5939995/
Edited to add missing link.
I found these by using the forum search for Crawley. I'm sure there are more.