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"XMRV is Not CFS" From Mary Schweitzer

Cort

Phoenix Rising Founder
Mary Schweitzer on XMRV, XAND and CFS from Co-cure

Once again people are confusing the retrovirus XMRC with CFS - and forgetting all about XAND (or XMRV Associated Neuroimmune Disease), We have to keep them clear as we talk to outsiders, if we are ever going to escape over 20 years of a pathetic and useless name and concept, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

** XMRV is not CFS **

XMRV is not CFS - it can't be CFS. It can't be CFS because CFS means too many different things in the realms of medicine, research, and popular culture.

Example: According to British psychiatrist Peter White, CFS is a condition of UNEXPLAINED SYMPTOMS that results from "inappropriate illness beliefs." It is best treated with Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Graded Exercise Therapy (GET). And this is pretty much the version of CFS that has been adopted by Britains National Health Services - and the "NICE" Guidelines.

XMRV isn't a symptom. Perhaps the symptoms of XMRV are identical to White's version of CFS, but then they wouldn't be medically unexplained any more.

So, by definition, XMRV cannot just be "CFS" - because there are definitions of CFS that preclude the possibility of being caused by a virus. Any time you hear someone like White, or Simon Wessely, or Trudy Chalder, express an opinion about the "validity" of XMRV with regard to "CFS", they cannot possibly have anything professional to say about it.

In the U.S., CFS began life as "chronic Epstein-Barr virus." Now, CEBV could be the result of a retrovirus, because retroviruses mess with your immune system.

But when they CREATED the term "Chronic Fatigue Syndrome," according to the article co-authored by Ian Holmes in 1988 that was the first of three CDC definitions, they explicitly stated that CFS was NOT the same thing as CEBV.
It was not chronic mono. It was chronic fatigue.

Over the years, there have been more research definitions for CFS, plus the definition hidden within the questionnaires the CDC currently uses to diagnose CFS (sometimes called the Reeves or empiric definition).

I, for one, would not have CFS according to Reeves' questionnaires.
And I'd bet the bank that there are many people in Georgia who have been diagnosed using those questionnaires in Reeves' and Emory U's psych dept's clinics - who don't have XMRV.

But I have a natural killer cell function of 2%, evidence of Rnase-L abnormality, active cytomegalovirus, HHV-6, HHV-7, and chronically recurring EBV.
I think I have a pretty good chance of having XMRV.

AND YET - Even if I were to be tested for XMRV to somehow justify "my" definition of CFS as the "right" one - I'd again be mistaken.

**XMRV is a retrovirus**

Viruses fall into classifications. Polio is an enterovirus, and Melvin Ramsay, the co-discoverwr of M.E., always believed it to be an enterovirus. Epstein-Barr (mono or glandular fever) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) are herpes viruses - like Human Herpesvirus 6, or HHV-6. XMRV is a retrovirus.

XMRV is one of only THREE retroviruses known to be active in humans: HIV, HTLV1, and XMRV.

(Which is why this is such a profound discovery.)

The only really good model we have for human retroviruses is HIV. But HIV isn't really what people are after when they get tested, is it?

No. HIV is important because it either causes, or is so close to the cause as to be indistinguishable for practical purposes, AIDS.

** XAND is to XMRV as AIDS is to HIV **

So what is our "AIDS"?

Is it CFS? No. Why not? Well, among other things, about 1/5 (if I have that right) of prostate cancer victims have XMRV. But they do not have CFS.

Let's go back and look at the HIV/AIDS model again.

HIV by itself is not AIDS. You have to have one of many defining diseases to be diagnosed with AIDS.

For example:
HIV + Karposi's sarcoma = AIDS
HIV + pneumocystic pneumonia = AIDS

** XAND **
The disease we are going to be diagnosing with XMRV is not CFS. It is XAND:
XMRV Associated Neuro-immune Disease. XAND

What is XAND?

  • XMRV + natural killer cell dysfunction = XAND
  • XMRV + active HHV-6 = XAND
  • XMRV + active CMV = XAND
  • XMRV + T-cell abnormalies = XAND
The DISEASE that XMRV will HELP in diagnosing is XAND.

** Myalgic Encephalomyelitis **

Where does this fit in with M.E., or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis?

Unlike CFS, M.E. is a disease, a disease that has been diagnosed for half a century and coded under neurological diseases in ICD-10, the World Health Organization's current International Classification of Diseases - and it has been there for FORTY YEARS.

