׉?4ׁB! בCט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://A56BURL7zrTKrOmVngSYqZDVdZHPL22a52_XMh7DCYg `׉	 7cassandra://81PRyRrmTzCvVafi-llIUvl77eF1dXCA9S1Z51QCZ8o``S׉	 7cassandra://PIX0SsPeI9jD0zDSMV42GhRfFx23M-ICtemHBBgrdzA$@`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://q_VBlxJ6iTWe8RIdjSM23rOPnNkCZTOLvhQo4yFonwA 9̠͠Xojcd4ט   {u׈         נXojcd3 N̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXo!jcd A9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׈EXojcd5׉E The
Journal of
IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1 May 2013
Mainstreaming
ME Research
IIMEC8 Conference 2013
Published by UK Charity Invest in ME
www.investinme.org
׉	 7cassandra://PIX0SsPeI9jD0zDSMV42GhRfFx23M-ICtemHBBgrdzA$@`̵ Xojcd6Xojcd5{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://P_p89dGkCSLoSIlD5QCbT6XNqPX84Rkg7FNGEraN02k @`׉	 7cassandra://zprUiXN6DbBylNtTickcSGszTZo6ywz930KiRrLdCXI}`S׉	 7cassandra://Gdj2yAUfng1Aeqt-6IB1gbnGPw3G-ZKoO3WoljULbG4*`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://0ErvOIrVFy1MnFk2AkTikuqO40QSwDSScGJYvs49ijI  C̰͠XojcdAט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://HIfRrDus40x4dDaGrFE9xXsIVRmdOEzo4zHb2lz83bA ` ׉	 7cassandra://0mGjuEw00BKWuBJdkX9_4-Q9k8tkGuC-Pb3MdPLHFPM̀`S׉	 7cassandra://u8B3ZkyzB5ZfsAe7m65yVyjBqDxQ60cdr9Tr9dgeMoE$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://oH8f-q1JTNMFnCllepcZE_3DtY_pLaNpXqgRL90h8pIRT͠XojcdBנXojcd7 N̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXojcd8 3Uq9׉Hhttp://tinyurl.com/6sy9vcvGׁׁrנXojcd9 9׉Hhttp://tinyurl.com/bgovc6GׁׁrנXojcd: 6V[9׉Hhttp://tinyurl.com/2f6gk66GׁׁrנXojcd; wՁd9׉Hhttp://tinyurl.com/7t6b3xuGׁׁrנXojcd< C9׉Hhttp://bit.ly/10YB6n3GׁׁrנXojcd= Cju 9׉Hhttp://bit.ly/10YB6n3GׁׁrנXojcd> ̨9׉Hhttp://bit.ly/10YB6n3GׁׁrנXojcd? N̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXojcd@ ̷9׉H !http://mailto:info@investinme.orgGׁׁrנXo!jce S̞9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXo!jcd ̯9ׁHmailto:info@investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
IiME Conference DVDs
The Invest in ME conference DVDs are professionally filmed
and authored DVD sets consisting of four discs in Dolby
stereo and available in PAL (European) or NTSC (N. America)
format. They contain all of the presentations from Invest in
ME International ME/CFS Conferences (2006 – 2013). Also
included in the DVD sets are interviews with ME presenters,
news stories and round-table discussions. The Invest in ME
conference DVDs have been distributed to more than 20
countries and are available as an educational tool – useful
for healthcare staff, researchers, scientists, educational
specialists, media, ME support groups and people with ME
and their carers/parents. Full details can be found at -
http://bit.ly/10YB6n3 or via emailing Invest in ME at
info@investinme.org
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 2 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://Gdj2yAUfng1Aeqt-6IB1gbnGPw3G-ZKoO3WoljULbG4*`̵ XojcdC׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
Inside This Issue
3 Welcome to the Conference
7
9
14
18
21
22
24
Biomedical Research into ME
Collaborative Meeting
IiME Proposal for Examination
and Research Facility
Let’s Do It For ME
Lili – Diane’s Story
Guidelines
Sarah’s Story - JustGiving
Presenters at IiME Conference
32 OMI-MERIT Initiative
34
Conference Agenda
Invest in ME
(UK Charity Nr. 1114035)
PO BOX 561
Eastleigh SO50 0GQ
Hampshire, UK
Tel: 07759 349743
E-mail: info@investinme.org
Disclaimer
The views expressed in this Journal by
contributors and others do not
necessarily represent those of Invest in
ME. No medical recommendations are
given or implied. Patients with any
illness are recommended to consult
their personal physician at all times.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
Welcome to IIMEC8
This is our ninth Journal of IiME and is made
available online for free on the charity’s web site. A
hard copy also forms part of each delegate’s
conference pack at the 8th Invest in ME International
ME Conference 2013.
Invest in ME have now organised eight biomedical
research conferences for ME – myalgic
encephalomyelitis - and the conference has become
a good checkpoint to determine how things are
progressing with research into ME.
We have been reminded in recent times of how
fragile life is and how healthcare is so important for
a just society. Yet for ME services to magically attain
the levels for existing diseases, whilst absolutely
justified and to be expected, is realistically not
something which will appear overnight. Even
“established” diseases which have comparatively
large research funding and correct perception
amongst health departments are not without
issues. We have seen examples of this close up.
The key to making ME a disease which receives the
highest priority is an objective which we need to
attain by establishing basic building blocks and a
foundation on which to progress – funding for
proper, quality research; education about the
disease; and correct perception of the disease.
Invest in ME was set up with the objectives of
making a change in how ME is perceived and
treated in the media, by health departments and by
healthcare professionals. These aforementioned
building blocks happen to be the basic objectives of
Invest in ME.
The people who run and support the charity are all
volunteers. There are no salaried staff and all work
is performed in spare time, for free. The charity
does not exist just to exist – we exist to make
progress.
For us biomedical research into ME has not been
well served in UK or elsewhere for a generation.
Patients are literally sick of the behavioural
approach to ME and fatigued by the constant false
belief that exercise will make one better. The PACE
Trial provided evidence that CBT and GET do not
produce any objective positive results. Yet although
heavily criticised and eventually dismissed by ME
patients, with hindsight, perhaps the PACE Trial
actually did the cause of biomedical research into
ME a huge favour. As knowledgeable patients have
been able to point out the flaws in its design,
execution and implementation, and debunked
implausible attempts to spin the results into a
justifiable end point, so the PACE Trial has clearly
shown why the psychosocial view of ME is now
www.investinme.org
Page 3 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
seen by mostly all objective observers to be a waste
of funding and of lives.
On a more positive and deliberate note the Let's Do
It For ME campaign has forced biomedical research
into ME - by amazingly positive efforts by people
who are not interested in complaining all the time
without offering anything - but instead put their
thoughts and energy into imaginative ways of crowd
funding biomedical research - often pushing
themselves beyond their limits.
IiME supporters have been showing the real side of
ME patients - people wanting to get better and
willing to be proactive in achieving this. And thus,
by their example, things change.
The promise of treatments developed from the
exciting research at Haukeland University Hospital in
Bergen has generated campaigns by three European
ME Alliance members - Norway’s ME
Association, Sweden's RMEand Switzerland's Verein
ME/CFS to fund this research. The MEandYOU
campaign in Norway has an ambitious target to
raise 7 million Norwegian Kroner in 90 days and has
achieved a commendable result already.
Education is another key to progress. This applies to
education of medical professionals as well as
politicians, the media, patients and the public. The
IiME conferences have formed a crucial part of this
education and served to provide a platform for the
latest and the best biomedical research into ME –
demonstrating how false is the belief that little is
known about the disease.
The charity has recently completed the distribution
of 25 GP packs to GPs and GP clinics in Scotland.
The packs contain information about ME, diagnostic
guidelines, charity Journal and DVD and other items
of specific information about ME which will help the
healthcare professional better understand the
disease and what progress is being made.
Our conference DVDs allow a historical record of
the conference events while at the same time
making it available to those around the world who
wish to hear of the biomedical research. The charity
has heard many times of the usefulness of the DVDs
and in many cases where they have helped patients
and healthcare staff.
Recently the charity began distribution of the latest
ME guidelines – the International Consensus
Criteria. Every conference delegate will have a copy
in their conference pack. We have also been UK
distributor for the printed copies of the Canadian
Consensus Criteria.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
The charity tries to help people with ME and has
been involved in a great deal of campaigning and
lobbying to raise awareness and gain a more valid
perception in the media and healthcare
departments and by the public.
The charity recently met with Dr Martin McShane –
NHS Commissioning Board Authority, Director -
Domain 2- Improving the quality of life for people
with Long Term Conditions). This meeting was
requested by the Prime Minister after a constituent
and supporter, Alex Hall, met with the PM and
passed on a letter from the charity.
At the meeting Dr McShane heard directly from two
parents of a severely affected young adult with ME.
The parents spoke with dignity and passion about
the treatment of their daughter and Dr McShane
patiently heard the terrible story of how parents
were blamed for this disease affecting their child,
and how healthcare services had failed in their
daughter’s case.
Although not unique such direct imparting of
knowledge to a prominent healthcare official of
how severely affected patients with ME are
managed and treated in UK is relatively rare in our
experience.
IiME also had proposals to Dr McShane which could
be used to move things on.
We suggested using this area (ME) as an example of
a difficult area of medicine and use it as a model for
nationwide services.
We suggested an ME consultancy role for CCGs to
be established.
We proposed setting up clinical trials which could
be initiated under the auspices of the local
university's clinical trials team. As the NHS can
participate and perform research so we suggested
two such trials to begin with.
IiME proposed setting up a trial of telemedicine,
where severely affected patients could be treated
by an ME consultant who would not have to be
physically present, and where a GP or other
professional could sit in and learn about ME.
IiME suggested that a standard service model could
be used for ME, and tested, in East Anglia. Other
commissioning groups would be able to see the
www.investinme.org
Page 4 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://QrC2Fp8RwFKvUh6DPK_70wrCTWx6Vb__RA2Gv1dUU1I$0`̵ XojcdT׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
effectiveness and efficacy of this model and it could
be developed from there. This service model would
be based on a biomedical approach to ME with a
trained and knowledgeable consultant(s) and where
training was emphasised. GPs could also learn from
this and all would be aware of the biomedical
research into ME which had been and was taking
place. Common protocols could become
established to enable a consistent approach to
treating patients.
The proposal for an examination and research
facility in Norwich by IiME includes patients being
correctly diagnosed and put forward for biomedical
research, with results from the research being
applied to patients as soon as possible.
We needed an acceptance from the NHS that there
was no one size fits all treatment/management
option.
Education of GPs was important as lack of
knowledge permeates the NHS. So IiME proposed
holding workshops with qualified physicians and the
charity offered to arrange these as part of the
introduction and trial of an appropriate service
model, with the charity using its links to various
researchers and clinicians here and abroad. Such
workshops could educate healthcare staff and look
at patients.
We suggested these projects could serve as pilot
projects for the NHS commissioning groups.
Dr McShane identified three strands coming from
our discussions.
