Guest guest Posted August 29, 2007 Report Share Posted August 29, 2007 Part -2 (Comments on the NICE Guideline on " CFS/ME " ) May be reposted The Guideline acknowledges the Canadian Consensus Definition yet ignores its message; Dr Bruce Carruthers, Fellow of the Canadian Royal College and principle lead of the international expert team that produced the highly respected ME/CFS Clinical Case Definition, states in the Overview: " A hypothesis underlying the use of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) for ME/CFS is based on the premise that the patient's impairments are learned due to wrong thinking and 'considers the pathophysiology of CFS to be entirely reversible and perpetuated only by the interaction of cognition, behaviour, and emotional processes. The patient merely has to change their thinking and their symptoms will be gone. According to this model, CBT should not only improve the quality of the patient's life, but could be potentially curative'. Supporters suggest that 'ideally general practitioners should diagnose CFS and refer patients to psychotherapists for CBT without detours to medical specialists as in other functional somatic syndromes'. Proponents ignore the documented pathophysiology of ME/CFS, disregard the reality of patient's symptoms, blame them for their illness and withhold medical treatment. Their studies have often included patients who have chronic fatigue but excluded more severe cases as well as those who have other symptoms that are part of the clinical criteria of ME/CFS. Further, their studies fail to cure or improve physiological impairments… " Research that indicates potential dangers of the recommended management regime was ignored Research that directly impinges on the safety of the NICE recommendations for graded exercise (which was available to the GDG) was also excluded from consideration and / or ignored. This was a serious omission. The AGREE Instrument (Appraisal of Guidelines Research and Evaluation Instrument) with which NICE is obliged to comply in the formulation of all its Guidelines is specific: " The health benefits, side effects and risks should be considered when formulating the recommendations " . Of particular significance is an important paper that was published in 2005 (well within the 2004 – 2007 life of the GDG's deliberations); that paper demonstrated that exercising muscle is a prime contender for excessive free radical generation, free radicals being highly reactive molecules which can cause damage to the cells of the body. Incremental exercise challenge induces a prolonged and accentuated oxidative stress, and existing evidence has shown a good correlation between muscle pain thresholds on exercise with various blood markers of oxidative injury (Oxidative stress levels are raised in chronic fatigue syndrome and are associated with clinical symptoms. Gwen Kennedy, Vance Spence, Jill Belch et al. Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2005:39:584-589). The recommended graded exercise plan specifies that the intensity of GET should be incrementally increased, leading to aerobic exercise. This is in direct contradiction to international ME/CFS experts such as Professor Cheney from the US, who in 1999 explained why aerobic exercise should not be used: " The most important thing about exercise is not to have them do aerobic exercise. I believe that even progressive aerobic exercise, especially in phase one and possibly in other phases, is counter-productive. If you have a defect in the mitochondrial function and you push the mitochondria by exercise, you kill the DNA " (Lecture given in Orlando, Florida, February 1999, at the International Congress of Bioenergetic Medicine). Professor Cheney has made a particular study of cardiac anomalies in patients with ME/CFS since the 1980s and emphasises the unassailable tenet that if metabolic demand (as in aerobic exercise) exceeds the impaired cardiac output of ME/CFS patients, even very briefly, the result is death. This information was submitted to NICE and was available to the GDG, including the evidence that 82% of ME/CFS patients have abnormal cardiac impedence and that patients have a high heart rate but a low cardiac output caused by a problem with energy production, with ischaemic changes in the inner ventricular wall. If a patient has abnormal oxygen consumption, muscles will not have enough oxygen and exercise will result in relapse. Patients' ability to work is impaired, as shown unequivocally by an abnormal serial exercise stress test which is 100% objective. This information was ignored by the GDG but impacts upon the recommended management regime. (For more information on Professor Cheney's cardiac work in ME/CFS, see http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/Klimas_Wessely_NICE_-_Redefining_CBT.htm and for a summary of current research on the cardiovascular anomalies that have been demonstrated in ME/CFS, see http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/Facts_from_Florida.htm ). Professor Pinching advised adapting the level of activity to levels that can include an incremental increase (page 87 of comments on chapter 1). Pinching also referred to " the commonest co-morbidities that are well-documented in the literature " as being depression and anxiety, yet the literature shows such levels to be no higher in ME/CFS than in disorders such as multiple sclerosis. All these studies and conference reports have direct bearing on the safety of the recommended management regimes and as such, under the terms of the obligatory AGREE Instrument, there can be no credible excuse for NICE to have ignored them. In endeavouring to justify CBT/GET for use in ME/CFS, the Guideline states: " an evidence-based psychological therapy is used in many health settings, including cardiac rehabilitation and diabetes management " . This