Good points, BobAlso, remember that the published response rates (i.e. the percentage of participants who responded to treatment and whose improvement met a minimal clinically useful threshold) (ignoring all the weaknesses of the trial) was between 11-15% after treatment with CBT/GET. So it's hardly a treatment to recommend for all ME patients, esp when so many harms have been reported for CBT/GET, and when the trial recruited patients with unexplained chronic fatigue. Also, severely affected patients were excluded from the trial.
I agree. The approach to characterizing patients as Fukuda CFS is flawed for a couple of reasons. In addition to what you said, the 2013 Recovery paper also:The fact that participants were later subgrouped using Fukuda is problematic (i.e. the Fukuda subgroup was not necessarily representative of a Fukuda cohort) because participants were previously filtered using the Oxford recruitment criteria.
a) referenced the Reeves criteria, not Fukuda 1994
b) stated they only required the symptoms to be present for the previous week, not the previous month
c) is unclear if this was a clinical assessment by a doc or a paper exercise from a list of criteria
d) does not state that they applied the more restricted exclusion criteria of Fukuda
The assessment of ME by London criteria has its own set of problems
Regarding nuanced scientific points and strong advocacy…
To me, the strongest scientific and logic-based argument against the P2P evidence review is that they have treated all definitions as equivalent - as an equally valid representation of the same clinical entity constructed around the concept of medically unexplained chronic fatigue.
Then, because there is no diagnostic standard for this disease against which to compare diagnostic methods, they allow any of the "ME/CFS" definitions to stand as the standard against which they then compare the diagnostic method. Having excluded CPET itself from consideration, they state that there is no diagnostic standard but then they draw conclusions from treatment studies that used the same definitions - All while ignoring the differences between definitions.
Thoughts?