It would be a well-established disease, but in direct contradiction to the origional Holmes definition of CFS (and all other CDC definitions of CFS), British psychiatrists and individual researchers such as Stephen Straus linked M.E. To CFS, CFS to neurasthenia, anxiety disorders, somaticizing, and/or a constitutional inability to handle stress (currently hypothesized by CDC's William Reeves as caused by childhood traumas, or post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD]).

** PTSD and XAND **
A constotutional inability to deal with stress, perhaps brought on by childhood abuse, has NOTHING to do with XMRV or XAND - unless Reeves could prove that:
XMRV + PTSD = (??) XAND

Indeed, when Reeves talks about not being able to replicate XMRV within his own cohort of "CFS" patients, he is (I think without realizing it) actually saying that XMRV + PTSD does NOT equal XAND

So let's just repeat that: if Reeves is correct,
XMRV + PTSD do NOT equal XAND

** M.E. and XAND **


There are three theoretical possibilities for M.E. and XAND

  1. Perhaps M.E. is XAND. That does not seem likely, because M.E. was identified in the 1950s.
  2. Perhaps XMRV + ME = XAND.
  3. Perhaps there were simultaneous outbreaks of XAND, M.E., and AIDS in the 1980s. Interesting thought. Or perhaps there is some other relationship. Who knows yet?
Whatever the answer, I think the discovery of XMRV and XAND will lead to a better understanding that "CFS" - the thing created by CDC to coverup hundreds of outbreaks of disease across the U.S. beginning in the 1980s - is not a disease.

XMRV, a retrovirus, is not "CFS".
XAND, the neuroimmune disease associated with XMRV, is not "CFS".

** There are many people with a diagnosis of CFS who do not have XMRV **


This will be the hardest lesson. There are many people who have a diagnosis of CFS who will turn out to have neither XMRV or XAND.

With a misunderstanding at its foundation (that this was an illness about "fatigue"), and with NO federal research dollars put towards understanding this condition in the 25 years (at least) it has been here, what other diseasea are hidden just below the surface, needing a diagnosis?

If you do not think you have XAND, perhaps this is not the time to be tested for XMRV. And if you are tested, and found negative, do not be discouraged. Hopefully the research now begun will continue and branch out.

Above all, we cannot allow ourselves, as a patient community, to be divided. More than ever before, we must support each other, whatever specific disease we may have.

The practice of disguising serious biological diseases as psychosocial illnesses - mainly to save money - MUST COME TO AN END.

A great step has finally been taken - but as we move forward into understanding XMRV and XAND, we must insist that research into these and as-yet-undiscovered diseases continue.

Mary M. Schweitzer, Ph.D.

As always very interesting from Mary. My only objection, if you can call it that, is that the current definition of CFS is so encompassing that its hard to know what it defines. A definition of CFS is not synonymous with a psychosocial definition of ME/CFS - researchers of all sorts (physiological and psychological) call their patients 'CFS' patients. Dr. White is not by an means the arbiter of thought regarding what defines CFS in the research community. If XMRV holds up it will certainly redefine this disease dramatically. I don't think we can keep CFS and XAND separate at this point simply because we don't know enough - we don't know who has XMRV and what it means to have XMRV.

Since is XAND is an umbrella term; right now according the WPI it appears to define a wide array of diseases - possibly even MS and autism and well as cFS - I think another term for the CFS subset of XAND might have to be developed.

Mary's last question is a very good one; what will happen to the non-XANDERS? Since their numbers will be diminished they may very well be in worst shape than before.

Dr. Reeves had no idea how his cohorts will turn out when he said those statements the CDC (HIV section) hadn't even begun testing his samples. His comments are essentially meaningless - and I think the fact that he made them must have just boggled his superiors minds.
 

gracenote

All shall be well . . .
Messages
1,537
Location
Santa Rosa, CA
great explanation

Thank you Mary Schweitzer!

I love how you have spelled this out. Your simple analogy (which I will turn around) is very helpful to keep in mind as we move forward.

XMRV is to XAND as HIV is to AIDS
 

dannybex

Senior Member
Messages
3,561
Location
Seattle
I agree and disagree...

...with several of her pronouncements.

Yes, XMRV may play a huge role, and may probably be the 'Puppet Master' as Cort so wisely suggested and Mary implies. I certainly don't think it acts alone, or is the sole cause.

