Mary wrote: "WillowJ is correct - there are exactly two options"
Actually she is not. Here's why:
There may be 2 options but the Coalition 4 ME/CFS option is scientifically unsupportable.
Mary wrote: "1) Go with the current draft of the ICD-10-CM which places CFS under Chronic Fatigue in the Signs and Symptoms chapter.
2) Move CFS to G93.3 in the Neurological Chapter - the same as is done in the ICD-10 and the ICD-10 clinical modifications used across the world - in fact used everywhere but the U.S".
Codes match to the definitions. CFS is what it is defined to be. It is a symptom syndrome. You cannot change this by changing codes.
CFS does not define a neurological illness and there are those with CFS who do NOT have ME, so at least it should be invalid.
If you wanted to code it as neurological there are plenty of neuro categories available. Wouldn't be accurate but wouldn't have really cared. You can recode or reclassify CFS all you want but not interfere with a discreet neurological illness by throwing it with the vague fatigue mix.
Mary wrote: "As WillowJ says "What we are supporting is the step of being moved to the neurology chapter and being coded G93.3 . The coding is the only thing we can change with the coding committee. The definition and name we need to change elsewhere, with other proposals."
This is not a step, it is or it isn't. Like being a little pregnant.
Definitions change first then it should be coded accordingly. Codes should match the definitions. Seems you have it backwards. It does not work this way.
Mary wrote: "Some additional points. Placing CFS at G93.3 does not prevent doctors from using the ME diagnosis. They will still be able to use ME or PVFS as well. In fact, they could use the term ME today while ME and CFS have different codes. But they don't, at least according to the attendees at the Sept NCHS meeting. The lack of use of the term ME is clearly not related to what code it has and whether it shares a code with CFS."
They can use the term ME but will be synonymous with CFS. ME will no longer be an actual diagnosis but combined with CFS.
Actually they do use ME as a diagnosis. The fact that the, what, dozen or so people on this committee has not seen it is NOT the basis to say it does not exist. And not nearly as many will have ME as the broad inclusive vague diagnosis of CFS, so it's not a #'s game.
Mary wrote: "The vast majority of literature uses the term CFS or ME/CFS, not ME. Yes, there are likely some 'CFS' studies that look at chronic fatigue or psychiatric issues but there are many, many, many studies that use the term CFS or ME/CFS and are assessing neuroimmune dysfunction and not general chronic fatigue. Even the recent Rituximab study uses CFS in its title.
The disease being studied in this body of literature does not belong under the R codes at Chronic Fatigue."
Hmmm. Then apply your own logic. Lots of CFS studies do not include those with ME or any neurological illness so should NOT be coded to ME OR classified under neurology. This is how it works.
Literature should use the terms correctly for whatever they are describing so this is meaningless. This IS the problem which you are perpetuating rather than solving.
Mary wrote: "The logic of the statement "the CFS cohort includes some patients that just have chronic fatigue so we need to classify all CFS patients under 'Chronic Fatigue'" is fatally flawed. If anyone said that 'a cohort of cancer patients includes some patients with just fatigue, not cancer and therefore we should classify all cancer patients under fatigue', we would all think it was ridiculous. Its no different here."
Probably. But yours is just as flawed. Two wrongs do not make a right. (see above)
Thus we have the right to make the same objection to what you are doing. Even if a cohort of ME patients had fatigue they shouldn't be classified as CFS.
WillowJ is correct - there are exactly two options
1) Go with the current draft of the ICD-10-CM which places CFS under Chronic Fatigue in the Signs and Symptoms chapter.
2) Move CFS to G93.3 in the Neurological Chapter - the same as is done in the ICD-10 and the ICD-10 clinical modifications used across the world - in fact used everywhere but the U.S.
As WillowJ says "What we are supporting is the step of being moved to the neurology chapter and being coded G93.3 . The coding is the only thing we can change with the coding committee. The definition and name we need to change elsewhere, with other proposals."
Some additional points
- Placing CFS at G93.3 does not prevent doctors from using the ME diagnosis. They will still be able to use ME or PVFS as well. In fact, they could use the term ME today while ME and CFS have different codes. But they don't, at least according to the attendees at the Sept NCHS meeting. The lack of use of the term ME is clearly not related to what code it has and whether it shares a code with CFS.
- The vast majority of literature uses the term CFS or ME/CFS, not ME. Yes, there are likely some 'CFS' studies that look at chronic fatigue or psychiatric issues but there are many, many, many studies that use the term CFS or ME/CFS and are assessing neuroimmune dysfunction and not general chronic fatigue. Even the recent Rituximab study uses CFS in its title. The disease being studied in this body of literature does not belong under the R codes at Chronic Fatigue.
- The logic of the statement "the CFS cohort includes some patients that just have chronic fatigue so we need to classify all CFS patients under 'Chronic Fatigue'" is fatally flawed. If anyone said that 'a cohort of cancer patients includes some patients with just fatigue, not cancer and therefore we should classify all cancer patients under fatigue', we would all think it was ridiculous. Its no different here.