1. Empathy and Respect (anger felt by patients and
carers understandable)
2.Services (some in the country supportive)
3. Research
The parents of the severely ill child added a
4th important strand - Medical practitioners are
faced with a lot of conditions - instead of suspicion
they should accept their limitations and show
respect. Patient /carer experiences/expertise
should be acknowledged.
The outcomes from this meeting confirmed our
views that we need to educate GPs; that research is
correct way forward as IiME were proposing; and
that we must continue to have to force through the
necessary changes ourselves.
So an independent charity and its supporters
continue to crowd fund biomedical research,
continue to crowd source ideas for ME research and
continue to raise awareness of this disease –
backed by an increasing number of supporters who,
themselves, have ideas and are willing to make the
enormous effort to make a difference.
Prior to the conference the charity has organised an
international collaborative meeting with researchers
and clinicians from nine countries in attendance.
Last year the collaborative two-day Clinical
Autoimmunity Working Group (CAWG) meeting
organised by Invest in ME and the Alison Hunter
Memorial Foundation of Australia, in London,
brought old and new researchers to the same table
for two days of discussions.
Initiatives came from this meeting and, perhaps,
influenced the latest calls for research in the latest
MRC highlight notice from last year -
“There is now preliminary evidence supporting the
view that inflammatory mechanisms in the brain
and spinal cord may underlie the pathophysiology of
some severe disease CFS/ME phenotypes.”
Immune dysregulation: “There is evidence for a
disturbance in innate and adaptive immunity in
CFS/ME including alterations in cytokine profile,
absolute and functional alterations in T cells and NK
cells and occurrence of autoantibodies and allergic
reactions that may explain some of the
manifestations such as fatigue and flu-like
symptoms. A number of infectious and
(May 2013)
Modern day terms for raising awareness and
funding – crowd sourcing and crowd funding – are
now used to describe efforts to maximise the
potential of new technology for the benefit of
patients.
An increasingly more knowledgeable and
determined patient population are forcing change
and making things happen - making a difference -
thanks to conferences and organisations
highlighting ME research and to the immediacy and
effects of social media.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 5 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
environmental exposures have been associated as
triggering these changes.”
- UK Medical Research Council
This developing recognition of the real disease in
ME needs to be backed up with an appropriate
response.
The overwhelming need is for research - and
essentially biomedical research into ME. We believe
International collaboration is a necessity for
research into ME.
If we are seriously to have a way forward for proper
research into ME then we need not just adequate
funding, but correctly defined cohorts,
standardisation on diagnostic criteria and a
collaborative of researchers who will not blur
science with politics.
Research into ME needs a strategic approach - but it
may be destined to fail completely by attempting to
establish the way forward on foundations which
include so much of what has been wrong in the
past. So we need -
 to establish homogeneous research cohorts
 to adopt and endorse the latest ICC or CCC
criteria for ME - for research and for diagnosis
 to separate research into fatigue and chronic
fatigue from ME
 to establish transparent peer reviewing by
professionals with the relevant experience and
background
For IiME our objectives over the next couple of
years will be to attempt to fund more biomedical
research using diagnostic criteria that are as good
as we have in the current day.
We will attempt to improve education of healthcare
staff by facilitating training events with
knowledgeable and experienced ME clinicians
providing help, advice and education to GPs, nurses,
researchers and patients.
We will organise research meetings to bring the
best researchers together.
We will collaborate with those who are genuinely
interested in progress in researching and treating
and curing ME.
This year we would also like to thank the Edward P.
Evans Foundation for contributing to the costs of
the conference. The Foundation is also a major
funder of ME research with recent awards to OMI
Merit and Griffith University showing a
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 6 of 36
(May 2013)
We will support those initiatives which promise to
make real progress.
Our approach is to try to get a strategic research
programme started here in the UK and build
collaborations with trusted clinicians and
researchers so that patients can get tested as part
of research rather than having to spend vast
amounts of money travelling to see doctors abroad.
We need clinical trials to get evidence for
treatments that work.
We need better education about ME for healthcare
staff.
We need additional and long-term funding for
biomedical research into ME.
At our IIMEC8 conference we focus on ME now
becoming a mainstream research area. We have
representatives from most of the main biomedical
research initiatives now occurring throughout the
world.
Our foundation biomedical research project will
begin this year at a leading UK university. We are
actively in discussion with a number of other
projects and welcome the chance to work with
other groups interested in biomedical research into
ME.
SPONSORS
A word of thanks to the Irish ME Trust who, yet
again, will be sponsoring one of the speakers to the
conference. IMET have been a constant friend and
supporter of IiME, and of ME patients. They have
funded major research into ME and have been a
leading member in the European ME Alliance.
׉	 7cassandra://6fcAbYchz9Hf02HpR7qVkb3U2oIu3ygDcUFbv9ayb2Q l`̵ Xojcd_׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
commitment and vision which is to be welcomed as
we try to facilitate international collaboration and
sharing.
And we would like thank our EMEA colleagues in
Sweden. RME have kindly donated to help with the
costs of the conference.
We would like to thank Simmaron Research
Foundation for generously sponsoring the tickets of
two medical students from University of East Anglia.
We would like to thank the presenters for coming to
London to speak at IIMEC8 and all the delegates
who attend in order to make this happen.
We thank all of our supporters for their support in
raising ME awareness, for their efforts in funding
biomedical research and for their inspiration.
The theme of the 8th Invest in ME International ME
Conference 2013 in London on 31st May is
Mainstreaming ME Research - an acceptance that,
despite the past, research into ME is now joining
the mainstream research area deserving of more
funding and of the interest of top biomedical
research institutions.
The IIMEC8 conference will highlight the major
biomedical research initiatives into ME now taking
place.
Enjoy the Journal.
Enjoy the conference.
Let’s do it for ME.
Invest in ME
ME QUOTES
"The delayed responses starting from 2–7
months after Rituximab treatment, in spite of
rapid B-cell depletion, suggests that CFS is an
autoimmune disease and may be consistent
with the gradual elimination of autoantibodies
preceding clinical responses. The present
findings will impact future research efforts in
CFS."
Mella and Fluge, Haukeland University Hospital,
Bergen, Norway
http://bit.ly/10krfqn
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
London.
The Biomedical Research into ME Collaborative
(BRMEC) Meeting London on 30th May has
attending almost 40 of the world’s experts and
leading clinicians involved with ME.
This meeting follows on from the cooperation and
dedication of the Alison Hunter Memorial
Foundation (Australia) and Invest in ME (UK).
To raise awareness of ME, and promote
collaboration, innovation and foundations for a
clearer strategy of biomedical research into ME,
Invest in ME and the Alison Hunter Memorial
Foundation of Australia continue the collaboration
which has been a feature for several years, and
which established the Clinical Autoimmunity
Working Group which met in London in May 2012.
The extraordinary skill and experience which can be
harnessed by meetings such as last year’s Clinical
Autoimmunity Working Group meeting in London
and this year’s BRMEC meeting, as well as the
possibilities to progress further the understanding
of the disease by “crowd sourcing” experience and
ideas, promises to enable a unique contribution to
understanding ME and suggest future research
directions and perhaps treatments.
Chairing the meeting was Dr Ian Gibson, former
Dean of Biology at UEA and Professor Hugh Perry of
Southampton University and Chair of the Medical
Research Council Neurosciences Board.
The objectives of the meeting were:
1. To present the status of some of the latest
initiatives occurring in biomedical research into
ME
www.investinme.org
Page 7 of 36
(May 2013)
As part of the conference events this year Invest in
ME have organised another researchers meeting in
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Volume 7 Issue 1
2. To discuss and explore the possibilities for
collaboration and for funding for biomedical
research into ME
3. To generate new ideas regarding research into
ME and assess research strategies for ME
research
4. Review experiences and expertise from other
research areas in order to assist ME research
5. Review evidence for immunological
derangement in ME
6. To discuss opportunities for extending clinical
trials in multiple centres and possibly
internationally
7. To plan future events
Our hope for the meeting was to initiate new
collaborations and generate new ideas for
biomedical research into ME and help researchers
support each other in the future.
To achieve continued progress in understanding and
treating this disease we must establish
collaborations between biomedical researchers who
can agree a clear strategy of biomedical research.
BRMEC AGENDA
ME QUOTES
"ME/CFS is not uncommon in England and
represents a significant burden to patients and
society. The number of people with chronic
Welcome and introductions
Pathogen Discovery and Pathogenesis
Retroviruses and ME
Pathogen Discovery continued
Gut Microbiota Study UEA
Chaired Discussion
Review of experience of Rituximab in ME
Rituximab in autoimmune diseases
Update on immunological derangement in ME
Screening NK-, B- and T-cell phenotype and function in
patients suffering from ME
Chaired Discussion
Update on ANS studies
FDA Endpoints / Vistide
OMI MERIT Strategy
Discussion – As per objectives of meeting
Funding Possibilities
Ways to Continue Collaboration and Discovery
Closing Summary and future directions.
Briefing to Invest in ME Conference
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
fatigue who do not meet specific criteria for
ME/CFS is higher still. Both groups have high
levels of need for service provision, including
health and social care. We suggest combining
the use of both the CDC-1994 and Canadian
criteria for ascertainment of ME/CFS cases,
alongside careful clinical phenotyping of study
participants. This combination if used
systematically will enable international
comparisons, minimization of bias, and the
identification and investigation of distinct subgroups
of patients with possibly distinct
aetiologies and pathophysiologies, standing a
better chance of translation into effective
specific treatments."
Nacul et al. BMC Med. 2011 Jul 28;9:91. doi:
10.1186/1741-7015-9-91.
(May 2013)
This demonstrates our view that forming a
collaborative of biomedical researchers, including
existing ME researchers and those new to the field,
is the best way forward and promises the quickest
and most efficient way to produce data and
treatments and so benefit people with ME and their
families – a Biomedical Research into ME
Collaborative .
Representatives from nine countries attended.
Invest in ME and Alison Hunter Memorial
Foundation continue to work together to raise
awareness and promote sound biomedical research
into ME through collaboration and innovation.
The provisional agenda for the meeting is shown
below.
www.investinme.org
Page 8 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
IiME PROPOSAL FOR RESEARCH and
EXAMINATION FACILITY
At the IIMEC8 conference Dr Ian Gibson will
announce news of the foundation research for ME
project which the charity and its supporters will
fund. It is a biomedical research project and will be
carried out at the University of East Anglia.
This follows three years of work by the charity and
its supporters. It was at the 5th Invest in ME
International ME Conference in London in May 2010
that Invest in ME announced that we had entered
into discussions with the University of East Anglia to
instigate a research facility for ME. Discussions
continued after that conference and we decided to
publicise our attempt to set up such a facility.
We attached the research to a proposal for a centre
of excellence for ME – something which the UK
does not have today and which is required.
Such a centre would allow proper examinations of
people with ME, would allow patients to be put
forward for trials, would allow the severely effected
to be included in research, would facilitate
translational biomedical research into ME to allow
early results to be used for the benefit of patients,
and would enable a database of results to be
maintained.
It may seem straightforward to get research carried
out, to organise the necessary elements to treat
patients properly, to initiate fundraising to carry this
out. In practice it has not been so straightforward.
