Journal of Clinical Medicine (Feb 2024)

Heterogeneity in Measures of Illness among Patients with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Is Not Explained by Clinical Practice: A Study in Seven U.S. Specialty Clinics

  • Elizabeth R. Unger,
  • Jin-Mann S. Lin,
  • Yang Chen,
  • Monica E. Cornelius,
  • Britany Helton,
  • Anindita N. Issa,
  • Jeanne Bertolli,
  • Nancy G. Klimas,
  • Elizabeth G. Balbin,
  • Lucinda Bateman,
  • Charles W. Lapp,
  • Wendy Springs,
  • Richard N. Podell,
  • Trisha Fitzpatrick,
  • Daniel L. Peterson,
  • C. Gunnar Gottschalk,
  • Benjamin H. Natelson,
  • Michelle Blate,
  • Andreas M. Kogelnik,
  • Catrina C. Phan,
  • on behalf of the MCAM Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13051369
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 1369

Abstract

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Background: One of the goals of the Multi-site Clinical Assessment of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (MCAM) study was to evaluate whether clinicians experienced in diagnosing and caring for patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) recognized the same clinical entity. Methods: We enrolled participants from seven specialty clinics in the United States. We used baseline data (n = 465) on standardized questions measuring general clinical characteristics, functional impairment, post-exertional malaise, fatigue, sleep, neurocognitive/autonomic symptoms, pain, and other symptoms to evaluate whether patient characteristics differed by clinic. Results: We found few statistically significant and no clinically significant differences between clinics in their patients’ standardized measures of ME/CFS symptoms and function. Strikingly, patients in each clinic sample and overall showed a wide distribution in all scores and measures. Conclusions: Illness heterogeneity may be an inherent feature of ME/CFS. Presenting research data in scatter plots or histograms will help clarify the challenge. Relying on case–control study designs without subgrouping or stratification of ME/CFS illness characteristics may limit the reproducibility of research findings and could obscure underlying mechanisms.

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