claim has been investigated by numerous people and has been found to be inaccurate, since unlike in ME/CFS, it is used as an adjunct where necessary, not as the first-line treatment of choice across the board. In no other medical disorder apart from ME/CFS are patients offered exercise as the only " treatment " option. Although it is clear that the type of CBT now recommended by the Guideline differs from Wessely's original prescription, it cannot be known whether the CFS Centres set up by Pinching will continue to employ Wessely's version (about which there are so many adverse reports – see the RiME collations) or the more supportive version as outlined in the Guideline, nor is it known who will re-educate and monitor the existing staff in these Centres, which is a matter of real and justified concern. The Guideline refers (on page 186) to the Wessely School mantra of " predisposing, precipitating and perpetuating factors in CFS/ME " as a key area upon which future research should be focused: unless this model of research is applied to all other medical conditions, it is inappropriate for this special pleading to apply only in the case of " CFS/ME " and reflects the Wessely School's discredited assertion that " CFS/ME " is a " faulty belief system " that can be " corrected " by CBT and aerobic exercise. The reality is that more than one Coroner has accepted ME/CFS as a cause of death. In line with the Wessely School beliefs, the Guideline restricts investigations that may be performed on those with ME/CFS and it also stipulates that thyroxine must not be administered to such patients, which ignores the evidence of thyroid dysfunction and the fact that basic NHS tests are too blunt to pick up this serious dysfunction. The Guideline states that no research evidence was found to support the experience of some people with " CFS/ME " that they are more intolerant of drug treatments and suffer more severe adverse side effects. There is an abundance of evidence (though not RCTs) from Professor Marty Pall in the US explaining the exact mechanism of such hypersensitivity and it is notable that the Guideline Development Group accepted anecdotal evidence when it suited their aim (for example, acceptance of the " boom and bust " concept, for which there is no RCT evidence), but rejected it in other places (such as Professor Pall's evidence), which is inconsistent. One patient representative on the GDG who resigned just prior to publication of the Guideline is on record as stating: " I do believe that the guideline has not fully taken into account the patient and biomedical evidence, because if it had, then it would not be recommending the widespread use of CBT and GET. It is said that patient evidence is not given high weighting due to it being biased " . If this is true, then it is another illustration of a clear breach of the AGREE Instrument to which NICE is obliged to conform. The Guideline recommends domiciliary support for the severely affected, yet in a climate of unprecedented financial restrictions offers no reassurance that funds will be available to implement such support. The NICE Guideline contains examples of carelessness, for instance, the date of reference 50 is given as being " 1921 " when it should be " 2005:19:21:38-43 " , as well as other incorrect dates. Another striking example of carelessness is to be found in the table of Stakeholders' Comments and GDG Responses, where inexcusably, many comments from one respondent have been attributed to others, for example, comments submitted by LocalME have been attributed to both Newport Pharmaceuticals Ltd and to North Staffordshire Combined Healthcare NHS Trust. Evidence that the GDG has not conceded to all the demands of the Wessely School The Wessely School clearly endeavoured to get its own way (see quotations below from the responses submitted by Simon Wessely and White to the Questionnaire) but on a number of fronts they did not succeed. The Wessely School got all its own way with the 1996 Joint Royal Colleges' Report and were infuriated that patients' views were given such weight in the 2002 Chief Medical Officer's Working Group report; this time, NICE seems to have treated them on the same basis as any other stakeholder among many, to the extent that this NICE Guideline now includes the Canadian definition, in full, over several pages. That is a significant step forwards. Specifically, the NICE Guideline does not state that ME/CFS is a behavioural disorder, a psychiatric illness, a somatic/functional disorder, and illness belief, depression or anxiety. It emphasises the need for an individualised management plan that should be provided in ways suitable for the individual, and it highlights the importance of shared decision-making between healthcare professionals and patients. Section 5.5 of the draft Guideline stated: " a view held by a few individuals on the GDG was that CFS/ME could not be identified or managed unless a broader view was taken " . This " broader view " was that a " biopsychosocial " approach to ME was required, lumping it together with other states of chronic " fatigue " and thereby affording psychiatrists the right to be involved in the care of all ME patients, regardless of whether those psychiatrist were needed or wanted. One of the patients' representatives (BRAME) challenged the fact that if only " a few " members of the GDG group held that view, why was their opinion allowed to dominate the recommended management regime? This seems to have forced the GDG into a remarkable admission: the Guideline does not accept any of the favoured theories of the Wessely School: " In considering the explanation for CFS/ME, we have followed the report of the Gibson Inquiry, which accepts that there is insufficient evidence to fully substantiate any of the current theories of causation, and that more high quality