Firestormm
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I found the results from this survey rather interesting. Looks to have been a well conducted survey - though I can never find the time to properly read these things:
November 18, 2013
PRO Health Survey RESULTS: Antidepressants for ME/CFS and Fibromyalgia
Last month editors Karen Lee Richards and Erica Verrillo posted a ProHealth survey: Antidepressants for ME/CFS and Fibromyalgia. Results of the survey can be viewed HERE.
The reasons for conducting this survey were twofold.
Results
- Antidepressants are among the most commonly prescribed medications for people with both Fibromyalgia (FM) and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME), sometimes predating the actual diagnosis of the illness. For FM, the antidepressants Cymbalta (duloxetine) and Savella (milnacipran) are two of three FDA-approved treatments, and are therefore in wide use.
- In spite of the widespread use of these medications, there are relatively few studies of their efficacy or safety for this population. Doctors who have prescribed antidepressants to their FM and CFS or ME patients have noted inconsistent responses to these drugs, with roughly one-third reacting poorly. This finding was borne out in the 2008 survey conducted by the ME Association in Great Britain, in which 30%-38% of respondents reported that antidepressants, of all classes, made them feel worse.
Of the 207 people who filled out the ProHealth survey, 52% stated that they had ME or CFS, 81% reported having FM, and 22% reported other ailments, such as migraine and Lyme disease. This means is that there are many comorbidities among people with FM and ME or CFS (i.e. people may have two or more diagnoses). What is interesting is that none of the respondents had been diagnosed with depression.
Of these patients, the majority (60%) had been ill longer than 10 years and were moderately severe to moderately ill (3-6 on the rating scale). Very few were either severely ill (bedridden), or mildly ill. The majority (54%) had taken antidepressants for more than 5 years at standard doses (59%). Nearly a third (31%) had taken antidepressants at higher than standard doses. The long-term use of antidepressants at standard doses implies that physicians are prescribing these drugs to patients with ME, CFS or FM as they would to patients with depression.
Of the 20 antidepressant medications listed, there wasn’t one that had not been tried by the respondents. In fact, each antidepressant listed had been taken by a significant portion of the respondents (range of 32% to 66%), with an average of 9 different prescription antidepressants per person. (Not all antidepressants were on the list - there are more than 60 - but the most common medications in each class of antidepressant were represented, indicating that physicians are prescribing a broad range of antidepressant medications to the FM/CFS/ME patient population.)
In a nutshell
- Every class of antidepressants is widely prescribed to patients with FM, ME and CFS, usually for a long period of time.
- Antidepressants, with a couple of exceptions, appear to benefit as many people as they harm, but the people in either camp are in the minority.
- In the majority of patients, antidepressants have no discernable effect on the illness.
- Nearly everyone with FM, ME and CFS experiences side effects while taking antidepressants, some of which are quite severe.