Tag Archives: xmrv

Will there ever be a cure for CFS?

I was asked this question on Formspring by @jwhouk the other day, and I decided it was worthy of a better answer than a few lines on Twitter. Actually, the way he phrased it was

Deep down in your heart of hearts (or whatever you want to call it) — do you believe/think there will ever be a cure for CFS? Or at least an understanding of causes for it?

which I like because I feel more comfortable talking about my beliefs and speculations than the hard science. And then the timing was funny as this story came out yesterday. It’s a report on a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), detailing a replication study seeking XMRV in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. The PNAS paper had been held for some time, frustrating and angering patients, and now that it’s out, the results are interesting. Although the researchers did not find XMRV, they did find a related family of retroviruses. This isn’t going to end the controversy over XMRV anytime soon — there are many questions remaining about the selection of patient cohorts, why other studies were unable to find XMRV, and so forth — but more information is always good.

This is part of my answer to the question, this fact that right now there is more interest in CFS research than there has been in years. For one thing, this is obviously directly good news for people who want a cure. Even if XMRV or MLV turn out to be complete red herrings, who knows what else may be discovered along the way. And a major side benefit of this research is that more people — physicians and otherwise — learn that CFS is a true somatic problem that warrants research. The disease and the people who have it receive validation, which may lead to better care and further research as well. So these are all positive signs even if there are some very questionable aspects, such as patients starting dangerous treatments for things they don’t even know they have yet.

The problem with CFS is that, although we patients tend to insist on it being treated as a disease, it is not one. It is a syndrome — an association of related symptoms — and those symptoms and their severity differ enormously from person to person. (It’s important to note this does not mean that anyone with a few fatigue-related symptoms has CFS. There are several sets of different but related diagnostic criteria.) Some patients have mostly neurological symptoms, and tend to identify as having ME (myalgic encephalopathy), while others like me exhibit almost exclusively post-viral symptoms. There are endless debates over the name of the syndrome, and whether it should or shouldn’t be lumped together, as it often is, as ME/CFS. This is why I remain skeptical about XMRV: does it really seem possible that a single retrovirus, or even a family of them, could cause such an enormous disparity in etiologies, disease progression, symptoms, and so forth? Possibly in one particular set of patients, but what about everyone else?

So I don’t really envision a vaccine or gene therapy anytime soon or ever that will wipe out CFS, although I do expect better therapies and treatments. I think what is more likely to happen is that as we increase our understanding of various illnesses, especially autoimmune ones, patients formerly diagnosed with CFS will be found to have something else. This happens frequently enough now (although sometimes in the other direction, as in patients with depression who are later found to have CFS as a somatic cause), and there’s no reason to think it won’t continue. As medical science becomes more knowledgeable about autoimmune disorders, demyelinating disorders, and many other related areas, I think CFS patients will continue to be rediagnosed with more specific — and hopefully treatable! — illnesses. In this sense, medicine will “cure” CFS by redefining patients into other categories, and with luck, having no more use for this “garbage can” of a diagnosis.

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The problem with causation

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) patients are making a name for themselves these days, and not in a good way. The current brouhaha over new studies that have been submitted, then held, then whatever else is going on is bringing out the worst in the XMRV cheerleaders. I recently wrote about compassion for patients who are not in a good place to think critically, but even my own compassion is stretched to the limit, and frequently breaks, when it comes to the screaming impatience and conspiracy theorizing that can be seen on sites like Phoenix Rising.

Some CFS patients, let’s say the extremists, expect XMRV to be a combined Messiah/Holy Grail/panacea for all their ills. As I’ve mentioned before, some are even taking antiretroviral medication already, something that is highly dangerous and is not currently recommended by any reputable physician. The problem stems from an overall difficulty I see in chronic illness communities: the correlation fallacy. Which is to say, “correlation does not imply causation.” This simply means that just because two things appear to be connected does not necessarily mean that they are.

CFS, like many chronic illnesses, is a concatenation of unpredictable symptoms. While it’s common for exertion to push patients into a crash, we might also stay in bed all day, and the next day be crashed for no apparent reason. (In this context I use “crash” like many patients, to mean an especially disabling flare-up of symptoms.) This is one of the most annoying aspects of the illness. Quite a while ago I described exactly that situation to my doctor, and asked why it happened, and his answer was this: “You have CFS.” Right. That’s the way it goes.