But I'm sorry...I get riled up when anyone implies that they have "real" CFS/ME/XAND...whatever you want to call it, while others don't or won't have it. Doing so negates the reality of acknowledged and known subsets (those with chemical sensitivities, environmental exposures, etc.) that are just as disabled as those who may have no XMRV or antibodies -- past infections -- from the XMRV retrovirus. Keep in mind that Dr. Peterson said some sample cohorts came back at only 60% positive.

As Cort said: "A definition of CFS is not synonymous with a psychosocial definition of ME/CFS."

Mary says: "And if you are tested, and found negative, do not be discouraged. Hopefully the research now begun will continue and branch out."

I'm sorry, I just find that statement to be premature and somewhat patronizing, however unintentional.

Continuing: "Above all, we cannot allow ourselves, as a patient community, to be divided."

Well...personally, I find parts of her letter exactly that...divisive. "Real" vs. "oh, you must have something else".

She says that "XAND is to XMRV as AIDS is to HIV". That may very well be true, but I personally think that has yet to be proven. It would be very interesting to go back to the healthy controls and find out if any of them also have any of the coinfections -- CMV, HHV-6, HHV-7, or EBV -- that she has, yet are not sick in any way.

And while she makes these connections between various infections and XMRV, she misses the boat completely IMHO, when it comes to the stress factor. There's been an endless discussion over on CFSFMExperimental about stress as a factor in many with our disease...probably 30 posts...until someone concisely replied:

"stress = cortisol = XMRV activated..."

Sorry to vent...just disagree with some of her points. If any of my statements come off as rude or insulting...please let me know. That's certainly not my intention. :)

just my two pennies...

Dan
 

InvertedTree

Senior Member
Messages
166
...with several of her pronouncements.

Yes, XMRV may play a huge role, and may probably be the 'Puppet Master' as Cort so wisely suggested and Mary implies. I certainly don't think it acts alone, or is the sole cause.

But I'm sorry...I get riled up when anyone implies that they have "real" CFS/ME/XAND...whatever you want to call it, while others don't or won't have it. Doing so negates the reality of acknowledged and known subsets (those with chemical sensitivities, environmental exposures, etc.) that are just as disabled as those who may have no XMRV or antibodies -- past infections -- from the XMRV retrovirus. Keep in mind that Dr. Peterson said some sample cohorts came back at only 60% positive.

As Cort said: "A definition of CFS is not synonymous with a psychosocial definition of ME/CFS."

Mary says: "And if you are tested, and found negative, do not be discouraged. Hopefully the research now begun will continue and branch out."

I'm sorry, I just find that statement to be premature and somewhat patronizing, however unintentional.

Continuing: "Above all, we cannot allow ourselves, as a patient community, to be divided."

Well...personally, I find parts of her letter exactly that...divisive. "Real" vs. "oh, you must have something else".

She says that "XAND is to XMRV as AIDS is to HIV". That may very well be true, but I personally think that has yet to be proven. It would be very interesting to go back to the healthy controls and find out if any of them also have any of the coinfections -- CMV, HHV-6, HHV-7, or EBV -- that she has, yet are not sick in any way.

And while she makes these connections between various infections and XMRV, she misses the boat completely IMHO, when it comes to the stress factor. There's been an endless discussion over on CFSFMExperimental about stress as a factor in many with our disease...probably 30 posts...until someone concisely replied:

"stress = cortisol = XMRV activated..."

Sorry to vent...just disagree with some of her points. If any of my statements come off as rude or insulting...please let me know. That's certainly not my intention. :)

just my two pennies...

Dan

Well said Dan. I had a similar reaction but couldn't put it into words as nicely as you have. I am troubled by several statements she made also. I didn't find anything you said rude or insulting...
 
C

cold_taste_of_tears

Guest
With respect, I agree with the original post by Mary.
Before I start - remember.

Many many people outside of the UK use the label CFS when they have
ME or XAND (or both). No one in the UK (with genuine ME) uses the word
CFS. CFS is for people who are cured by saying the word 'No' in 3 days.
Ok? So understanding that, that CFS in the UK is a joke - lets continue.

CFS is not a disease, it's a syndrome.
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Chronic Tiredness Syndrome to be exact.

Anyone can have this diagnosis with ZERO blood work up, and ZERO other diagnostic tests (Cardiac/Immune/Autonomic etc). How is that a serious neuro immune illness? CFS means nothing, and never was anything which is why in all these years the CDC, the British NHS, and every other government in the whole world did precisely NOTHING for people with CFS, because they never had CFS - they had a retrovirus or were misdiagnosed.

By medical classification if you have XMRV, you cannot have CFS.
CFS is 'unexplained' chronic fatigue. XMRV is not unexplained.


Indeed, British experts in CFS - claim that ''Abnormal Physical Signs should not be compatible with a diagnosis of CFS''. Source: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Practical Guide to Assessment and Management Sharpe M. Wessely S et al Gen Hosp Psychiatry 1997:19:3:185-199

Very recently, Professor Peter White who runs the St Barts CFS team in London - stated that if people with XMRV have Cancer - then people cannot have CFS.

Source: http://www.bartscfsme.org/Documents...leukemia virus-related virus XMRV and CFS.pdf


You guys do realise..............

A drunk, an anorexic, a work-a-holic, an insomniac, a neurotic, a post menopausal teacher, a drug addict - can all have a diagnosis of CFS

Not because this means anyone cannot get CFS, but because the above people's symptoms are classified AS CFS!!!!!!!. It's critical people understand this. This is how 'Nurse Lead' therapy by the CDC plans to 'Cure' people over the phone who have CFS by TALKING TO THEM. I am not joking.

They are doing this in the UK up until 2012. This what your tax payers money goes to. Why carry on with a dustbin diagnosis? CFS is DENIAL by the CDC you have a serious immune disease (pathalogical abnormailty) in your body. This, historically is what the name was based on. A group of American GP's and Psychiatrists invented (created the mirage) of 'CFS'. This was exported from the USA from Reeves back to the UK by Simon Wessely.

CFS = Long term tiredness. according to British NHS in 2009.
CFS = 'No Specific Symptoms' (Oxford CFS Criteria).

ALL diseases have specific symptoms - we all know this.

XAND is very specific and a disease process, hence the WPI coined it
and are developing a blood test for it. :cool:

Would newly diagnosed AIDS, Lupus, MS, Parkinson's patients be up in arms saying - Nooooooo we have CFS and it must be taken seriously?
I think not. Is CFS became Parkinson's - then Parkinson's is Parkinson's. Bye Bye CFS.

CFS is dead - infact it was still born. CFS never existed it never lived.
You (and me) were all lied to, tricked, conned and in some cases killed by the CDC by the ridiculous label CFS.

Let those with unexplained chronic tiredness have CFS
Let the mentally ill have CFS.

I never had it, I don't want it.
I will have XAND or something else.

Infact my Diagnosis before XMRV is:

1) Post Infective Syndrome (what ever that is)
2) Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (Obvious what that is).
3) ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) (ME - a disease of the brain).
4) Dysautonomia/POTS and Vaso Vagal Syncope.

Dysautonomia POTS is physical disease proven on a test. CFS is not.
Even if I don't have XMRV, I have Dysautonomia - this is controlled
by the CNS, not through illness beliefes corrected with CBT/GE/Pacing as CFS is. Many people with CFS recover through mental illness 'therapy'.

Just because a Psychiatrist wants to kill me by telling me I have CFS, doesn't mean I should play ball or anyone else.

CFS kills people - by the label.
I repeat. CFS is an N-Word
Don't use it.
 

dannybex

Senior Member
Messages
3,561
Location
Seattle
With respect, I agree with the original post by Mary.
Before I start - remember.

Many many people outside of the UK use the label CFS when they have
ME or XAND (or both). No one in the UK (with genuine ME) uses the word
CFS. CFS is for people who are cured by saying the word 'No' in 3 days.
Ok? So understanding that, that CFS in the UK is a joke - lets continue.

CFS is not a disease, it's a syndrome.
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Chronic Tiredness Syndrome to be exact.

And with respect back to you :) I certainly agree that CFS or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is an unfortunate and damaging 'name', and that many doctors (and friends/family) may equate it with 'chronic tiredness', but I and many patients -- and some of our doctors, even our friends, etc. -- do not. I hate the name, but I try not to let the label suck what little energy I have...I've allowed that to happen for too many years. If it has to start with a "CF", I always preferred the name CFIDS, or even better, CIDD (Chronic Immune Dysfunction Disease)...but CFS is the name that's very ingrained here in the US, [and I doubt it will change in the next few years, maybe even longer, so I try not to dwell on it. 'Syndrome' is unfortunate...disease of course is preferable, and even if the XMRV link for some odd reason falls completely apart (which I doubt) -- we've gotten so much attention from the news, that attitudes are changing already, even though the name remains the same.

