Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21641846.2024.2306801
Videoconference-delivered group cognitive behavioral stress management for ME/CFS patients who present with severe PEM: a randomized controlled trial
Marcella May
Sara F. Milrad
Dolores M. Perdomo
Sara J. Czaja
Devika R. Jutagir
Daniel L. Hall
Nancy Klimas
&
Michael H. Antoni
show less
Received 03 Aug 2023, Accepted 15 Jan 2024, Published online: 25 Jan 2024
ABSTRACT
Background
In Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), post-exertional malaise (PEM) is associated with greater distress and symptoms. Cognitive Behavioral Stress Management (CBSM) has demonstrated beneficial effects for ME/CFS and may mitigate stress-related triggers of PEM. We tested a virtual CBSM intervention to increase access, and we report on its effects on stress and symptoms in ME/CFS patients with severe PEM.
Methods
Data were from a randomized controlled trial (NCT01650636) comparing 10-week videoconference-delivered group CBSM (V-CBSM, n = 75) to a 10-week Health Information active control (V-HI, n = 75) in Fukuda criteria ME/CFS patients (71 classified as highPEM, 79 lowPEM). Linear regression explored PEM-by-Treatment interactions on overall symptom frequency and intensity, perceived stress, and fatigue-specific interference and intensity, at 5-month follow-up. Logistic regression tested V-CBSM effects on 5-month PEM status. Analyses controlled for age, gender, race/ethnicity, mode of symptom onset, and time since diagnosis.
Results
The sample was middle-aged (47.96 ± 10.89 years), mostly women (87%) and non-Hispanic White (65%), with no group differences on these variables or baseline PEM. For highPEM patients, V-CBSM (versus V-HI) demonstrated medium to large effects on follow-up symptom frequency, symptom intensity, fatigue interference, and fatigue intensity (p’s < .05) and trending to significant reductions in perceived stress (p = .07). Differences were not evident for lowPEM patients. Treatment predicted follow-up PEM status at a trend (p = .058), with patients receiving V-CBSM demonstrating half the risk of highPEM classification versus V-HI.
Conclusions
V-CBSM demonstrates benefits for ME/CFS patients presenting with severe PEM and may reduce the expression of PEM over time.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01650636..
KEYWORDS:
Disclosure of interest
Michael H. Antoni discloses that he is a paid consultant for Blue Note Therapeutics and Atlantic Healthcare, two digital health software companies. He is also an inventor of cognitive behavioral stress management (UMIP-483) and receives royalties for books, treatment manuals and other products associated with this intervention. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Videoconference-delivered group cognitive behavioral stress management for ME/CFS patients who present with severe PEM: a randomized controlled trial
Marcella May
Sara F. Milrad
Dolores M. Perdomo
Sara J. Czaja
Devika R. Jutagir
Daniel L. Hall
Nancy Klimas
&
Michael H. Antoni
show less
Received 03 Aug 2023, Accepted 15 Jan 2024, Published online: 25 Jan 2024
ABSTRACT
Background
In Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), post-exertional malaise (PEM) is associated with greater distress and symptoms. Cognitive Behavioral Stress Management (CBSM) has demonstrated beneficial effects for ME/CFS and may mitigate stress-related triggers of PEM. We tested a virtual CBSM intervention to increase access, and we report on its effects on stress and symptoms in ME/CFS patients with severe PEM.
Methods
Data were from a randomized controlled trial (NCT01650636) comparing 10-week videoconference-delivered group CBSM (V-CBSM, n = 75) to a 10-week Health Information active control (V-HI, n = 75) in Fukuda criteria ME/CFS patients (71 classified as highPEM, 79 lowPEM). Linear regression explored PEM-by-Treatment interactions on overall symptom frequency and intensity, perceived stress, and fatigue-specific interference and intensity, at 5-month follow-up. Logistic regression tested V-CBSM effects on 5-month PEM status. Analyses controlled for age, gender, race/ethnicity, mode of symptom onset, and time since diagnosis.
Results
The sample was middle-aged (47.96 ± 10.89 years), mostly women (87%) and non-Hispanic White (65%), with no group differences on these variables or baseline PEM. For highPEM patients, V-CBSM (versus V-HI) demonstrated medium to large effects on follow-up symptom frequency, symptom intensity, fatigue interference, and fatigue intensity (p’s < .05) and trending to significant reductions in perceived stress (p = .07). Differences were not evident for lowPEM patients. Treatment predicted follow-up PEM status at a trend (p = .058), with patients receiving V-CBSM demonstrating half the risk of highPEM classification versus V-HI.
Conclusions
V-CBSM demonstrates benefits for ME/CFS patients presenting with severe PEM and may reduce the expression of PEM over time.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01650636..
KEYWORDS:
- myalgic encephalomyelitis
- chronic fatigue syndrome
- post-exertional malaise
- cognitive behavioral stress management
Disclosure of interest
Michael H. Antoni discloses that he is a paid consultant for Blue Note Therapeutics and Atlantic Healthcare, two digital health software companies. He is also an inventor of cognitive behavioral stress management (UMIP-483) and receives royalties for books, treatment manuals and other products associated with this intervention. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest.