Hi Tina RE,
I think you may not be clear on what this 1a proposal is about
We are not asking the CDC to start over at all, and this has nothing to do with the CDC coming up with a new criteria.
It is a small separate proposal that will cost a very small amount and would only take a few months to achieve.
This proposal is that a small Independent panel of diagnostic experts are set up, (Independent so the CDC does not have total control of it) this only needs to be between 5-10 expert diagnosticians, the CDC could recommend a doctor or two for this panel if they wished.
The term diagnostic expert is a term that the medical world will understand, it means someone who is not just a doctor, but someone who has spent many extra years training in all the hard to diagnose diseases and has then been given an extra degree as specialist in diagnostics. I know it’s just a TV show, but if you are familiar with the show House, his character is exactly this, a specialist in diagnostics, who because of his training and vast knowledge of other diseases is given all the hard to diagnoses cases. So this proposal is for a panel of real world doctors like that to be set up to write a complete guide of what all the diseases that can cause ME, CFS symptoms are. And to write a easy to understand guide for less well trained doctors to follow which will explain not just what these diseases are but the diagnostic process for investigating these kinds of patients, what tests need doing and in what order, and to explain or provide references to the information that explains how to investigate the hard to diagnoses conditions, because the average doctor is not trained in this and therefore does not know how to do this.
So the aim is that what will be achieved at the end of this being created is that we end up with something like this which is a differential diagnostic list and the testing procedure to find the cause of Fever of unknown origin http://www.aafp.org/afp/2003/1201/p2223.html except for CFS, ME.
All other diseases have these kinds of differential and testing guides, but CFS.ME doesn’t, but we urgently need one, because what doctors have to guide them in the US is the CDC list, which would be lucky to rule out 30% of the diseases that can cause these symptoms, which is why there are so many misdiagnosed, and they end up in the research and corrupt the results so we still after 25 years have no idea of what is really going on with CFS, ME.
As Dr Mirza says
I have yet to see a diagnostic criteria list for fatigue that is complete. This unfortunately includes the diagnostic criteria for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome issued by CDC. No wonder we keep citing CFS as a cause for fatigue when we ourselves fail to pinpoint the diagnosis.
So how long would this take, working on the assumption that the proposal is accepted and is done seriously. A list of possible candidates would be made and asked if they would like to be involved, this will take a few weeks.
They then will read and compare the literature on testing and differential diagnosis lists. Such as the CDCs list the NICE list the IACFS/ME list, the CCC list, Drs Mirzas and Hydes articles, what is in the various medical text books on diseases that cause long term fatiguing conditions etc. because there is very little of this, even if they were still doing their normal jobs they could do this in a week.
They will then add their own expert knowledge to this information and make their recommendations. Because they can communicate through email and video conferencing, there is no need for them to even meet each other.
What the expert diagnosticians come up with can then be written into the form of a complete guide which can then be made available to all doctors. We are stating that the likes of Drs Hyde and Mirza and the writers of the IACFS/ME and CCC be at least consulted in this process because they have a vast amount of clinical experience in finding the misdiagnosed amongst CFS. ME patients and this knowledge will be very useful for writing the guide, some of the other experts diagnosticians may not have the same amount of clinical experience with these kinds of patients because they have not focused their careers on investigating CFS, ME patients .
So that is what we are proposing, it is urgently needed, will cost very little money and can be completed in a matter of months not years.
You said
The CDC is already doing 1a. They have seven physicians, including Bateman, Klimas, Peterson, Kogelnick and others coming up with a new criteria. Of course, it will include how to exclude other diseases.
The CDC has an appalling track record on this, I appreciate that if people are not aware of what kind of testing is really needed to rule out all other diseases is, then it can be hard to see the faults in the CDC list, but believe me it is atrocious! Just compare the IACFS/ME list which is far from complete with the CDC list.
You mention Bateman, Klimas, Peterson, Kogelnick, now I mean no offence to these doctors I’m just stating a fact, they are normal doctors, they do not have specialist degrees in diagnostics. Therefore they do not have the training or knowledge that will allow them to come up with as complete a list as four expert diagnosticians would. A lot of the conditions that can be misdiagnosed as CFS.ME are rare and hard to diagnose, normal doctors do not get trained in this, so they don’t have the knowledge to write a complete list.
Drs Hyde and Mirza who have specialist training in finding hard to diagnose diseases, report finding 80-90% misdiagnosis rates amongst their CFS, ME patients. And have frequently let the medical community know this, yet a large number of CFS/ME clinicians who do not have this kind of specialist training have never in their entire careers investigating CFS,ME patients even mentioned it.
The CDC certainly shouldn’t be left to do this job, and once again no respect to the doctors you mentioned and I have a great respect for their dedication to the patient community, but they do not have the specialist training that is required to do this job in the manner that it needs doing.
So this proposal is to do something totally different to what the CDC is doing so it won’t affect that at all. All it is, is a plan to get the cream of the crop of expert diagnosticians to write for the first time ever a complete guide to ruling out other diseases that get mistaken for CFS and ME, it will not take long to do and the costs will be minimal.
This guide can then be made available to doctors to use which will help vast numbers of people get their right diagnosis instead of being wrongly diagnosed as having CFS, this guide can be used by researchers to make sure that people with other diseases don’t end up in the research and stuff up the results!
RE
Bob is in the UK and I’m in New Zealand, why should we know about what government agencies in the US can do?? We have said that we don’t know and are waiting for advice on this! However I doubt that your information is completely accurate because there are testing and treatment options that are compulsory such as if a patient shows signs of having cancer and the doctor doesn’t test for it they well be hauled before the medical authorities and have a strong chance of being struck of, so there has to be fixed guidelines somewhere as to what doctors should be doing in certain situations, otherwise no one would have any control over them.
1b may have to be completely rewritten, nobody has provide bob our I with the correct information, so we cannot proceed with an accurate final version, but the basic jist is the guide will be made available to all doctors and whatever means there are available to request that doctors use it, will be used.
Even if we can just have it on the CDC website, then a patient can ask a doctor to use it, if they don’t the patient can sack the doctor and get a new one that will, plus it will help researchers who almost never have specialist degrees in diagnostics to make sure that they have pure cohorts.
RE ‘
RE
This guide is needed urgently if all other diseases are not ruled out, then nobody has a clue if the patients have ME, or something else, which makes researching the mixed cohorts created by not ruling out all other diseases a complete and absolute waste of time, this is what has happened for the last 25 years which is why all the research is so contradictory. It is for this reason that creating a complete differential and testing guide is the first thing on the list, because nothing else will work without it.
All the best
The CDC is already doing 1a. They have seven physicians, including Bateman, Klimas, Peterson, Kogelnick and others coming up with a new criteria. Of course, it will include how to exclude other diseases. Before making this recommendation, I suggest finding out more about what they are doing and then if you want to influence what details are included, you can make a recommendation to that effect. I can't tell if you just don't know what they are doing or if you are saying what they are doing is different than what you want and so you want them to start over. It's taken a year for them to get to this point in the process. This is U.S. government. So they had to put out the call, ask for bids, and then go through the process of choosing which ones will participate and get them to sign the contract. Now, they are getting data. And even one year into that process, Dr. Ermias Belay is saying it will be two more years before completion.
If you guys want the CDC to start over again, then we are looking at another 3 years from the point they start. And getting them started might mean their finding the funding for it, which may add another year.
I think you may not be clear on what this 1a proposal is about
We are not asking the CDC to start over at all, and this has nothing to do with the CDC coming up with a new criteria.
It is a small separate proposal that will cost a very small amount and would only take a few months to achieve.
This proposal is that a small Independent panel of diagnostic experts are set up, (Independent so the CDC does not have total control of it) this only needs to be between 5-10 expert diagnosticians, the CDC could recommend a doctor or two for this panel if they wished.
The term diagnostic expert is a term that the medical world will understand, it means someone who is not just a doctor, but someone who has spent many extra years training in all the hard to diagnose diseases and has then been given an extra degree as specialist in diagnostics. I know it’s just a TV show, but if you are familiar with the show House, his character is exactly this, a specialist in diagnostics, who because of his training and vast knowledge of other diseases is given all the hard to diagnoses cases. So this proposal is for a panel of real world doctors like that to be set up to write a complete guide of what all the diseases that can cause ME, CFS symptoms are. And to write a easy to understand guide for less well trained doctors to follow which will explain not just what these diseases are but the diagnostic process for investigating these kinds of patients, what tests need doing and in what order, and to explain or provide references to the information that explains how to investigate the hard to diagnoses conditions, because the average doctor is not trained in this and therefore does not know how to do this.
So the aim is that what will be achieved at the end of this being created is that we end up with something like this which is a differential diagnostic list and the testing procedure to find the cause of Fever of unknown origin http://www.aafp.org/afp/2003/1201/p2223.html except for CFS, ME.
All other diseases have these kinds of differential and testing guides, but CFS.ME doesn’t, but we urgently need one, because what doctors have to guide them in the US is the CDC list, which would be lucky to rule out 30% of the diseases that can cause these symptoms, which is why there are so many misdiagnosed, and they end up in the research and corrupt the results so we still after 25 years have no idea of what is really going on with CFS, ME.
As Dr Mirza says
I have yet to see a diagnostic criteria list for fatigue that is complete. This unfortunately includes the diagnostic criteria for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome issued by CDC. No wonder we keep citing CFS as a cause for fatigue when we ourselves fail to pinpoint the diagnosis.
So how long would this take, working on the assumption that the proposal is accepted and is done seriously. A list of possible candidates would be made and asked if they would like to be involved, this will take a few weeks.
They then will read and compare the literature on testing and differential diagnosis lists. Such as the CDCs list the NICE list the IACFS/ME list, the CCC list, Drs Mirzas and Hydes articles, what is in the various medical text books on diseases that cause long term fatiguing conditions etc. because there is very little of this, even if they were still doing their normal jobs they could do this in a week.