During this time we have had setbacks. There have
been walls put up, some understandable but others
mendacious. We have encountered apathy and
ignorance from some and lack of support from
some.
We have been affected by the effects of the
government reforms to healthcare which affected
everything in the NHS.
Despite setbacks we have continued to try to get
these necessary building blocks for a UK Centre of
Excellence off the ground. Invest in ME are a small
charity – Small charity BIG Cause has been our
slogan.
But we are determined and we have continued to
lobby and to arrange and attend meetings. Our
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
fundraising efforts have continued and the
inspiration given by the efforts of supporters has
energised us to do more, and never give up.
It does feel that we have been working on this
project every single day – and that is close to the
truth.
A plain fact of life is that healthcare departments
and organisations do not prioritise treatment of ME
patients and the recent government healthcare
reforms have seriously affected the timescale for
implementing this – with a lot of preparatory work
lost. The charity has had to spend much time trying
to educate people about this disease.
Though there have been a few surprises and
disappointments along the way, thanks to
wonderful support and help from fellow
campaigners, we have managed to get there.
Our work in attempting to set up a clinic, which is
linked to the research, continues.
IiME supporters can be truly proud of the fact that a
top UK research university is preparing to perform
high quality research into ME using sequencing
facilities which already exist in Norwich Research
Park.
The foundation project looks very good. And so we
build on this and continue.
We have other ideas to supplement this and initiate
new research. We will continue to try to have
proper services for people with ME.
Below is a summary of information relating to the
proposal which was formulated by an Invest in ME
steering group that was formed to oversee the
setting up of this facility.
It has taken a great deal of work and determination
to pursue this proposal.
But we hope this convinces anyone considering
supporting our efforts that we are serious and will
continue until we have a proper research base
which can make a major contribution to
understanding and treating this disease.
www.investinme.org
Page 9 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
THE CHARITY PROPOSAL-THE BIG CAUSE
With the objective of improving and promoting
education about ME amongst healthcare staff and
raising awareness of the disease the charity feels
that the best way to make progress is to establish a
national centre of excellence for ME.
To this end we have established momentum and
resources to begin work on establishing a base of
research which could develop into a facility leading
to a UK Centre of Excellence for Biomedical
Research into ME.
(May 2013)
describing it as "SERIOUS or LIFE THREATENING", on
a par with cancer or /heart failure (click here) and
the UK government recognise ME as a chronic
neurological illness.
To download our poster please use this url -
http://www.investinme.org/Documents/ME%20Aw
areness/LBM%20Oct2012/Gut%20PROD%20A4.pdf
BACKGROUND
People with ME need early and correct diagnosis,
proper treatment and advice. The current status of
services for people with ME and their families in the
UK is poor with little knowledge of biomedical
research being applied and possible treatments not
being made available to patients or healthcare staff.
Simplistic and ineffectual, even damaging
psychological therapies are offered in place of real
treatments - wasting public money and doing
nothing to help patients.
This has resulted in ME patients having no real
healthcare service and far too little progress in
attracting new researchers or clinicians to study the
disease. The dangers for people with ME having no
proper clinical examination and no access to
possible treatments is that the disease can develop
into more severe forms with significant loss of
functioning.
There is also the danger of mis- or missed diagnosis
– a common problem with people thought to suffer
from ME.
The USA Food & Drugs Agency (FDA) recently
decided to re-categorise ME in "Immune Diseases -
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
THE AIMS and OBJECTIVES
After five years of campaigning for awareness and
promoting better education about ME the charity
felt that the best way to make progress is to
establish a national centre of excellence for ME.
The Invest in ME Steering Group was formed -
consisting of carers of people with ME and scientific
advisors - to begin work on establishing a facility
leading to a UK Centre of Excellence for Biomedical
Research into ME.
We believe that a change needs to be made in the
way service provision for ME patients is carried out
and is suggesting a simple but effective structure for
providing services and instituting major biomedical
research into this disease which will have profound
effects on the way ME is treated in the UK and
establish a hub of scientific and clinical excellence
for ME within Europe.
THE RESEARCH
With the help of leading researchers the charity is
proposing a number of initial projects which would
help establish a research base and lead to further
projects being initiated based on findings.
It is not often realised that 60-70% of the immune
system is located in the gut as a vast network of
lymph tissue referred to as GALT (gut associated
lymphatic tissue). The research highlighted in the
proposal involves looking at gut microbiota, which
is the latest thinking in how to go about research. In
USA, renowned pathogen hunter Dr. Ian Lipkin and
specialist clinician Dr. Nancy Klimas have all been
suggesting a similar approach.
The charity is keen to replicate the recent
Norwegian Haukeland University findings using
Rituximab as well as a number of new ideas being
developed. The aim is to build on this but the
research has to start somewhere and so the
researchers will begin afresh with the best
approach. This research proposal would build a
strategy of research which would involve patients,
clinicians and researchers working together.
www.investinme.org
Page 10 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
THE PROPOSAL
The charity proposes for a facility to be instigated
with four main elements for diagnosis, treatment
and research into ME – service commissioning,
service provision with clinical diagnosis and
examinations, translational biomedical research and
a research database to allow for more research and
improved training of healthcare staff.
Figure 1 shows the elements of the model with
patient care and treatment at the centre of the
model.
The proposal would be located around the Norwich
Research Park in Norfolk. This area contains worldclass
facilities with a leading university (the
University of East Anglia (UEA)), leading research
institutes and a modern university hospital (the
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital) - all of
which complement the necessary biomedical
research which would take place.
(May 2013)
from GPs. An important issue is for early and correct
diagnosis to be determined.
The service would include a clinical biomedical lead
consultant who would perform correct diagnosis
(using the international standard Canadian
Consensus Guidelines or International Consensus
Criteria), perform a full examination using a
standard clinical protocol and, once patients have
been formally diagnosed as having ME, administer
possible treatments and participate in biomedical
research into the disease.
Using a standard diagnostic and clinical protocol the
service would allow a model of care and
appropriate care packages for people with severe
presentations and would establish and co-ordinate a
clinical network and disseminate best practice
across that network.
Follow-up examinations would be scheduled so that
patients are provided with a service and possible
treatments and results from any treatments would
be fed back into a database which is administered
between the university hospital and the university
research faculty.
GPs in the area with a special interest in ME would
be used to assist and be trained in proper diagnosis
and treatment of ME.
Translational Biomedical Research
A parallel but complementary element will be for
translational biomedical research to be started by
the university in association with other
complementary research organisations.
Figure 1
Service Commissioning
Service commissioning would be performed by the
local CCG or CCG Grouping (formerly the PCT). The
service would require early and correct diagnosis,
examination and treatment of ME using a clinical
biomedical lead consultant with GPs with special
interest being connected to the service.
Diagnosis and Clinical Examinations
The examinations of people with ME would be
commissioned by the CCG. Referrals to the
university hospital would be via existing methods
The university would undertake biomedical
research into ME using cohorts of patients from
those being examined at the university hospital and
provide possible recommendations for treatment.
The university research would be used for more
rapid provision of possible treatments for patients
whilst at the same time building up the research
database for ME and allowing fostering of new
areas of cooperation with other biomedical
research facilities.
The research being proposed by the university
would be of the most advanced possible – using
virology and immunology as the key for examining
patients.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 11 of 36
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 ̻9ׁHhttp://www.nnuh.nhs.ukׁׁЈנXo!jce	 @9ׁH &http://www.nrp.org.uk/cms.php?pageid=1ׁׁЈנXo!jce ̛9ׁHhttp://www.ifr.ac.ukׁׁЈנXo!jce }9ׁHhttp://www.foh.uea.ac.ukׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
An important aspect of the biomedical research is
that properly defined and distinct patient cohorts
are defined and maintained.
The research would be oriented toward
translational biomedical research, which allows
results from research to be applied toward
treatments for ME patients.
Our initial proposal for research which
has been discussed with researchers
at the UEA, would aim to initiate
studies using TGAC sequencing facility
at the Norwich Research Park which
would allow all known and unknown
viruses present to be identified in a
cohort of well defined patients.
Allied to this would be biomedical
research projects – the first of which
would examine the possible link
between ME and gut inflammation.
A Research Database
These initial and ongoing projects would enable a
database to be established for use in further
research. This research database will assist
epidemiological studies, enhance research potential
and provide patients with proper records of
treatment.
A research protocol will be established to outline all
the study procedures, including data collection and
planned data analysis.
THE CURRENT INFRASTRUCTURE
This proposal would make use of the existing
infrastructure where patients are initially seen by
GPs and referred to a consultant.
Where it differs is that a specialist biomedical
clinical lead would be used to perform diagnosis
and provide treatment and would be working with
a translational biomedical research facility at the
university in order to deliver real improvement in
patient care from scientific discovery
THE BENEFITS
The above proposal would lead to a facility with the
following benefits –
 Early and correct diagnosis of ME
(May 2013)
 the clinical lead consultant would assess and
plan the development of future services in
conjunction with commissioning CCGs
 it would provide access to specialist assessment,
diagnosis and advice on the clinical
management, including symptom control and
specific interventions, for both patients and
health professionals

eventual provision of an
ambulatory service and/or telemedical
services for those
severely ill patients who cannot
be moved

development of a
network of local multi-agency
domiciliary services to support
people who are more severely
affected and who are unable to
access hospital and primary care
services

allow ME patients
(including those severely
affected) to participate in clinical
trials, where novel research will be conducted,
and where medical students can learn about this
disease
 facilitate training and education opportunities
for healthcare staff to enhance their knowledge
and skills in the diagnosis and management of
ME
 lead the development of services within primary
and secondary care and support GPs and other
health professionals in the care of patients with
ME.
 Healthcare staff would feel more comfortable
with the diagnosis of ME being made
 Undertake comprehensive assessments and
provide a care package for each patient to
include carer and family support
 Savings on existing consultant referrals and staff
by concentrating ME examination in one area.
The benefits of this approach will, we are sure, save
lives and could help restore or improve the lives of
hundreds of thousands of patients and their
families.
TRAINING of HEALTHCARE STAFF
The need for training in ME is one of the main areas
of interest for the ISG. The proposed model would
allow the GP network to have access to up to date
information about ME including data on treatments
and prognosis.
Specialist advice for more complex cases across the
country could be provided based on referrals from
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 12 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://5y2a82_Hnqq-Si37ruyvG3LRot_QtHGhY54Je7O5xLY$h`̵ Xojcd׉E!Journal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
other CCGs. This in turn would complement the
research database thus increasing knowledge and
awareness of treatments. Models of care and
appropriate care could be developed with packages
for people with severe presentations.
FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
This model would be developed in the future with
an ambulatory service and/or tele-medical services
being employed for those who are too ill to attend
the hospital examination. Phlebotomy services
would be provided for home visits to be made to
allow the severely affected to participate in the
research and allow treatments for these
disenfranchised patients.
We would seek to establish additional biomedical
research projects to be undertaken by the university
which would increase the knowledge about the
disease and facilitate development of treatments
for patients.
In partnership with the charity more training
courses would be arranged with visiting experts
(researchers and clinicians) being able to share
experiences and data and facilitate more education
about the disease.
Future developments would see the potential of
referrals from other areas (and other countries) to
be created thus generating income and helping to
establish the translational research and treatment
facility as the foremost facility in Europe for treating
myalgic encephalomyelitis.
Our aim is to build sustainable and developing
collaborations with translational biomedical
research at the heart of all research.
FURTHER READING
 University of East Anglia
http://www.foh.uea.ac.uk
 Institute of Food Research http://www.ifr.ac.uk
 Norwich Research Park
http://www.nrp.org.uk/cms.php?pageid=1
 Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital
http://www.nnuh.nhs.uk
 TGAC - The Genome Analysis Centre
http://www.tgac.bbsrc.ac.uk
IiME BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH FUND
Our long term objective is to establish a UK Centre
of Excellence for Biomedical Research into ME. We
will continue to campaign for this facility to be
established. We welcome all support. Donations to
the Invest in ME Biomedical Research Fund will be
used to support the establishment of this facility.
We hope to continue raising funds for other
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
 EDP News Story
http://www.investinme.org/Medianewspapers.
htm
 MP Executive Summary September 2011
http://www.investinme.org/Documents/Biome
dical%20Research%20Facility/MP%20Exec%20S
ummary%20September%202011.pdf
 FAQ September 2011
http://bit.ly/180Iod0
(May 2013)
projects and until external research grants are
available. http://bit.ly/qkjD5K
HOW TO LEARN MORE
Contact Invest in ME at info@investinme.org.
SUPPORT US
Help us by contributing to the Invest in ME
Biomedical Research Fund for ME –
http://tinyurl.com/ydh6whu
Our JustGiving page is here -
http://www.justgiving.com/investinm-e
www.investinme.org
Page 13 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://x8R9FSL8vFVs08-kl5uql0ERiUnWWxUAZg_nYHwaEAM!`̵ XojcdXojcd{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://WAyAQnBwqDFSqwlz7I2_GjqR_SRi7IlCt6rKsL4JM-Y Җ` ׉	 7cassandra://KcTFJXLhtMsPnYrDqsRW1fWS_Li-x4_2NUu2wmKHtQ4͆`S׉	 7cassandra://oMjUjMUznoWyYgJmigutGbgKtDHoeAVmTcBtmBEQkOU&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://umLFQB0KlQhGl1u_0h2aBFVsd7L_HM4Sj1CpUcj6tewg̤͠Xojcdט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://cd2Bgh-2IJBItiTHjL2Uq05EblhE20PvyYCBj6CPoD4 ë`׉	 7cassandra://so3tah9iHgnJkU6lJHABacx_wAU_UmHgwhAxCclsiK4̈́I`S׉	 7cassandra://W5slxH7DPsOIOCk5BXXhz3qO28SjJKlA0tp2l9oZe18&c`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://EnUfiBULS4QtBUxFRU0RVi5BZ8Ph5iDGgomjKrCdB7k 	͠XojcdנXojcd N̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXojcd N̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXo"jce' S̞9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E)Journal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
Few who have any knowledge or experience of
myalgic encephalomyelitis, whether from a
personal or professional perspective, would dispute
the urgent need for reliable bookmarkers for early
and accurate diagnosis and provision of effective
medical treatments for this organic chronic disease.
Accurate information, guidance, education and
training for patients, public, medical professionals,
and other service providers, needs to be made
available meanwhile to avoid unnecessary suffering.
The Let's do it for ME campaign was launched by a
small group of people with severe ME in July 2011
in support of the proposal by Invest in ME to
establish a centre of excellence for ME based in East
Anglia and the first of its kind in UK/Europe.
We commend the forward-planning and joined up
thinking to combine translational biomedical
research with patient care and education and
training for medical professionals, in collaboration
with international researchers and like-minded ME
organisations across the world, and the clear focus
on infection and immunity.
We are keen to help progress research and
treatment, not only to benefit ourselves as patients,
but also to avoid losing another generation to the
ravages of this disease.
We have no more time to lose.
We wished to assist in a practical way by raising the
£100k needed to fund the foundation project to get
the research strategy underway in Norwich. We
were delighted to receive supportive comments for
our Guest book or by other means, from some of
our MPs; the Countess of Mar, Chair of the Forward
ME group; and Jane Colby, Executive Director of The
Young ME Sufferers Trust. Empowerment is a key
element driving the campaign and it has
been very rewarding to see children and young
people in particular, as well as the very severely
affected, able to play a role in speaking out about
their disabling illness and how it is viewed and
treated by society and the medical profession,
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
whilst taking such positive steps to raise funds for
the translational biomedical research required to
bring realistic hope for their recovery, with support
of well friends and family members.
As we expect to reach the initial fund-raising target
by the end of May or thereabouts, we will have
raised £100k in under two years. This is no mean
feat, starting from scratch from our homes and
beds, with no campaign budget or publicity. Every
penny raised goes to the IIME Biomedical Research
Fund; any competition prizes or similar resources
are donated.
Every penny raised goes
to the IIME Biomedical
Research Fund
We could not have achieved this without the
tremendous efforts of a wide range of supporters,
from very severely ill survivors to wonderful willing
wellies.
We are genuinely delighted and appreciative of any
types and all levels of support, and there have been
too many ingenious, innovative, creative, generous,
courageous and inspiring ideas, events and
contributions to highlight them all individually.
Our supporters hail from all corners of the UK,
Europe, USA, Australia, NZ, and over 3500 votes in
April won IIME 1st prize of £2000 in The Big Break
contest run by Direct Debit.
Writer Jacqueline Rayner is a founder member of
our planning group. She had been planning with her
friends and colleagues at Big Finish Productions to
produce a charity audio play for download in aid of
IIME, based on the character of Bernice
Summerfield: Many Happy Returns.
Not content with that, producer Scott ran the
Edinburgh Marathon for IIME, Simon donated funds
www.investinme.org
Page 14 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
from his choir, and others have done more besides.
At the same time, planning group member and
writer Barnaby Eaton-Jones reworked his play,
Running To Stand Still, in aid of our cause.
Music artist Mama Chill decided to proactively
support IIME in her awareness raising and by
donating proceeds of downloads and
joining the team. Her ME Awareness
track is based on the original “I Can't
Stand The Rain”, and her new
track, “Don't Say Nuthin If It
Ain't Worthwhile” was
released for May Awareness.
There are various other
artists, writers, musicians,
photographers, supporting
IIME.
Members of the planning
group run the campaign
websites and on-line shops;
organise May Awareness events
such as The Big Sleep for ME,
designed to be accessible to people
of all ages and levels of illness severity
and launched in 2012, ongoing fundraisers
such as the 1st of each month One Day-One Pound
and Small Change to Change M.E, the Christmas
card competition, calendars and summer quizzes,
card sales, stalls, supermarket and church
collections.
We also proactively support other patient initiatives
that include IIME such The Big Shave 2013 and Walk
for ME. This is all done painstakingly between us
over the course of days, weeks, months.
Make ME Crafts exploded onto the scene last year
and is proving hugely popular, with an
ever-expanding team producing an
impressive range of arts and crafts
available all year round.
A young contributor summed it up with
this comment:
“Big thankyou to Jon because you have
brought the community together, its
really positive, everyone is happy
making and doing things they enjoy
and its all going to hopefully find what
is going on with our bodies !! Sooo
happy to be a part of this XD xx”
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
Another member of our planning group featured
alongside an advert placed by IIME to raise
awareness of the foundation research project. Rosa
had previously crocheted soft wool blue
awareness wristbands for IIME and her
grandparents hosted a coffee morning in aid of our
cause.
Following a decline in her health,
Rosa was moved to a nursing
home, and fed by
nasojejunal tube. She
chose to mark her 21st
birthday by raising
awareness and
funds for our
cause. The staff at
the nursing home
joined in with a
pyjama day with all
proceeds to Rosa's
appeal.
Goodwill messages
were posted across the
social networking sites
and some people used
Rosa's photo as their profile
picture for the day.
Her mother said that the appeal passed all their
expectations. Having contracted ME at 8 years of
age, Rosa's story epitomises the indomitable spirit
of the majority of people of all ages with ME, as
well as the spirit of our campaign.
A 14 year old boy wrote:
“Although it has been a year since I was in hospital
due to M.E. I am still struggling with this awful
misunderstood illness. I am still not in school and I
want my life back as I knew it. I
know many other children who
are suffering with this illness too
and I am in touch with them. They
are also missing out on so many
things like me. This is such a great
cause, raising money to find a
cure!!”
We are grateful to IIME and to all
those who are engaging with the
international drive to instigate,
fund, and conduct the kind of high
quality scientific biomedical
research that may be translated into long-awaited
effective treatment options for this organic disease.
www.investinme.org
Page 15 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
Wherever you are based and whatever role you
play, be it front of stage or behind the scenes: we
thank you for your support.
Here follows just a few of the campaigns set up by
supporters to raise awareness of ME and to raise
funds for the IiME Biomedical Research Fund.
Big Finish Productions is pleased to announce
a very special release to celebrate the twentieth
anniversary of archaeologist and adventurer Bernice
Summerfield.
Many Happy Returns will be a unique featurelength
drama where every penny will go to
supporting Invest in ME.
(May 2013)
Beckham on Channel 4′s Richard and Judy. This
positive feedback encouraged her back into the
studio where she worked with producer Shane
Shanahan on her next album ‘Nobody wants to
know ya when ya Nobody’.
The Big Sleep for ME is an awareness and
fundraising event initiated by Julia Cottam as part of
the Let’s do it for ME effort to raise awareness and
funds for biomedical research.
Stacy Hart aka Rap/Hip Hop artist Mama
Chill is an ME sufferer with real talent. When
diagnosed with ME doctors told her that any chance
of a music career was well and truly over but
Stacy didn’t let this discourage her. While bedbound
for two years she released 13 track home
demo rap/hiphop album ‘RAW’ and also entered
and won a competition to write a song for Victoria
One Day One Pound encourages
donations of £1 to be made on the 1st each
month. If you would like to join us in creating a
sea change by donating just £1 (or more if you
wish) one day a month for Biomedical ME
Research text the code ODOP99 £1 to 70070.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 16 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://y9FyDJgHvhgpyIkVXiOATjUeRUK2OYGe64mKWWdnisU'\`̵ Xojcd׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
Make ME Crafts is a creative branch of the
Let’s do it for ME campaign initiated and run by ME
sufferer Jon Watson which sells handmade and
unique items made by ME sufferers and their
supporters crafting for charity.
(May 2013)
‘Running To Stand Still’ is a charitable audio play
with original songs. The central theme is the illness
ME and, aside from giving information about the
disease, it revolves around how it affects
relationships and a sufferer’s life. It is in aid of Invest
in ME and all the professional creatives involved
have graciously given their time for free for this
production.
Advertisement
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 17 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
Lili – Diane’s Story
An ME Carer’s View
I'm a carer for my adult daughter, Lili, who is
completely bedbound with very severe myalgic
encephalomyelitis. For Lili, M.E. didn't come slowly.
It very rudely crashed into her life and very quickly
stole her health, taking bigger and bigger chunks of
it as she deteriorated.