In addition, like myself, many people with CFS have other conditions that either exacerbate our symptoms or result in fun new ones. So, although I must reiterate that there are specific criteria (well, half a dozen sets of criteria, but that’s another story) for diagnosing CFS from symptoms, most if not all of us experience symptom weirdness and ups and downs without rhyme or reason.

And yet, patients happily share stories of great success with dubious or even flat-out quack treatments. “I started using this herb, and the next day I started feeling better!” someone will chirp. Despite the fact that the selfsame person may recently have been bemoaning the capricious nature of our illness and how it’s so hard to make plans when you never know how you’re going to feel (true), now it’s become perfectly clear that taking this herb caused an upswing.

“Correlation does not imply causation” is one of the clarion calls of the critical thinker and the evidence-based physician. And yet these false correlations happen all the time. As you know, I try to come from a place of understanding, but the cognitive dissonance displayed in the above example really blows right past me. Whether it’s low-dose naltrexone (LDN), CoQ10, or even conventional pharmaceuticals, it’s usually pretty difficult to determine (and especially not in the space of a couple of days) whether any one treatment caused a major improvement. And that’s not even taking into account the placebo effect.

I don’t begrudge people feeling better. Nor do I discount the placebo effect for people who cannot get relief any other way. But what sometimes happens next is that other people who have had similar experiences will post about it as well. And then the other major fallacy found in chronic illness communities arises, where patient anecdotes are mistaken for hard data. Mostly, this isn’t too big of a deal. After all, science has so far failed us, so we do turn to others to find out what has helped them, and possibly try it ourselves. As I’ve said many times, I’m not entirely against this. The problem happens when people come to consider this information to be as valid as evidence-based medicine. Communities are wonderful for commiserating and sharing stories, but relying on these stories as a source of scientific data is dangerous.

Especially when it comes to XMRV. I’ve seen people deciding that everyone on a FB page or a forum should get tested for XMRV “and then we’ll have more results.” No. Those are still anecdotes, and given that the evidence-based studies can barely get it together on how to select a patient cohort and all the other complicated issues with testing CFS patients (such as severity of disease, which isn’t always taken into account), it’s ridiculous to imagine that half a dozen tests on people from all over the country or the world will contribute to a scientific body of evidence.

Finally, something I see missing from an enormous amount of XMRV discussion is the fact that even if it is shown to have a strong correlation with CFS, that does not imply causation. There isn’t even solid evidence of a correlation yet and people are jumping all over causation, with the antiretrovirals, rushing out to get expensive and useless tests, worrying themselves to death over whether they’ve spread the illness to others, and so forth. It’s perfectly likely that even if a correlation is found, the retrovirus may simply be a dormant infection to which people with CFS are especially susceptible. Or any number of other possibilities besides XMRV being a causative agent. I wish I were seeing less anxiety and more patience.

I get that some of the hoopla doesn’t even really have to do with medicine. It has to do with perception. The notion that a virus causes CFS is enormously attractive to patients who have been dismissed, invalidated, and marginalized for years. Proof of a somatic cause would mean even more than a cure — it would mean no more people trying to, say, cure CFS with neurolinguistic programming (NLP), as a fellow patient related to me the other day. The hope for that may be even stronger than the hope for a cure.

But again, hope, belief, fear…these do not aid in the calm assessment of the scientific process or of the data it (eventually) provides. Patients are falling back on emotion when they should be hanging on to rationality. No, it’s not fun. It’s easier and more comfortable to get together with other patients and howl instead of making the effort to think things through with a clear head. But that effort is absolutely crucial, especially considering the very negative views on our community that are starting to develop due to a visible and vocal segment of it. We’ve spent all this time trying to get attention, and now that we have it, we’re being seen by outsiders as a bunch of hysterical loonies. This is why I continue to plead for rationality and critical thinking in the CFS community.

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Why another “awareness” day?

Today, May 12, is International ME/CFS Awareness Day. And I know what you might be thinking, because I think the same thing sometimes: “Why another awareness day? I’m aware it exists, what’s the big deal?”

ME/CFS (a term encompassing two similar or related illnesses: myalgic encephalopathy and chronic fatigue syndrome) is different from many other conditions that get awareness days and months, walks for the cure, and other support. Not only is it poorly understood and often misdiagnosed in the medical community, being something of a “trashcan diagnosis,” but that lack of understanding is far, far worse among the general public. Patients are still fighting off the terrible moniker of “yuppie flu” with which we’ve been stigmatized for decades, and in some cases they are fighting even to be recognized as ill at all.