biomedical research is needed " . The conclusions of the Gibson Report were concise: * The Canadian Criteria are " a useful contribution in defining ME/CFS " * " The opposing opinions about the nature of the disease are very problematic " * The Gibson Report refers to " The inability of some in the medical profession to separate (other disorders) from genuine ME/CFS patients " * " ME/CFS have been defined by the World Health Organisation as neurological illnesses " * " In the UK, precedence has been given to psychological definitions " * " Regarding CFS/ME as a physical illness has been marginalized by the psychological school of thought " . Professor Baker, Chair of the Guideline Development Group, appeared to express exasperation at the polarised views about the nature of the disorder, saying in the Preface to the Guideline: " A further problem created by the lack of adequate research evidence is the sometimes widely divergent and hotly contested beliefs about CFS/ME, including those about its cause. In developing the Guideline, we kept in mind the overall goal of improving care for people with CFS/ME, with the patient's preference and views firmly in the driving seat. Rather than aligning ourselves with one or other perspective on CFS/ME, we have sought to provide practical guidance for professionals and patients " . Quotations from the responses to the Questionnaire by some Wessely School members Illustrations from Wessely School members demonstrate their insistence that " CFS/ME " is a behavioural disorder. Extracts from the submission by Wessely's Chronic Fatigue Research Unit at King's College, London: " We do not agree with what is written about the care of those with severe disability and CFS, and the best treatment options for that group. For example, it is stated that 'patient experience suggests that some of these interventions may be harmful or ineffective'. We would argue on the basis of our extensive experience that what is being reported in these negative accounts is rarely either CBT or GET. It would be more accurate to state that 'some patients' rather that 'patient experience', since the latter seems to imply that it is all patient experience. It seems likely that the same approach that works in outpatients would also be successful in severely affected " . " We disagree with the numerous statements in the guidelines that patients in the published CBT/GET trials are 'mild to moderate'. Nearly all of the published studies came from secondary or tertiary care. One would expect that these will be patients with high morbidity and the data shows that to be the case " . (One can only wonder how Wessely can convince himself that people who are well enough to attend an outpatient department can be described as " severely affected " ). " Overall, this is strong evidence that the published work on CBT and GET concerns those with chronic illness and substantial disability. This needs to be addressed since if this is not corrected, there is a danger than NICE will inadvertently give credence to the oft expressed but erroneous view that CBT/GET only works in those who do not have 'real ME', those who have psychiatric disorders, or who are not very disabled " . This submission goes on to assert that there is evidence of emotional instability assessed 25 years before the onset of " CFS/ME " and that this " adds to the existing evidence that personality and depression increase the risk of CFS " and asserts " the statement on page 90 (of the draft Guideline) should reflect this new and definitive research " . The submission states: " We note the omission of any reference to what is now a well cited and accepted body of research on the role of psychiatric disorders and CFS, which is definitely of interest to clinicians considering treatment options. It is sometimes said that depression or anxiety is merely a consequence of disability. However, there is now a well-replicated body of evidence that shows this not to be the case. It has been established that the rates of psychiatric disorder in the CFS patients are too high to be explained as a simple reaction to disability. Such is the consensus in this area that studies are no longer being performed " . Commenting on page 134 of the draft Guideline which related to Wessely's own paper in the Lancet (1999:354:936-939) 'CFS has been described as part of a broader condition that includes a range of disorders including fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome etc', this submission states: " True, and this will be well received by many doctors, since it reflects their views and emphasises ways in which we can increase our knowledge of one 'syndrome', to which the GDG response was that it accepts the conclusions of the Gibson Report. The submission from White's Chronic Fatigue Services at St Bartholomew's Hospital said: " We think it illogical to mix symptoms and disability. We do not think the evidence supports separating severe from very severe. We emphasise that CBT and GET can also help patients who do not wish to return to normal health " . " There are too many symptoms included, which will encourage practitioners to attribute symptoms such as palpitations to CFS/ME " . " The (draft) guideline emphasises the importance of investigations, with little guidance about examining the patient. Examination should include a proper mental state examination. The guideline could usefully provide guidance about illness insights and beliefs " . " The emphasis here would be appropriate for someone suffering from an incurable chronic disease, which CFS/ME is most often not " . The GDG response was terse: " The Guideline Development Group had to balance a positive outlook with the recognition that some people will not recover " . " Equipment and aids may hinder recovery as much as help it " , to which the GDG response was: " The