It all began when she experienced a gastric virus of a
sort she had never experienced before because this
time she never regained her health. A couple days
later, she woke up with agonising head pain 'like her
brain was on fire', with severe neck pain – she also
couldn't move her neck, and her whole body was
paralysed. She's not sure how long she stayed like
this as she was in and out of consciousness but she
truly felt that she was going to die because her body
was undergoing an extreme crisis.
To cut a long story short, it took a year to get a
diagnosis during which time she literally dragged
herself to doctors and hospital appointments to
undergo tests and consultations (which were
sometimes more like inquisitions from paid
torturers).
Although Lili was severely affected and completely
housebound from day one, she forced herself to go
because she so desperately wanted to know what
was wrong with her so that she could have
treatment and get on with her life again. However
each visit and test pushed her body beyond its limits.
She was gradually deteriorating.
Every tiniest activity (physical, cognitive and sensory)
from washing her hair to rubbish collection day, had
devastating results.
Sometimes she could recover in a few days, other
times it would take months, but often the
cumulative effects of the noisy, smelly, bright,
sunny, loud, vibrational, fast, chemical based world
we live in were all too much and disease progression
with permanent damage resulted. Doctors always
amaze me when they are puzzled by her severity and
wonder why it's taking so long to 'pick up her bed
and walk'.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
Lili collapsed after her last hospital visit. She passed
out with a seizure, her body violently shook, and
paralysis spread throughout her body. It was an
extreme reaction to the overload of physical,
cognitive and sensory attack on her body during that
year, but this last journey to the hospital was the
straw upon the last straw that broke her body down.
She never recovered.
My beautiful daughter is totally bedbound. She has a
diversity of symptoms that seem endless. (Most of
the very severely affected have between 60+ and
100+ symptoms). The worst thing of all is the
relentless, agonising pain. Widespread pain in every
muscle, joint, and organ possible.
She has not had one day free from pain since the
illness began.
Her whole life now is lived from her bed. Not her
choice for she is a talented artist and photographer
and she dreams of being in summer meadows
photographing the dancing bees and butterflies and
painting the colourful flowers.
She dreams of baking cupcakes. She dreams of
completing her geology degree. She dreams of
paddling in the sea with her nephew. She dreams of
putting on a pretty dress with her hair all beautified.
Such simple dreams.
Her dreams have been snatched from her by this
awful disease that others misunderstand by thinking
it's just about feeling tired or attention-seeking.
The above are some of Lili's dreams but in reality,
she would just love to be able to do some of the
everyday things that others take for granted. Lili
longs for simple pleasures such as having a bath,
cleaning her own teeth, reading a book, eating a
plate of solid food, emailing her friends, cuddling her
nephew, having a conversation, going to the toilet
rather than using a slipper-pan, and having a hug.
When I hear people moaning about having to stand
in a queue, I think 'my daughter would love to do
that' (not the moaning bit)! To be able to get up,
have a shower, get dressed, walk, travel, shop,
interact with the environment, have a conversation,
and stand in a queue are such blessings that people
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Page 18 of 36
(May 2013)
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Volume 7 Issue 1
forget they have. And to be able to do all this
without unimaginable pain is a further blessing.
My amazing daughter has such a positive view of
life. I'm stunned that she's not depressed or angry.
Although she sometimes has her low days, her
courage and inner strength are immeasurable. Not a
day passes without seeing one of her magical smiles
which sometimes just breaks my heart.
Her days are spent in a darkened room and in as
much silence as the outside environment will allow.
She is hypersensitive to light, noise, odour, vibration,
touch, movement, chemicals, some foodstuffs, and
medicinal drugs. She can hear a vacuum cleaner five
houses down the road, smell the fabric softener on
people's clothes and feel the vibration of a humming
fridge. All these things can send her body into a
crash at any time.
She is unable to sit or stand due to being moribund
with pain, orthostatic intolerance, paralysis,
blackouts and much more and so her bed is her
companion twenty-four hours a day. She is unable to
chew and has swallowing difficulties so her food is
liquid or puréed. She cannot tolerate touch as her
skin is always 'on fire' like it's been grated with a
cheese grater. Her description. I have to cut her
pyjama tops off (when she can tolerate a change of
tops) because any movement causes her
indescribable pain. She has difficulty speaking
sometimes and so asks me to be her voice...
"My amazing daughter has
such a positive view of life. I'm
stunned that she's not
depressed or angry. Although
she sometimes has her low
days, her courage and inner
strength are immeasurable.
Not a day passes without
seeing one of her magical
smiles which sometimes just
breaks my heart."
I do my best to protect her from noise, light, odour,
vibration, movement etc within the house to
minimise the damage to her health. I pick up the
pieces after a visitor has long gone, desperately
trying to create a place of healing safety for recovery
to occur and to reduce her recovery time. However, I
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
am limited to protecting her from the outside world
- aircraft, motorbikes, fireworks, DIY, sunshine, heat,
barking dogs, roadworks, lawnmowers, parties,
environmental smells...the list is endless. Another
thing that I try to protect her from is people's
attitudes towards her illness and therefore, towards
her personally. Sometimes these misunderstandings
and judgemental opinions come knocking at your
door.
Last year we had to move house. There was no
choice. Lili and I knew that it would be a huge cost to
her health and in the back of our minds, we knew
(but didn't verbalise), it could have taken her life
too. It didn't but it came very close. With a move
comes new doctors. I registered us both at the local
surgery straight away and booked a home visit. I
won't go into details but the GP was an aggressive
rude man who insulted Lili to such a degree that I
wanted to throw him out. I remained polite but firm.
The next time I called the surgery I requested a
different GP. She came as if she had already
prejudged us. The doctor was very keen for Lili to do
GET. Lili declined stating her reasons.
A couple of months later there was a knock at the
door. It was a social worker. One of the doctors (who
wished to remain anonymous) made an allegation of
abuse/neglect. I was in a state of shock and felt sick
to my stomach. To hear the words 'suspected of
abusing your daughter' is something that will haunt
me for the rest of my days. The accusing doctor said
that Lili was 'being kept in the dark', 'not allowed to
speak', 'nursed in bed for 24hrs for 3 years', 'denied
hospital appointments'. The film, Whatever
happened to Baby Jane?' springs to mind doesn't it!
The case is still ongoing.
Lili and I were hurled out of our safe world into the
jaws of ignorance and betrayal. The bond of trust
between patient and doctor had been shattered. It
was obvious that the accusing doctor had no basic
understanding of M.E. (let alone very severe M.E.).
No understanding of light sensitivity and the fact
that this group of patients are unable to get out of
bed and so they certainly cannot travel to hospital
appointments. The extent of this ignorance in a
doctor is just frightening. The fact that they have not
kept up their medical knowledge is cause for grave
concern.
The carer of an M.E. loved one is like no other carer.
Not only is it imperative to learn about myalgic
encephalomyelitis in order to give the specialist care
required for M.E. (to avoid causing them further
www.investinme.org
Page 19 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
harm), it is also necessary to become their protector.
This serious illness is very misunderstood, even by
doctors. Society as a whole has a very misguided
view of M.E. and so the carer has to do all they can
to keep this harmful ignorant tribal thinking from
entering the world of the M.E. sufferer. They need to
protect their healing space from influences, opinions
and 'treatment' that will cause disease progression
and maybe even death.
But who protects the carer? In some ways the carer
is as vulnerable as their loved one. If a doctor does
not respect a patient's choice of treatment, they can
send in the heavy mob – social services. It's not just
children with M.E. that this happens to but adults
too. Adults, like Sophia Mirza, who are completely of
sound mind are threatened or taken away from the
safety of their home and family. Another way to
force the seriously ill person to tow-the-line is to go
after their carer. A doctor can say anything they
want. They are believed because of their social
standing. People with M.E. don't seem to have the
right to choose their treatment like other seriously ill
people do.
This can be a lonely and difficult journey for the M.E.
person and their carer to travel. Together they
travel, often feeling alone, often feeling vulnerable,
feeling ignored and misunderstood, feeling isolated
from a world they once knew. But this world no
longer recognises them, no longer understands their
plight, their sorrows, their torment, their daily
struggle. They are outcasts.
“Doctors and healthcare
workers need to be reeducated,
and the media and
general public need correct
and truthful information.
People need to know...
because M.E. isn't fussy who it
attacks next."
My hopes and prayers are that things will change for
the better for the M.E. community and their carers.
New M.E. biomedical centres with specialist training
for healthcare workers would be a good start. I
wholeheartedly support Invest in ME and their
campaign to create a centre of excellence which is
much needed not only for those with myalgic
encephalomyelitis, but for society as a whole.
Doctors and healthcare workers need to be reInvest
in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
educated, and the media and general public need
correct and truthful information. People need to
know... because M.E. isn't fussy who it attacks next.
ME QUOTES
Ann Epidemiol. 2013 Jun;23(6):371-376. doi:
10.1016/j.annepidem.2013.04.003.
The adoption of chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic
encephalomyelitis case definitions to assess
prevalence: a systematic review.
Johnston S, Brenu EW, Staines DR, MarshallGradisnik
S. Griffith Health Institute, School of
Medical Sciences, National Centre
for Neuroimmunology and Emerging Diseases,
Griffith University, Parklands, QLD, Australia.
CONCLUSIONS: Advances in clinical case
definitions during the past 10 years such as the
Canadian Consensus Criteria have received little
attention in prevalence research. Future
assessments of prevalence should consider
adopting more recent developments, such as the
newly available International Consensus Criteria.
This move could improve the surveillance of more
specific cases found within CFS.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23683713
ME QUOTES
"It is of the greatest importance to keep in mind
the goal toward which one works in science, but it
is also of equal importance to simply explore and
define the 'new' while keeping that mind well
prepared for finding new treasures.It is only
through such efforts that we believe the etiology
of CFS will be finally illuminated."
Steven Tracy and Nora Chapman, University of
Nebraska Medical Center:
http://bit.ly/11Xs9MA
www.investinme.org
Page 20 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
GUIDELINES
One of the basic problems with treatment of ME is
the original diagnosis of the illness.
Invariably it is too late and the current environment
in the UK means that diagnosis may cover a broad
range of illnesses with similar symptoms which are
brought together under one diagnosis - ME - a deadend
of a medical diagnosis by a medical community
which cannot even agree on a name.
In order to establish correct and early diagnosis
there needs to be a standard clinical diagnosis
method used throughout the country. This area is
currently clouded with up to four sets of diagnostic
criteria being available for use.
When a doctor or paediatrician gives a diagnosis of
myalgic encephalomyelitis then they do this
currently by exclusion of other illnesses and by
means of basic blood tests.
Diagnostic guidelines are meant to be a means to
assist in diagnosis. Another important distinction is
If a diagnosis is given to a patient based on a
different interpretation of an illness then the
diagnosis may be flawed. Worse still patients might
be misdiagnosed and a treatable illness may be
missed for years in some cases.
Invest in ME support the use of either the so called
Canadian Consensus Criteria (CCC) or the later
(May 2013)
version of these guidelines the International
Consensus Criteria (ICC).
For some time Invest in ME have been responsible
for distributing printed copies of the Canadian
Consensus Guidelines in the UK.