Before I go any further, let me be perfectly clear that I am referring here only to issues of awareness. (I would not in a million years try to “one-up” people with other terrible diseases and conditions.) Would you accuse a woman with a malignancy in her breast of “just being lazy?” Or suggest to someone with a spinal cord injury that his inability to walk must be due to clinical depression?

And yet that’s exactly what people with CFS face all the time. In England, for example, there is an ongoing struggle to get the National Health Service to move away from treatments focusing mainly or solely on psychological issues, and to see ME (as it’s mostly called there) as a somatic problem. And there are other countries where ME/CFS is categorized only as a psychiatric disorder! Thankfully, change seems to be coming slowly, but that doesn’t help physically disabled people who have been told for years that cognitive behavioral therapy and antidepressants will cure them. Here in the States we are a bit luckier — that is, if you can find a doctor who knows anything about CFS and what it takes to treat it.

(“Return to the career I loved” was my entry, although I’m sure it was sent in by more than one person.)

Awareness has been raised recently by the publication of a paper suggesting a possible link between a retrovirus called XMRV and people who have ME/CFS. While this has still not yet been proven in any way — there have not yet been any successful replication or corroborative studies — the news did serve to legitimize the illness somewhat, and make it clear that people who have it aren’t just malingerers.

This is the most common perception of people with CFS. Because of the negative stigma of the disease, patients not only have to contend with daily physical symptoms of malaise, cognitive dysfunction, crushing fatigue, fever, pain, and so forth, we also have to deal with people who don’t take us seriously. I’ll be honest: when I see someone complaining about having the flu and how bad it feels, and all the sympathy they receive, sometimes I get annoyed. Not at that person, but simply because people with CFS feel like that every damn day and yet they’re far more likely to hear “But you look great!” and “It can’t be that bad.” Not to mention the classic accusations of laziness.

When I was diagnosed with CFS, I was engaged to be married, finishing my very satisfying and successful grad school work, and about to start on a college teaching career literally custom-made for me, combining my passions for TESOL (teaching English to speakers of other languages) as well as deaf education. I was barrelling through life towards my ambitions as I had for more than 30 years. And now? I had to quit that wonderful job because of my increasing disability. I can’t finish my degree because I no longer have the money or the physical capacity. My extremely modest exercise routine made me so sick I had to ditch it and take half of April to recover. Am I depressed? Hell yes, wouldn’t you be? My mind hasn’t been disabled, and I daily fight the frustration of the physical limitations that effectively put an end to everything I’d been working for my whole life. But this is secondary depression due to the physical disability. I dare any of you to accuse me of simply giving in to laziness.

And I have it so, so much better than many patients. Yes, I lost a friend who appeared to take my increasing inability to hang out with her whenever as a personal affront. (And I’m much better off for that loss.) But my closest, dearest, most important friends have stuck by me, and unlike many patients whose illness destroys their romantic relationship(s), I also have an incredibly loving, supportive, and understanding husband. I have a wonderful support system of online friends as well, who accept me for who I am, including my limitations and liabilities. And I have access to quality medical care, including a GP with a great deal of clinical experience with CFS.

Not everyone is so lucky. Many if not most CFS patients lose friends, partners, and the support of family members who do not understand that their loved one is sick. Without a palpable injury or malignancy, patients are often misdiagnosed by both doctors and laypeople as suffering from clinical depression or even bipolar disorder. Doctors without something to shrink medically or cut out of the body are often at a complete loss, and apt to hurry a patient out of their office with no answers, support, or help of any kind.

This is why awareness is so vital. Without the impetus that non-invisible illnesses gain in terms of research funding as well as patient support, ME/CFS remains a mystery. That is of course its defining trait — we patients are, all of us, medical mysteries — but the fact of its existence, the way to support patients, the need for research funds and scientific attention to be paid, are not mysteries. They are imperatives. I do not deny that the misdiagnosis can go the other way, and people who are in fact suffering from major clinical depression may be wrongly diagnosed as having CFS. But this only emphasizes the need for greater attention and understanding to be directed at ME/CFS. There is a collection of blog posts here if you wish to read more. And if you are moved to donate to some very promising research, please read my previous post. But even more than your dollars, I plead for your awareness and your understanding. Not for myself, but for all the patients out there who aren’t so lucky.

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