I've never heard of that 'No for 3 days' cure, thank god. :)

Anyone can have this diagnosis with ZERO blood work up, and ZERO other diagnostic tests (Cardiac/Immune/Autonomic etc).

All I can do is speak for my own case, and perhaps that of friends in my support group, but for those of us here, again in the US, the situation you describe has never happened. In fact, it often takes years to get a diagnosis of CFS, and when given, it's given with great reluctance and/or frustration on the part of the doctor. I've never heard of anyone just walking in and getting an official diagnosis -- given a diagnostic code -- of CFS without any tests or blood work being done. If that's happening in the UK, then that's truly scary...and grounds for malpractice.


How is that a serious neuro immune illness? CFS means nothing, and never was anything which is why in all these years the CDC, the British NHS, and every other government in the whole world did precisely NOTHING for people with CFS, because they never had CFS - they had a retrovirus or were misdiagnosed.

Yes, our government agencies have basically done diddlysquat, but I politely disagree that having a diagnosis of 'CFS' means nothing, etc., or that if one doesn't have XMRV, that they've been misdiagnosed.

By medical classification if you have XMRV, you cannot have CFS.
CFS is 'unexplained' chronic fatigue. XMRV is not unexplained.

Who has made this medical "classification"? And who has been able to decisively explain XMRV? Even Mikovits and Peterson have offered conflicting explanations. (Mikovits strongly suggesting it's causal, with Peterson saying he thinks the immune problems may come first.)

Indeed, British experts in CFS - claim that ''Abnormal Physical Signs should not be compatible with a diagnosis of CFS''. Source: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Practical Guide to Assessment and Management Sharpe M. Wessely S et al Gen Hosp Psychiatry 1997:19:3:185-199

Very recently, Professor Peter White who runs the St Barts CFS team in London - stated that if people with XMRV have Cancer - then people cannot have CFS.

Source: http://www.bartscfsme.org/Documents...leukemia virus-related virus XMRV and CFS.pdf


You guys do realise..............

A drunk, an anorexic, a work-a-holic, an insomniac, a neurotic, a post menopausal teacher, a drug addict - can all have a diagnosis of CFS

Not because this means anyone cannot get CFS, but because the above people's symptoms are classified AS CFS!!!!!!!. It's critical people understand this. This is how 'Nurse Lead' therapy by the CDC plans to 'Cure' people over the phone who have CFS by TALKING TO THEM. I am not joking.

They are doing this in the UK up until 2012. This what your tax payers money goes to. Why carry on with a dustbin diagnosis? CFS is DENIAL by the CDC you have a serious immune disease (pathalogical abnormailty) in your body. This, historically is what the name was based on. A group of American GP's and Psychiatrists invented (created the mirage) of 'CFS'. This was exported from the USA from Reeves back to the UK by Simon Wessely.

CFS = Long term tiredness. according to British NHS in 2009.
CFS = 'No Specific Symptoms' (Oxford CFS Criteria).

Perhaps it's happening in the UK, but I have never heard of a case here where an alcoholic or anorexic or a drug addict (for example) has been officially diagnosed with CFS, rather than being put in treatment for alcoholism or anorexia or drug abuse, etc., at least in the US. Again, it often takes years to get a diagnosis of CFS.

As for talking to people over the phone to cure their -- whatever -- that's of course a ridiculous proposal, and I seriously doubt it would be officially approved. Especially with the recent news...



ALL diseases have specific symptoms - we all know this.

XAND is very specific and a disease process, hence the WPI coined it
and are developing a blood test for it. :cool:

Would newly diagnosed AIDS, Lupus, MS, Parkinson's patients be up in arms saying - Nooooooo we have CFS and it must be taken seriously?
I think not. Is CFS became Parkinson's - then Parkinson's is Parkinson's. Bye Bye CFS.

CFS is dead - infact it was still born. CFS never existed it never lived.
You (and me) were all lied to, tricked, conned and in some cases killed by the CDC by the ridiculous label CFS.

Let those with unexplained chronic tiredness have CFS
Let the mentally ill have CFS.

I never had it, I don't want it.
I will have XAND or something else.

Infact my Diagnosis before XMRV is:

1) Post Infective Syndrome (what ever that is)
2) Post Viral Fatigue Syndrome (Obvious what that is).
3) ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) (ME - a disease of the brain).
4) Dysautonomia/POTS and Vaso Vagal Syncope.

Dysautonomia POTS is physical disease proven on a test. CFS is not.
Even if I don't have XMRV, I have Dysautonomia - this is controlled
by the CNS, not through illness beliefes corrected with CBT/GE/Pacing as CFS is. Many people with CFS recover through mental illness 'therapy'.

Just because a Psychiatrist wants to kill me by telling me I have CFS, doesn't mean I should play ball or anyone else.

CFS kills people - by the label.
I repeat. CFS is an N-Word
Don't use it.

I don't think anyone 'wants' to kill you, but I certainly understand what you're saying and your anger. The term CFS (or the many variations) has been very damaging, it isn't taken seriously by most, and in many cases that has brought about neglect, resulting in death, or ridicule or both, resulting in suicide.

Nevertheless, that's the name that's used here in the US, and I for one, won't let that name or label kill me. I refuse to give it or anyone who denigrates us that power.

Sorry for the long reply. We'll all probably have to agree to disagree on many of these issues, but with genuine respect and understanding.

Best regards,

Dan
 

dannybex

Senior Member
Messages
3,561
Location
Seattle
Right, IRD is not my idea, but I really like it. What do you think about putting up a poll for potential renames of CFS? I stopped using the term CFS the day I was diagnosed with it 25+ years ago. Its a joke, and a cruel one at that.

And calling it "Reeves Disease" is better? :confused:

Seems pretty insulting to me, but I'm probably misinterpreting what you're saying...

d.
 

Alice Band

PWME - ME by Ramsay
Messages
175
Location
UK
In the UK we have endless argument on CFS vs ME. Some argue that it is the same disease, some different .... some more serious etc etc.

I think we may have a similar situation here. It's too soon to tell which groups will test positive and which negative (i.e. subtypes of CFS or ME, or whatever).

People who test positive for XMRV is no more "worthy" than those who don't.

Could we not agree that these different groups may be different but equal?

I for one, do not want to see anyone go through what I've been through. The lack of research, the lack of real care, the sneering and the abuse.

As everyone is tested the most vulnerable group in many ways, may be the people who test negative, who have no clear understanding of their disease and maybe, no hope.

We must care for this group.
 

cfs since 1998

Senior Member
Messages
603
I have to respectfully but firmly disagree with Mary Schweitzer and those that share her line of thinking. I think it only hurts our case to go around and saying, "XMRV is not CFS." To do that would we would be agreeing with Reeves, Wessely, White, et. al.

CFS was a name given by the US government to an outbreak of an uknown disease in Lake Tahoe in the mid 1980s. If it is proven that XMRV caused said disease, then at that point, the name CFS will become an obsolete name for XAND (XMRV Associated Nueroimmune Disease), and CFS as a diagnosis will cease to exist. If there are people with CFS-like symptoms who do not have XMRV, then a new illness entity and criteria would have to be created for them.
 
Messages
41
As I've always seen it, CFS is an umbrella term for ME, fibromyalgia, unexplained chronic fatigue, and some other conditions. (now including XAND perhaps)

I've never liked the term CFS, though I sometimes use it to describe myself to lay people who have never heard of ME.

I imagine if it turns out that a majority of ME/CFS patients have XMRV/XAND as the main cause of their symptoms, they will vote with their own voices and completely drop the CFS and ME names, and stick with XMRV/XAND.

I've no doubt that a small but significant proportion of CFS patients are hypochondriacs, depressed, misdiagnosed or whatever. While these people deserve respect, and need help, the prospect of being able to "weed them out" through new diagnostic testing, is intriguing.

Indeed, if there are people suffering from chronic fatigue symptoms, for different reasons than others, surely it is in everyones interest to segregate and treat each group independently.
 

caledonia

Senior Member
I'm not liking how this thread is going, mainly because I suspect that I'm going to be XMRV negative, yet I fulfill the criteria for the strictest definitions of CFS (such as the Canadian definition).

I don't think it's going to be so black and white as you have XMRV/XAND or you have Reeves Disease, like Mary points out.

There has to be some room for methylation problems, toxic chemicals, Lyme, toxic mold, etc.

Now if it could be proven that XMRV causes methylation problems, that would be really interesting.
 

Marylib

Senior Member
Messages
1,155
As I've always seen it, CFS is an umbrella term for ME, fibromyalgia, unexplained chronic fatigue, and some other conditions. (now including XAND perhaps)

I've never liked the term CFS, though I sometimes use it to describe myself to lay people who have never heard of ME.

I imagine if it turns out that a majority of ME/CFS patients have XMRV/XAND as the main cause of their symptoms, they will vote with their own voices and completely drop the CFS and ME names, and stick with XMRV/XAND.

I've no doubt that a small but significant proportion of CFS patients are hypochondriacs, depressed, misdiagnosed or whatever. While these people deserve respect, and need help, the prospect of being able to "weed them out" through new diagnostic testing, is intriguing.

.

You may have opened a big can of worms with this post. Patients can vote with their own voices about the name of their illness? You are kidding, I presume.
 

Dx Revision Watch

Suzy Chapman Owner of Dx Revision Watch
Messages
3,061
Location
UK
When the WPI XMRV paper was first reported on in the media, confusion arose around the inclusion of lymphoma cases (vis Wall Street Journal).

This led to some commentors - Lloyd, Shepherd, Wessely and others to question why these lymphoma cases had not been excluded from the cohort. In the document leaked to me that Peter White was circulating to CNCCs, White had seized on this too, with his letter quoting largely from the Lloyd commentary.

WPI has since clarified that the lymphoma cases were a separate cohort to the cohort studied in the Science paper, that is, it was not the case that 20% of the 101 cohort studied had lymphomas.


On Day One of the CFSAC meeting, as part of his slide presentation, Dan Peterson had run through figures for some of the other diseases/disorders that WPI had looked at separately. I scribbled down (and please do not quote these figures unless you have confirmed these, yourself, with the video):

Fibromyalgia - 20, with 60% positive for XMRV
Atypical MS - 3
Autism - "small number" - 40%
GWS - not tested


I didn't catch any figure for the lymphoma study but I haven't yet been able to view the afternoon session of Day One or any of Day Two of the CFSAC meeting.

Question: Has it been clarified how large that separate lymphoma study group was or how it was assembled? Is it 20% of 5, 10, 50? And where had the samples come from - one locality or several?

I'm not looking for flaws in methodology, here, I just want to be able to understand more about the lymphoma cases.

(If this has already been discussed under another thread perhaps someone could direct me to it.)
 
Z

zero

Guest
I agree with condra - CFS is a wastebasket diagnosis. XMRV/XAND refer to something specific.
 

fresh_eyes

happy to be here
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I agree with those who've said that there's got to more to this than XAND vs. Reeves' Disease. Having an unexplained illness has made me much less inclined to dismiss anyone else who reports feeling ill; while things like hypochondria and somatiform disorders surely exist, I lean towards believing that most people in even the broadest CFS definition probably have legitimate biological illnesses. Surely XMRV isn't the last work in retroviruses, and the future probably holds the discovery of XMRV 2, XMRV 3, etc. and who knows what else. I don't want to abandon anybody in the land of "it's all in your head".
 
R

Robin

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cancer group

Question: Has it been clarified how large that separate lymphoma study group was or how it was assembled? Is it 20% of 5, 10, 50? And where had the samples come from - one locality or several?

I'm not looking for flaws in methodology, here, I just want to be able to understand more about the lymphoma cases.

(If this has already been discussed under another thread perhaps someone could direct me to it.)

From Cort's write up of the IACFS/ME conference last March:

Dr. Peterson got Dr. Mikovits, a cancer researcher, interested when he mentioned at a conference in Spain that he had nine patients with Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL). NHL strikes about 2 out of every 10,000 people in the US (0.02%) but a full 5% of Dr. Petersons Nevada cohort had developed it. Even more striking was the type of specific of type of lymphoma he was finding.

Mantle Cell Lymphoma is a form of non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL) that is almost vanishingly rare. If my back of the envelope statistics are correct MCL strikes about 1 out of every 100,000 people but thirty percent of Dr. Petersons ME/CFS cancer patients had it. Thats the kind of finding that will turn a cancer researchers head...

I'm not sure if lymphoma cases were tested for XMRV (but why wouldn't they be?), or if an incidence lymphoma has observed in CFS by other physicians than Dr. Peterson.

Incidentally my uncle has mantle cell lymphoma. :( It's very aggressive, incurable and difficult to treat. He went through stem cell treatment last summer which was successful (for now) but claims he's not sure he could do it again if the lymphoma resurges. Mantle cell usually strikes men in their later years. I'm curious if Dr. Peterson's 3 mantle cell patients 1) were men 2) were older.
 

