This seems an incredibly feeble rationale for not using the Canadian Consensus Criteria in research. Here's how Dr. Peterson advises physicians making an ME/CFS diagnosis:
This week Dr. Vernon is criticizing Hemispherx Biopharma for its outmoded cohort selection: There are hints of promise for Ampligen especially in the anecdotal treatment success stories but those are difficult touncover in data where all participants are lumped together (
http://www.research1st.com/2012/03/...&utm_campaign=Feed:+Research1st+(Research1st)). We know CFS is heterogeneous, she writes, adding that the company has an ethical responsibility to patients and its investors to dig as deep as possible and to conduct more sophisticated subgroup analyses as part of its next submission to the FDA.
If Hemispherx Biopharma is guilty of using crude measures...that in hindsight arent likely to discriminate...very well, then what of the CAA BioBank's ethical responsibility to us when it comes to patient selection?