The charity earns nothing from this – we merely
attempt to recover the cost of the original printing.
The Canadian guidelines were recently endorsed by
the US CFS Advisory Committee.
between guidelines used for research and those
used for clinical diagnosis.
One may think these would always be the same. A
clinician may treat a wide selection of patients but
researchers need cohorts that are as homogeneous
as possible.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
More recently the International Consensus
Guidelines (ICC) has been produced and is available
in printed form from Invest in ME.
Contact info@investinme.org to order.
www.investinme.org
Page 21 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
Helping IiME –
Sarah’s Story
Invest in ME’s supporters have achieved an
enormous amount over the years. One of the
continually impressive ways of raising awareness of
ME and of achieving fund raising to support
biomedical research has involved use of our
JustGiving pages.
Continuing in the ethos of IiME and the methods of
Let’s Do It for ME - to make progress and not build
egos and to try to enjoy, as best one can, the events
and ideas generated to support the charity – this
nevertheless often masks some of the real tragedy
being endured and the sacrifices people have had to
make.
So we have picked out just one story. Sarah-Louise
Jordan is raising money for IiME and biomedical
research.
My Story
There is so much I want to say!
Before I became ill I hadn't even heard of M.E and
the first twelve years of my life were magical and
very English.
Then I had a vaccination against meningitis c and my
health very quickly began to fall apart. At first it was
just all kinds of aches and pains, dizziness,
forgetfulness, nausea, the occasional fainting spell
and a lot more tiredness but within two years I had a
constant migraine and I struggled to drag my legs
around because they were so heavy.
Soon I couldn’t walk at all and I began to 'freefall'
until I was blind and had no memories. I lost all of
my words and my ability to understand other people
speaking. I was so exhausted even when I woke first
thing that it felt like I was trying to lift buildings to
try and move.
I was housebound for a year and I by the end of it I
could stand for 30 seconds and manage a few
painful steps, but then I relapsed again and became
bedbound. I didn’t sit up for four months, I barely
moved and I couldn’t talk. I had no sense of touch
and no strength in my body. I suddenly perked up in
April 2004 and could sit up and read a little, I was so
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
excited. In July 2004 I woke up to find my whole
body 'on fire'. So hot it felt like I was melting, so
painful I wanted to scream and scream and scream. I
honestly didn’t think I could bear it for one minute.
So far I have been on fire for eight and a half years
and counting....
At first the pain, the heat and the pressure-which
made my head feel like it was gripped in a vice- was
so intense that I couldn’t move or speak again. For
six and a half years I was silent and still, simply
enduring, my hearing was so sensitive that I had to
wear headphones all the time.
My parents added another door to my room and
triple glazed the window. every noise was still
excruciating. I had blackout blinds because the light
made me physically sick. I released a strange
chemical that smelt acidic and clung in clumps to my
hair, pooling in white/brown patches on my skin.
I woke one day to find my hands curled in fists, rigid,
paralysed and I couldn’t open them.
Nothing seemed to change until 2010 when they
opened enough for me to be able to use my 'claws'
and I began to be able to do little things despite the
fire, like read and write and go online.
I am still bedbound, although I had a little time when
I could move around the house last year, and the fire
has been particularly awful again this last year.
I am 25 years old and I so want to live.
I could write books worth on everything that has
happened, but really all I need to say is, Invest in M.E
are actually doing something to help people like
me...and there are hundreds of thousands of us.
We all fight the same dragon; we all want to beat it
so we can be free.
And I can’t even tell you how heroic my M.E friends
are, what they go through and also how kind they
are to other people! If you don’t know them, you are
missing out!
With them and the girls from my old schools, and
other people I’ve met along the way, I feel that I
have a life rich in people. But I am a young, free
www.investinme.org
Page 22 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://FJ_Uew6nDyPs8MJX0m-EkJhRknktJbHsbci_WGgJMpk%?`̵ Xojcd׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
spirit trapped in a body that will not work! Invest in
ME want to change that.
And, as to losing the 50 lb, it is something I really
need to do, although I do not know who is going to
keep Mr. Kipling in business without my help ;)
Invest in ME’s JustGiving pages are here -
http://www.justgiving.com/investinm-e
(May 2013)
Sarah’s JustGiving Page
Sarah’s fundraising page is here -
http://www.justgiving.com/Sarah-Louise-Jordan
Thanks for taking the time to visit my JustGiving
page.
M.E is a horrible illness suffered by over 250,000
people in the UK and no cure or cause is currently
known. I'm raising money for research into M.E as
it's an illness that I and many of my close friends
suffer from and I want to do my bit to help change
that!
I've taken the following information off the charity's
website because I think it explains things better than
I can:
'People with ME need early and correct diagnosis,
proper treatment and advice. The current status of
services for people with ME and their families in the
UK is poor with little knowledge of biomedical
research being applied and possible treatments not
being made available to patients or healthcare staff.
Simplistic and ineffectual psychological therapies are
offered in place of real treatments - wasting public
money and doing nothing to help patients.
This has resulted in ME patients having no real
healthcare service and far too little progress in
attracting new researchers or clinicians to study the
disease.
The dangers for people with ME having no proper
clinical examination and no access to possible
treatments is that the disease can develop into more
severe forms with significant loss of functioning.
There is also the danger of mis- or missed diagnosis –
a common problem with people thought to suffer
from ME.'
Donating through JustGiving is simple, fast and
totally secure. Your details are safe with JustGiving –
they’ll never sell them on or send unwanted emails.
Once you donate, they’ll send your money directly to
the charity. So it’s the most efficient way to donate –
saving time and cutting costs for the charity.
So please dig deep and donate now.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Companies can also use JustGiving to support Invest
in ME. The more awareness and funds we can raise
the sooner there will be treatments for people such
as Sarah.
ME QUOTES
"ME/CFS is disabling and has a greater
impact on functional status and well being
than other chronic diseases such as
cancer. The emotional burden of ME/CFS is
felt by lay carers as well as by people with
ME/CFS. We suggest the use of generic
instruments such as SF-36, in combination
of other objective outcome
measurements, to describe patients and
assess treatments."
Nacul et al. BMC Public
Health 2011, 11:402
http://www.biomedcentral.com/14712458/11/402
ME
QUOTES
"After acute infections, enteroviruses can
persist in patients resulting in
manifestation of ME/CFS. Chronic
enterovirus infection in an
immunocompetent host may be an
example of a stalemate between
attenuated, intracellular viruses and an
ineffective immune response.",Chia, Chia:
EvMed Research, California, USA
http://bit.ly/10krfqn
Page 23 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
PRESENTERS at the 8th INVEST in ME
INTERNATIONAL ME CONFERENCE
Bios and Abstracts from the presenters at IIMEC8
Conference Chair - Dr Ian Gibson
recognize an outbreak of what is known as
ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS). He became
a pioneering physician and researcher in
understanding the biological characteristics and
methods for diagnosing, managing and treating
ME/CFS. He has also performed major studies of
Ampligen as a treatment for ME/CFS, and studying
the possible role of human herpes virus 6 (HHV-6) in
CFS patients. See Wikipedia entry - click here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Peterson_(physi
cian)
Former Dean of Biological Sciences, UEA
Dr Ian Gibson, former Labour MP for Norwich
North, worked at University of East Anglia for 32
years, became Dean of the school of biological
sciences in 1991 and was head of a cancer
research team and set up the Francesca Gunn
Leukaemia Laboratory at UEA. In 2011 Dr Gibson
received an honorary doctorate of civil law from
UEA.
Key Note Speech: The
Mainstreaming of ME Research
Dr Daniel
Peterson –
Simmaron
Research
Foundation
With over 25
years of medical
practice, Dr Daniel
L. Peterson has become a sought-after internist for
diagnosing difficult and complex medical cases.
When several patients in Incline Village became ill
with symptoms that resembled persistent
mononucleosis, Daniel Peterson was one of the first
physicians to
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
Dr Andreas Kogelnik is the Founding Director of the
Open Medicine Institute, a collaborative,
community-based translational research institute
dedicated to personalized medicine with a human
touch while using the latest advances in medicine,
informatics, genomics, and biotechnology. The
Institute works closely with the Open Medicine Clinic
and other clinics to conduct research and apply new
knowledge back into clinical practice.
Dr. Kogelnik received his M.D. from Emory University
School of Medicine in Atlanta and his Ph.D. in
bioengineering/bioinformatics from the Georgia
Institute of Technology. Subsequently, he completed
is residency in Internal Medicine and a Fellowship in
www.investinme.org
Page 24 of 36
Key Note Speech: Making ME
Mainstream: Strategies for ME
Research and Collaboration
Dr Andreas Kogelnik
Director of the Open Medicine Institute, USA
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Volume 7 Issue 1
Infectious Diseases at Stanford University and its
affiliated hospitals. Following his clinical training, he
remained at Stanford with NIH funding to engage in
post-doctoral research in microbiology, immunology
and bioinformatics with Dr. Ellen Jo Baron and Dr.
Stanley Falkow, where he explored host-response
profiles in severely ill patients.
Together with Dr. José Montoya, he was instrumental
in the conception, design, and execution of the
EVOLVE study - a placebo-controlled, double-blind
study of a subset of chronic fatigue syndrome
patients with evidence of viral infection. Dr. Kogelnik
worked with Dr. Atul Butte in translational
informatics to determine patterns that indicated a
high risk for adverse events in paediatric patients at
Lucille Packard Children's Hospital. He is the Medical
Director of the Open Medicine Clinic - a communitybased
research clinic focussed on chronic infectious
diseases, neuroimmune disease, and immunology.
Dr. Kogelnik has published numerous scientific
papers and book chapters, is an Editor of Computers
in Medicine and Biology, and is a Consulting
Assistant Professor at Stanford University. With the
Open Medicine Institute, he has led the formation of
CFS and Lyme Registries and Biobanks as well as
creating an infrastructure for providers to collect
better data and implement clinical trials across a
network of sites.
Abstract: Not available at time of printing – but will
be available on Invest in ME web site.
The Role of the Brain and ME
Rakib Rayhan
(May 2013)
Gulf War Illness (GWI), and Fibromyalgia (FM).
Understanding pain perception, autonomic and
cognitive dysfunction in relation to abnormal
functional and structural changes within the brain in
GWI has been Mr. Rayhan’s specific focus for the 2
past years.
He has discovered that white matter alterations in
the right inferior-frontal occipital fasciculus are
strongly associated with the severity and perception
of pain and fatigue. In addition, he has identified two
unique phenotypes based upon autonomic and
hyperalgesic changes in response to an exercisechallenge.
Changes
in symptoms were associated with distinct
patterns in working memory cognitive networks and
discrete regions of brain atrophy. These recent
discoveries have substantiated GWI as a central
nervous system disorder. He is actively engaged in
further pursuing a systems biology approach to the
neuroimaging research by examining genomics,
proteomics and metabolomics.
His desire is to identify potential biomarkers that
provide objective support to disease criteria and
that are then translated into new and affordable
therapies leading to a better quality of life for
patients.