They will then add their own expert knowledge to this information and make their recommendations. Because they can communicate through email and video conferencing, there is no need for them to even meet each other.
What the expert diagnosticians come up with can then be written into the form of a complete guide which can then be made available to all doctors. We are stating that the likes of Drs Hyde and Mirza and the writers of the IACFS/ME and CCC be at least consulted in this process because they have a vast amount of clinical experience in finding the misdiagnosed amongst CFS. ME patients and this knowledge will be very useful for writing the guide, some of the other experts diagnosticians may not have the same amount of clinical experience with these kinds of patients because they have not focused their careers on investigating CFS, ME patients .
So that is what we are proposing, it is urgently needed, will cost very little money and can be completed in a matter of months not years.
You said
The CDC is already doing 1a. They have seven physicians, including Bateman, Klimas, Peterson, Kogelnick and others coming up with a new criteria. Of course, it will include how to exclude other diseases.
The CDC has an appalling track record on this, I appreciate that if people are not aware of what kind of testing is really needed to rule out all other diseases is, then it can be hard to see the faults in the CDC list, but believe me it is atrocious! Just compare the IACFS/ME list which is far from complete with the CDC list.
You mention Bateman, Klimas, Peterson, Kogelnick, now I mean no offence to these doctors I’m just stating a fact, they are normal doctors, they do not have specialist degrees in diagnostics. Therefore they do not have the training or knowledge that will allow them to come up with as complete a list as four expert diagnosticians would. A lot of the conditions that can be misdiagnosed as CFS.ME are rare and hard to diagnose, normal doctors do not get trained in this, so they don’t have the knowledge to write a complete list.
Drs Hyde and Mirza who have specialist training in finding hard to diagnose diseases, report finding 80-90% misdiagnosis rates amongst their CFS, ME patients. And have frequently let the medical community know this, yet a large number of CFS/ME clinicians who do not have this kind of specialist training have never in their entire careers investigating CFS,ME patients even mentioned it.
The CDC certainly shouldn’t be left to do this job, and once again no respect to the doctors you mentioned and I have a great respect for their dedication to the patient community, but they do not have the specialist training that is required to do this job in the manner that it needs doing.
So this proposal is to do something totally different to what the CDC is doing so it won’t affect that at all. All it is, is a plan to get the cream of the crop of expert diagnosticians to write for the first time ever a complete guide to ruling out other diseases that get mistaken for CFS and ME, it will not take long to do and the costs will be minimal.
This guide can then be made available to doctors to use which will help vast numbers of people get their right diagnosis instead of being wrongly diagnosed as having CFS, this guide can be used by researchers to make sure that people with other diseases don’t end up in the research and stuff up the results!
RE
As for 1b. You should know, in the U.S., no government agency can make any medical procedure or test compulsory. Every doctor and patient makes his own decision. And then it is up to the patient or insurance company to pay for it if they choose to do it. You can say that these exclusionary tests are to be included in the guide as to how physicians diagnose the disease. Again, though, I am sure this is part of the process of what they are doing as they already have exclusionary tests on their website. It may not include all the ones you want, but there is no guarantee the new list will, no matter which independent physicians they choose.
Bob is in the UK and I’m in New Zealand, why should we know about what government agencies in the US can do?? We have said that we don’t know and are waiting for advice on this! However I doubt that your information is completely accurate because there are testing and treatment options that are compulsory such as if a patient shows signs of having cancer and the doctor doesn’t test for it they well be hauled before the medical authorities and have a strong chance of being struck of, so there has to be fixed guidelines somewhere as to what doctors should be doing in certain situations, otherwise no one would have any control over them.
1b may have to be completely rewritten, nobody has provide bob our I with the correct information, so we cannot proceed with an accurate final version, but the basic jist is the guide will be made available to all doctors and whatever means there are available to request that doctors use it, will be used.
Even if we can just have it on the CDC website, then a patient can ask a doctor to use it, if they don’t the patient can sack the doctor and get a new one that will, plus it will help researchers who almost never have specialist degrees in diagnostics to make sure that they have pure cohorts.
RE ‘
I presume you mean the CDC website, this list is so bad it is basically useless. As is the NICE one and the one on the Stanford site, I’m not even a doctor and I could write a better one in ten minutes.they already have exclusionary tests on their website.”
RE
Nothing in life is perfect, but if expert diagnosticians are doing it, then it will be the best that it is possible to be.It may not include all the ones you want, but there is no guarantee the new list will, no matter which independent physicians they choose.
This guide is needed urgently if all other diseases are not ruled out, then nobody has a clue if the patients have ME, or something else, which makes researching the mixed cohorts created by not ruling out all other diseases a complete and absolute waste of time, this is what has happened for the last 25 years which is why all the research is so contradictory. It is for this reason that creating a complete differential and testing guide is the first thing on the list, because nothing else will work without it.
All the best