view of the GDG is that equipment can help to maintain independence " . " The advice regarding drug treatment should (not imply that) neuropathic pain and IBS are part of CFS/ME " , to which the GDG response was: " The section has been revised to reflect comments from stakeholders " . " Weight loss is not part of CFS/ME at any age " , to which the GDG response was: " The view of the GDG is that some children may lose weight and require nutritional support " . " Sometimes acting as an intermediary between a patient and employer may encourage dependence rather than fostering recovery " , to which the GDG's response was: " Facilitating a dialogue with employers about adjustments to work often helps to remove barriers for the patient " . " Referral to specialist care should depend on the severity of the disability, not severity of symptoms " , to which the GDG replied: " The GDG considered the wording to be appropriate " . Quoting from the draft Guideline that said: " We need reliable information on prevalence and incidence of this condition to plan services " , White's response was: " Do we really? " , to which the GDG replied: " The GDG considered the research recommendations to be appropriate " . As the above illustrations show, the Wessely School did not succeed in all its demands. In the light of this submission, it is noted that on 16th August 2007, St Bartholomew's CNCC (Clinical Network Co-ordinating Centre) issued the following Statement: " We can confirm that Barts CNCC does not consider CFS/ME to be a psychiatric illness " . Evidence that the Wessely School knows that CBT and GET provide no lasting benefit in ME/CFS Despite their ruthless determination to implement CBT and GET across the board for people with ME/CFS, Wessely School members have previously acknowledged that there is no long-term benefit from CBT, for example: * at the American Association for CFS (AACFS, now the IACFS/ME) International Conference at Cambridge, Massachussets on 10-11th October 1998, Wessely School psychiatrist Sharpe went on record stating that the benefits of CBT faded with time * in a personal communication dated 12th October 1998 to Professor Fred Friedberg, Sharpe stated about his often-quoted 1996 study (BMJ 1996:312:22-26) that outcome measures have begun to decline 17 months after treatment termination (quoted in JCFS 1999:5:3/4:149-159) * on 3rd November 2000, Sharpe again confirmed " There is a tendency for the difference between those receiving CBT and those receiving the comparison treatment to diminish with time due to a tendency to relapse in the former " (www.cfs.inform/dk ) * the very modest benefit in only some patients who have undergone CBT has been shown to last for only 6-8 months and " observed gains may be transient " (Long-term Outcome of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Versus Relaxation Therapy for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A 5-Year Follow-Up Study. Deale, Trudie Chalder, Simon Wessely et al. Am J Psychiat 2001:158:2038-2042) * in his Summary of the 6th AACFS International Conference in 2003, Lapp, Associate Clinical Professor, Duke University and Director, Hopkins-Hunter Centre, NC, stated about CBT that Dr Clauw (who had studied 1,092 patients) found that at 3 months there were modest gains, but at follow-up at 6 and 12 months, those modest gains were lost (this being an example of " evidence-based " medicine) * Wessely himself is on record stating that CBT doesn't work for all: in his Editorial (JAMA 19th September 2001:286:11) he stated that CBT and GET are only " modestly effective " and that neither is " remotely curative " * Wessely is also on record as stating: " It should be kept in mind that evidence from randomised trials bears no guarantee for treatment success in routine practice. In fact, many CFS patients, in specialised treatment centres and the wider world, do not benefit from these interventions " (The act of diagnosis: pros and cons of labelling chronic fatigue syndrome. Marcus JH Huibers and Simon Wessely. Psychological Medicine 2006:36: (7): 895-900). It should not be forgotten that after a course of CBT, there is no objective evidence of improvement (only subjective) and that the transient gains may be illusory (Interventions for the Treatment and Management of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – A Systematic Review. Whiting P, Bagnall A-M et al. JAMA 2001:286:1360-1368). Some initial responses to the final Guideline Action for ME issued a Statement supporting the Guideline: " We believe that the guidelines represent an opportunity to drive forward the improvement of services for those with ME and it is for that reason we support them " . AfME did note that the Guidelines still contain flaws and " are still influenced by the history of research in this area, which has produced findings that can not be generalised to all people with ME and which therefore once again place an over-emphasis on cognitive behavioural therapy and graded exercise therapy " . The response of the Northern Ireland ME Association noted its disappointment that these new guidelines bring us no nearer a cure, and noted that the NHS in Northern Ireland is poorly equipped to implement these new national guidelines. Invest in ME noted that the reasons why the draft Guidelines were almost universally condemned was due to the poor quality of analysis and their lacking ability to serve the needs of people with ME and their families, and that initial reaction to the final version can be summed up as continued dismay that NICE has again highlighted CBT and GET as the most effective forms of management. Ellen Goudsmit PhD commented on the confusion, the bias and the inconsistencies in the Guideline; she noted the dominance of the CBT School; the promotion of unproven techniques such as activity management; the lack of