Abstract
Myalgic encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a disabling and complex
disease state characterized by profound fatigue,
chronic pain, autonomic dysregulation, headaches,
sleep disturbances, cognitive dysfunction, endocrine,
immune and exertional exhaustion. ME/CFS is a part
of a larger group of idiopathic interoceptive and
nociceptive illnesses such as Gulf War Illness (GWI),
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), migraines and
Fibromyalgia (FM). Such syndromes greatly impair
quality of life and have a high economic burden.
Despite considerable research ME/CFS, GWI, and FM
are diagnoses of exclusion that is further
complicated by symptom severity, subphenotypes
and a lack of quantifiable objective biomarkers.
Rakib Rayhan works with Dr James Baraniuk at
Georgetown University, Washington, and is deeply
interested in symptomatic development and
chronification of pain and fatigue in idiopathic
illnesses such as Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME),
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
Exercise based paradigms have been useful models
to show dynamic symptom alterations in CFS/ME
and FM. This raised the question of whether
increased susceptibility to stressor paradigms can
elucidate objective evidence for the entire symptom
complex. Utilizing both exercise provocation and
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
technology, Dr. James Baraniuk has developed a
novel paradigm to characterize the causality
between inappropriate stressor response and
www.investinme.org
Page 25 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
neurological dysfunction in GWI. GWI affects 25-30%
of the one million military personnel who served in
the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Veterans with GWI
present with multifaceted symptom profiles similar
to ME/CFS patients. In fact, overlap in symptoms
often leads to co-morbid diagnosis.
The data presented today provides the first direct
evidence of i) white matter damage that is
associated with the complaints of pain and fatigue ii)
elucidation of two phenotypes in response to
exercise stressors iii) neurological evidence of
compensatory cognitive function iv) cortical,
cerebellar, and brainstem damage associated with
exercise induced phenotypes and v) cognitive
alterations associated with abnormal energetics of
lactate metabolism in the prefrontal cortex possibly
linked to neuronal mitochondrial dysfunction.
An important confounder is the use of different
designation criteria to diagnose patients. This has
created difficulties for clinicians to identify cases and
also hindered meaningful collaboration between
researchers. Current phenomenological case
definitions have considerable consistency and
functional overlap. What is clear is the need to shift
focus from aetiology and "symptoms at rest" to the
response of the CNS to physiological perturbations.
Although heterogeneity in symptom complexes
exists; it may be too subtle to elucidate true
subphenotypes at baseline. This is due to the
remarkable ability of the brain to recover function
and hide the underlying insult. Pushing the CNS
beyond its compensatory capabilities removes the
phenotype dependent functional stopgap and leads
to unchecked pathophysiological profiles that
amplify subgroups that would otherwise go
unnoticed.
We propose that fMRI of patients before and after
stressor protocols may provide the distinct
advantage of a standardized top-down approach that
will lead to biomarker discovery of subphenotypes,
individual pathophysiology, and tailored therapies.
Retroviruses and ME
Professor Greg Towers
Professor of Molecular Virology, Research
Department of Infection, Div of Infection &
Immunity, University College London, UK
Research Activities: HIV,Host factors influencing viral
tropism and antiviral innate immunity, Innate
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
Immunity, Retrovirus in gene therapy and
xenotransplantation, Transcription and chromatin
Abstract
Greg J Towers and Stephane Hue
Infection and Immunity, University College London
Why do we think that XMRV is not a human
pathogen?
Xenotropic murine leukaemia virus related virus
(XMRV) is a mouse gammaretrovirus. In 2006 XMRV
was described as being present in prostate cancer
samples using a new technique of virus discovery.
Several labs began to study the association between
XMRV and human disease. In 2009 XMRV was
associated with samples from patients with
ME/Chronic Fatigue. This study raised particular
interest because it also found XMRV in samples from
healthy controls suggesting that XMRV may be a new
human pathogen infecting millions of individuals.
Our interest in studying the life cycle of retroviruses
led us to consider whether XMRV was truly a human
pathogen. We found that patient derived XMRV
sequences were almost identical to a mouse
xenotropic gammaretrovirus found in a human
prostate cancer cell line called 22Rv1. Using
phylogenetic techniques we could show that the
sequences in the cell line were more diverse and
parental to those derived from patients. We also
found that some XMRV sequences were identical to
another known gammaretrovirus called Moloney
MLV, a virus that is commonly used to study MLV and
that cannot replicate in human cells.
We concluded that XMRV sequences in patients
could be explained by contamination, a recognised
problem with very sensitive PCR based detection
methods.
We went on to show that human integration site
junctions described as proving XMRV infection of
human prostate samples could also most likely be
explained by contamination.
We also demonstrated that MLV sequences detected
in patient samples by Shyh-Ching Lo and colleagues
did not represent evolution of XMRV, rather
www.investinme.org
Page 26 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://kZeGHNhrkSaDqUSm83AhrZ3U_yBTJ1Vb645fLFig8FI#`̵ Xojcd׉E@Journal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
contamination of patient samples with different MLV
sequences from mouse genomic DNA.
We were unable to find XMRV sequences ourselves
in HIV patients in the UK or within prostate cancer
samples in the USA. In 2011 Vinay Pathak and
colleagues described how XMRV is a recombinant
virus that arose in the procedure in which the 22Rv1
cell line was derived by passage of human tumours
in mice. The complex recombinant nature of XMRV
and the lack of viral infection of tumour samples
before exposure passage in mice convincingly
demonstrated that the source of XMRV was
contamination of PCR reactions with DNA from
22Rv1 cells or cloned XMRV encoding plasmid. These
results and their implications for future retrovirus
research in ME will be discussed.
We are funded by the Wellcome Trust, the Medical
Research Council and the UCL/UCLH National
Institute of Health Research Biomedical Research
Centre
Pathogen Discovery in ME
Professor Mady Hornig
Associate Professor Mady Hornig, Center for
Infection and Immunity (CII), Columbia University
Mailman School of Public Health, New York, USA
(May 2013)
neuropsychiatric conditions, including autism,
PANDAS (Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric
Disorders Associated with Streptococcal infection),
mood disorders and myalgic
encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome
(ME/CFS).
She is widely known both for establishing animal
models that identify how genes and maturational
factors interact with environmental agents to lead to
brain disorders and for her work clarifying the role of
viruses, intestinal microflora and xenobiotics in
autism and other neuropsychiatric illnesses that may
be mediated by immune mechanisms.
Under her direction, proteomic analyses of umbilical
cord samples are identifying potential birth
biomarkers for autism in a prospective study in
Norway, the Autism Birth Cohort (ABC).
She established that there was no association
between intestinal measles virus transcripts and
autism, and, with Brent Williams and W. Ian Lipkin at
CII, has found altered expression of genes relating to
carbohydrate metabolism and inflammatory
pathways and differences in the bacteria harboured
in the intestines of children with autism.
She also leads projects examining the influence of
immune molecules on brain development and
function and their role in the genesis of
schizophrenia, major depression, and cardiovascular
disease comorbidity in adults, and directs the
Chronic Fatigue initiative Pathogen Discovery and
Pathogenesis Project at CII.
In 2004, Dr. Hornig presented to the Institute of
Medicine Immunization Safety Review Committee
and testified twice before congressional
subcommittees regarding the role of infections and
toxins in autism pathogenesis.
Mady Hornig, MA, MD is a physician-scientist in the
Center for Infection and Immunity (CII) at the
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health
where she serves as Director of Translational
Research and is an associate professor of
epidemiology.
Her research focuses on the role of microbial,
immune, and toxic stimuli in the development of
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 27 of 36
Her work in ME/CFS is establishing immune profiles
and helping to identify pathogens that may be linked
to disease.
Her work on the MIND (Microbiology and
Immunology of Neuropsychiatric Disorders) Project,
one of the largest studies of immune factors in mood
disorders and schizophrenia, examines the role of
viruses and immune responses in the pathogenesis
of these disorders.
Abstract: Not available at time of printing – but will
be made available on Invest in ME web site.
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Volume 7 Issue 1
NHS Reforms: Implications
for long term chronic
conditions such as ME – for
GPs and Patients
(May 2013)
Abstract
Government NHS Reforms: Implications for long
term chronic conditions such as ME – for GPs and
Patients
The Health and Social Care Act 2012 makes
provisions for a number of changes to the English
NHS – these changes became operational on 1 April
2013. Dr Clare Gerada, Chair of the Royal College of
GPs, will present an overview of the NHS Reforms,
and what changes in legislation mean in practice for
GPs and their patients.
Her talk will cover the structural changes,
accountability, funding arrangements and
commissioning. Dr Gerada will also outline the role
of the Royal College of GPs, and ongoing work on
long-term conditions.
Dr Clare Gerada MBE MOM FRCP FRCGP
Chair, Royal College of General Practitioners
Dr Clare Gerada is a London-based GP and Chair of
Council of the Royal College of General Practitioners.
She is the first female Chair for over half a century.
She has held a number of local and national
leadership positions including Senior Medical
Adviser to the Department of Health. She is Medical
Director of the largest practitioner health
programme in the country and she has published a
number of academic papers, articles, books and
chapters.
Dr Gerada has been a GP since 1992, when she
became a partner for the Hurley Clinic in South
London. The practice started life in 1969 – and
remains on its current site – on the ground floor of a
19-storey housing estate in Lambeth.
Dr Gerada has a long involvement with the RCGP;
she was previously Vice Chair of College Council and
past Chair of the Ethics Committee. She established
the RCGP’s groundbreaking Substance Misuse Unit
and also led on the strategic and logistical delivery of
the RCGP Annual National Conference.
Prior to general practice, she worked in psychiatry at
the Maudsley Hospital in South London, specialising
in substance misuse. She was awarded an MBE for
services to medicine and substance misuse. In 2012
Dr Gerada was presented with the National Order of
Merit award in Malta for distinguishing herself in the
field of health.
Current Knowledge of
Immunological Biomarkers
in ME
Professor Sonya Marshall-Gradisnik
School of Medical Sciences, Griffith University,
Australia
Professor MarshallGradisnik
is one of
Australia's
foremost
researchers in the
area of
neuroimmunology
and has been
instrumental in
establishing the
Public Health and Neuroimmunology Unit (PHANU)
at Bond University. Much of her work relates
specifically to autoimmunity in Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome sufferers and she is regularly asked to
speak to community groups on behalf of Queensland
Health and NSW Health.
Her research in the area of exercise immunology has
also contributed to the body of knowledge relating
to the effect of doping in sport and she serves as
Sports Medicine Australia's national spokesperson in
this area.
The vital research conducted by Professor Marshall
has attracted more than $1 million in grant funding
and she has produced 21 peer-reviewed papers, five
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 28 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
book chapters and one provisional patent. In 2008 Dr
Marshall was joint leader of the Bond University
team responsible for developing the BioSMART
program. The team was awarded a prestigious
Australian Teaching and Learning Council Award
(formerly known as the Carrick Award) for
Outstanding Contribution to Student Learning and
for the quality of student learning over a sustained
period of time.
Abstract:
Immunological and molecular markers for defining
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
S.M. Marshall-Gradisnik1,2*, T.K. Huth1,2, K. Fuller1,2,
M. Kapur1,2, S. Johnston1,2, S.B. Ramos1,2, D.R.
Staines2, 3and E.W. Brenu1, 2
1. School of Medical Science, Griffith University, Gold
Coast, Australia
2. The National Centre for Neuroimmunology and
Emerging Diseases, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith
University, Gold Coast, Australia.