Dx Revision Watch

Suzy Chapman Owner of Dx Revision Watch
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From Cort's write up of the IACFS/ME conference last March:

"Dr. Peterson got Dr. Mikovits, a cancer researcher, interested when he mentioned at a conference in Spain that he had nine patients with Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL). NHL strikes about 2 out of every 10,000 people in the US (0.02%) but a full 5% of Dr. Peterson’s Nevada cohort had developed it. Even more striking was the type of specific of type of lymphoma he was finding."

Mantle Cell Lymphoma is a form of non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL) that is almost vanishingly rare. If my back of the envelope statistics are correct MCL strikes about 1 out of every 100,000 people …but thirty percent of Dr. Peterson’s ME/CFS cancer patients had it. That’s the kind of finding that will turn a cancer researchers head...

I'm not sure if lymphoma cases were tested for XMRV (but why wouldn't they be?), or if an incidence lymphoma has observed in CFS by other physicians than Dr. Peterson.

Incidentally my uncle has mantle cell lymphoma.


Robin, I'm sorry that your uncle is having to live with this and I hope that he remains well.

Judy M has clarified that the lymphoma group were a separate group to the Science study group and also that none of the 101 group had lymphomas.

In the absence of a clearer picture about the "20%" lymphoma group, it might be assumed that the data has come entirely from Dan Peterson or from Dan Peterson plus samples from elsewhere.

20% is a very significant figure.

Are no other "CFS" and ME clinicians in the US reporting lymphomas or significant incidence of other cancers in their own patients?

I know that Byron Hyde was at one time (and may still be) reporting that he had noted significant levels of thyroid cancers amongst his patients (though I have never seen him quote actual figures).

If you are going to get a cancer then thyroid cancer is one of the easier ones to successfully treat. I don't know whether Hyde has ever reported on the outcomes of his ME patients who had had thyroid cancers identified and had undergone treatment for them. Did they, for example, fare as well as the otherwise well population does following treatment for thyroid cancer? Were there gender differences in incidence of thyroid cancer amongst his patients?

Are there gender differences in this "20%" lymphoma group?

I have a 23 year old son who has been ill since he was 12 and it is a concern.

There are anecdotal reports, in the UK, of a higher incidence of cancers amongst ME patients but no studies have been carried out. We are told in the UK that at some point in our lives 33% of us can expect to develop some form of cancer.

Hopefully more information about the "20% lymphoma group" will emerge in time.
 
Messages
84
Lymphoma

Hi,

I think we will find that most of us have the retrovirus. I rarely read a post where I think the symptoms discussed are unlike symptoms I have or had in the past. Recently I read a discussion that sounded completely different than my illness but then I remembered that at the very beginning of my illness it might have been an accurate description. Between the way this illness moves around the body, changes in severity and sometimes even backs off, we are not all on the same page most of the time. Add to that the difficulty many of us have or have had with output versus input, changing IQ and dementia like memory, it is surprising we still manage to recognize a fellow PWC.

I know that when I am tested every year for all the CFS culprits ( HHV6/ HHV7/ EBV/ NK cells etc.) the results reflect how I am feeling at the time of the test. I have found that when the levels of virus are high I am feeling bad and the NK cells are also low. I expect XMRV will behave similarly. If I am in a "remission" I would expect to see only minimal XMRV antibodies but I will assume that the next check up (the following year) it might be active. Perhaps the people who have struggled for a diagnosis and never had any CFS type lab work are worrying unnecessarily. When my annual CFS blood work shows little sign of virus and my NK cells have gone from 3 up to 17, my doctor has never suggested I am well. I once got confused by it but not her.

I also would add that we have known for a long time that NHL (lymphoma) was a cousin of sorts to this illness. Dr. Peterson verified it when I asked him at the CFSAC meeting. Not mantle cell necessarily but generic NHL. My husband came down with it about 5 years before I got sick. He does not have CFS and I do not have NHL but at my house we have always assumed each gave it to the other and no one blames anyone. Up until I asked Dr. Peterson every other doctor I asked about it looked at me like I was truly nuts.

srmny
 

camas

Senior Member
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702
Location
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Lymphoma in my family too

Susan,

I just wanted to thank you for posting about the CFS and NHL in your family and for reporting what Dr. Peterson said about NHL in general.

I've had CFS for a couple of decades and lost my 49-year-old husband to a rare follicular mutated to Burkitt's lymphoma several years ago.

I always felt there was a connection between our illnesses because he'd shown mild signs of CFS for a long time. I'd never discussed my theory with my doctor until the news of XMRV. He did his best to console me and agreed to let me go ahead with the XMRV testing.

Wishing you and your husband the best.