recognition of subgroups of " CFS " ; the lack of differentiation of ME or CFS from somatisation disorder and the recommendation that CBT should be offered to mild cases, given NICE's interest in saving money, when counselling and self-help may be enough. Short of Anglia ME Action quoted Dr Myhill on the central problem of ME/CFS being mitochondrial failure resulting in poor production of ATP, which shows that CBT, GET and antidepressants are irrelevant in addressing the root cause of this disorder; he feared that scientific and democratic integrity are now dead in the UK, having been sold out by the Government which has placed corporate interests over and above the interests of patients and he commented: " To be ill and abused for it is nothing less than a living hell " . Greensmith PhD: replying to an article in the Daily Mail on 23rd August 2007 which said: " Well thought–out exercise regimes can help patients overcome the debilitating symptoms, although there used to be resistance from ME campaigners to psychiatric approaches " , Greensmith wrote: " The NICE report with its lax terminology and its reliance on questionable experimental designs and interpretations, produced by a disproportionate number of advisers with a psychiatric backgrounds – already in favour of and using these treatments – was much too narrow to make any material difference to ME patients. ME sufferers will not, in practice, be treated as equal partners. Things will not change until the biomedical research supported by appropriate funding, comes first " Overall assessment of the Guideline Overall, this Guideline has accepted much that was submitted by the ME/CFS community. It was, however, limited by the narrowness of its remit: as in all reports about ME/CFS commissioned to support policy, the remit seems to have been deliberately constructed in a way that would achieve the outcome desired by the Wessely School, which meant that a significant amount of published biomedical literature was not considered by the GDG, which is to the continuing detriment of patients. On the issue of guidance about diagnosis, there can be little doubt that the Guideline has failed those with ME/CFS (although it does recommend biomedical research and does recommend the need for informed discussion around diagnosis). The ignoring of such a significant published body of biomedical abnormalities when those abnormalities clearly assist in diagnosis is indefensible, especially as that body of evidence would be invaluable in distinguishing between ME/CFS and behavioural disorders. On the issue of " treatment " , the Guideline does highlight the need for a range of treatment options to be discussed. Key questions remain. Given that the notion of ME/CFS as a mental disorder has been so assiduously and successfully established in the perception of healthcare professionals and agencies of the State over the last 20 years by the Wessely School (and when something is repeated often enough, it becomes regarded as fact), and given that it is perception that influences people, how much notice will healthcare professionals who are deeply mired in Wessely School misinformation about ME/CFS take of the useful parts of the Guideline? Will they simply ignore it and carry on as at present, with many of them dismissing ME/CFS as non-existent or else as a behavioural disorder? Will the Medical Royal Colleges accept the Guideline? It is, by definition, only a guideline. The Wessely School did not accept the findings of the 1994 National Task Force Report and the result was the Joint Royal Colleges' Report of 1996. What will be their response to this Guideline? Three members of the Wessely School ( White, Cleare and Trudie Chalder) have already made known their plans for future CBT studies in " CFS/ME " to a group of MPs (the Gibson Inquiry) and their belief that CBT can reverse the HPA axis dysfunction seen in ME/CFS. The Wessely School has already obtained funding for their " Biomedical Research Unit " at the Institute of Psychiatry, which is funding a project called " Emotional Processing in Psychosomatic Disorders " . The Section of General Hospital Psychiatry at the IoP was advertising for a psychology graduate to work on the project, which will " involve working across the Section on Eating Disorders and the Chronic Fatigue Research and Treatment Unit " . The closing date for applications was 13th July 2007. The job reference was 07/R68. Applicants were informed that " The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research and Treatment Unit receives about 400 referrals per year. The multi-disciplinary team assesses and treats patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and carries out research into both causes and treatment efficacy. Anorexia Nervosa (AN) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) are classical psychosomatic disorders where response to social threat is expressed somatically. Aberrant emotional processing is a strong candidate as a maintaining factor for these disorders. The post holder will work under the immediate supervision of Professors Ulrike Schmidt (AN) and Trudie Chalder (CFS) " . Other IoP job advertisements for " CFS " that can be found on the website include one for a " Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapist " for the Chronic Fatigue Research and Treatment Unit, accountable to Professor Trudie Chalder, which requires the applicant to possess " the ability to maintain a high degree of professionalism in the face of highly emotive problems, verbal abuse and the threat of physical abuse " and " an understanding of the needs of people with mental health problems " . Will anything really change for hapless ME/CFS patients as a result of this NICE Guideline? The end Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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