3. Queensland Health, Gold Coast Public Health Unit,
Robina, Australia
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) is disorder with
hallmarks of varying changes in immune cells and
molecular related mechanisms. Decreased cytotoxic
activity of innate and acquired immune cells
together with increased CD4+,CD25+,FOXP3
regulatory T cells (Tregs) are consistent in CFS/ME
patients, while cytokine profiles and immune cell
phenotypes have produced equivocal results.
MicroRNA and B cell investigations have also
provided potential insight into additional
immunological and genetic markers for CFS/ME.
More recently investigations of NK phenotypes,
dendritic cells (DCs), neutrophils, B cells, T cells, γδT
cells and Tregs as well as cytotoxic activity,
expression of cell surface receptors, adhesion
molecules, intracellular proteins and cytokine
secretion have been reported for CFS/ME patients.
Collectively these studies are reviewed, suggesting
comprehensive dysregulation of the immunological
response in CFS/ME suggesting impaired immune
functioning characterised by inadequacies in
eliminating pathogens and restoring immune
tolerance.
(May 2013)
Clinical Immunology and
Research on B-cell
Abnormalities in ME
Patients
Dr Amolak Bansal
Consultant Clinical Immunology and
Immunopathology, Epsom and St. Helier
University Hospitals NHS Trust, Surrey, UK
Dr. Bansal trained in immunology and allergy from
1989 to 1993 at St. Mary’s Hospital in Manchester
and at Hope Hospital in Salford. From here he spent
five years (1993-1997) as Senior Lecturer and
Consultant in Clinical Immunology in the Department
of Medicine at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in
Brisbane, Australia. From 1997 to the present date
Dr. Bansal has worked as a Consultant in Clinical
Immunology and Immunopathology at Epsom and St
Helier University Hospital. Dr Bansal’s key interests
lie in allergy, autoimmunity, CFS/ME and
immunodeficiency.
Abstract:
B and T cell dysregulation in patients with CFS/ME
Bansal AS, Bradley AS, B. Ford B
Sutton CFS Service and Department of Immunology,
St. Helier University Hospital NHS Trust, Carshalton,
Surrey, SM5 1AA.
Low level autoimmunity is frequently evident in
patients with CFS. However, CFS patients do not have
the clinical features or the repertoire of autoantibodies
seen in the commonly recognised
systemic connective disorders or organ specific
autoimmunity. Nonetheless, B cell depletion using
Ritiximab has shown benefit in CFS. Furthermore
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 29 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
autoimmunity to non-conventional self proteins has
also been demonstrated.
We sought evidence for B cell dysregulation as well
as T cell dysfunction in 33 well characterised patients
with mainly moderate CFS fulfilling all recognised
criteria. B, T and NK cell enumeration was assessed
using flow cytometry and NK cell cytotoxic function
by K562 killing. Cytokines were analysed by multiplex
technology.
We found a significantly increased number of naïve
and transitional B cells in addition to reduced
plasmablasts in patients with CFS compared to
healthy controls. The numbers of switched memory
B cells were also reduced suggesting a dysregulation
of B cell checking mechanism. CFS patients had
significantly greater numbers of T helper memory
effector cells and T helper and cytotoxic effector
cells. They also had significantly reduced numbers of
CD8+ lymph node homing naïve and memory T-cells
suggesting either sequestration within lymph nodes
or a reduction overall. While the levels of
proinflammatory cytokines were no different
between the CFS patients and the HC, the levels of
IL12, IL21 and IL27 were reduced. These cytokines
are particularly involved in regulating cellular
immunity and specific antibody production within
lymph node germinal centres. We did not find any
significant difference in the circulating levels of NK
cells or in NK cytotoxic function between patients
with CFS and the HC.
Taken as a whole our data suggest a subtle
impairment of the immune system with T and B cell
dysfunction geared towards autoimmunity and
reduced anti-viral immunity. This was accompanied
by altered lymph node germinal centre formation
that is critical for specific antibody formation and the
elimination of B cells with autoimmune tendency.
We speculate on the cause of these changes in
immune function which are likely to be
multifactorial.
Immunological Basis of ME
Professor Carmen Scheibenbogen
Professor for Immunology and Deputy Chair,
Institute of Medical Immunology, Berlin Charité,
Germany
Group leader of a Tumour Immunology Laboratory
and Attending Physician at the Dept. of
Haematology, Oncology und Transfusionsmedizin,
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
www.investinme.org
Page 30 of 36
(May 2013)
CBF, Charité,,2/1997 Venia legendi for Internal
Medicine "Habilitation",,1990 - 1998 Residency at
the Med. Klinik und Poliklinik V, Hämatologie,
Onkologie und Rheumatologie, Universität
Heidelberg, 1988 - 1990
Postdoctoral fellowship
at the Med. Klinik,
Dept. of Hämatologie
und, Onkologie,
Universität
Freiburg,1982 - 88
Medical school at the
Universities of Bonn,
Marburg and Denver
Abstract: Diagnostic Markers in CFS
One of the major problems in CFS is that the
diagnosis is based on symptoms reported by
patients. Diagnostic tests would be of great benefit
for improving diagnostic uncertainness and the
performance of clinical trials. A hallmark of CFS is
immune dysregulation and immune activation. Both
T cell activation and a skewed T cell type 1 / 2 profile
can be detected in many patients with CFS.
Regarding B cell function both diminished and
elevated levels of immunoglobulins are found in
subsets of patients. Further a skewed immune
response against EBV is frequently found. Thus it
should be possible to develop reliable diagnostic
tests based on immune abnormalities.
B-cell Depletion Therapy
Using Rituximab in ME/CFS
Professor Olav Mella
Bergen University Hospital, Norway
Professor Mella and Dr Fluge have published a paper
"Benefit from B-Lymphocyte Depletion Using the
Anti-CD20 Antibody Rituximab in Chronic Fatigue
׉	 7cassandra://vozJaLBvYlJlvl0wMcgT8X9a39hFOFsar1GfMHG_gzQ% `̵ Xo jcd׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
Syndrome. A Double-Blind and Placebo-Controlled
Study".
Dr Øystein Fluge
Bergen University Hospital, Norway
(May 2013)
the criteria defined in the randomized study. The
main endpoint defining response was change in
Fatigue score during the observation period,
although improvements in fatigue were generally
followed also by decrease in other ME-symptoms.
Follow-up is a minimum of 28 mths in all patients.
Two patients had serious allergic reactions and had
to stop Rtx treatment (one responding patient given
alternative B-cell depleting agent with new
response). Two had repeated airway infections and
were given antibiotics and eventually gamma
globulin. Seven had transient ME-symptom increase
shortly after Rtx infusion. Two had late onset
neutropenia of short duration.
Dr Øystein Fluge received medical degree in 1988 at
the University of Bergen, and is a specialist in
oncology since 2004. He has worked as a Research
Fellow with support from the Norwegian Cancer
Society and is now chief physician at the Cancer
Department, Haukeland University Hospital. Doctoral
work emanates from the Surgical Institute and
Depart. of Molecular Biology, University of Bergen.
Abstract:
Intervention and maintenance treatment with the
B-lymphocyte depleting monoclonal anti-CD20
antibody Rituximab in ME patients. A Phase II
study.
Fluge Ø, Mella O. Dept. of Oncology and Medical
Physics, Haukeland University Hospital and
University of Bergen, Norway.
We have previously published a case series and a
small double blind, placebo-controlled study using
immune manipulation with the B-lymphocyte
depleting, monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody Rituximab
(Rtx). These studies showed that Rtx yielded
clinically meaningful responses, with symptom
alleviation, although usually transiently, in the
majority of patients. Patients in the double-blinded
study having received placebo were according to
protocol offered inclusion into an open-label Phase II
with Rtx treatment. This study pursued the concept
of repeated Rtx infusions to see if responses were
more durable than in the randomized study, and to
estimate side effects of the drug including adverse
effects of prolonged B-cell depletion.
28 patients (including 2 pilot patients) were treated
with Rtx 500 mg/m2 day 1 and 15 (as in the
randomized study) and with maintenance Rtx
infusions at 3, 6, 10 and 15 mths. Patients in slow
responses were offered additional infusions up to 24
mths. Study endpoints were predefined according to
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
20 of the 28 patients had moderate or major
response to treatment. 7 of the 9 placebo patients
from the randomized study (without response)
responded in the present study. Median selfestimated
level of functioning, compared to
completely healthy condition, was changed from
10% at baseline to 78% at 18-24 mths after inclusion
in responders, and from 15 to 18% in nonresponders.
Response durations were evidently
longer than in the randomized study. However, later
than 24 mths into the study, 9 of 20 responding
patients have had ME-symptom recurrences. We
conclude that the present Phase II study supports
previous data on good clinical responses to immune
manipulation with Rtx in ME-patients and that
maintenance treatment seems to prolong responses.
Based on the studies, we have sought financial
support for a Norwegian multicenter, double-blinded
and placebo-controlled study of Rtx given at day 1
and 15, and at 3, 6, 9 and 12 mths, with 24 mths
observation time. This study will also include
prospective analyses of bio bank material and
physical tests to verify the subjective measures that
are the prime endpoints.
Parallel to the clinical studies, we have performed
multiple analyses to get a better understanding of
the mechanisms that trigger and maintain the
symptoms in ME. Although preliminary, this has
given us a candidate system we presently are
investigating as a possible effector system in the
body that may explain the symptoms and responses
to interventions in ME-patients. What could be a
possible link between such a system and the
immune manipulation that Rtx induces? Dr. Fluge
will cover this aspect of our studies in his
presentation at the meeting. Supported by the Kavli
Foundation and the Western Norway Health
Authority.
www.investinme.org
Page 31 of 36
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Volume 7 Issue 1
(May 2013)
OMI-MERIT INITIATIVE
For a long time IiME has argued for a strategic
approach to research into ME was necessary. But a
translational research model also requires research
to be connected to patient care – diagnosis,
management, treatments, research integration,
follow-up and so on. In such a model we also need
researchers to work together. International
collaboration is necessary and sharing of common
database repositories and protocols. Local area GPs
and consultants need to be involved and be able to
share experiences.
The use of digital technology also needs to be
integrated in order to expedite and facilitate
research and results. Using new technology also
opens the way for severely affected patients to be
integrated into research – thus enabling
opportunities for them to be able to improve if
treatments are found.
The OMI-Merit Initiative offers to do all of this and
create a surge of awareness which can finally make
the urgent and long-overdue leap in progress which
has been held back for a generation. Invest in ME
wish to play a part in supporting this endeavour.
The OMI-MERIT Initiative is a strategic initiative of
the Open Medicine Institute and its collaborators to
put the best science and people together in an
organized, collaborative plan to discover and apply
diagnostic and treatment solutions for ME/CFS.
Led by the Open Medicine Institute and the MERIT
Chair, Dr. Andreas Kogelnik (Open Medicine
Institute/Private practice, US), the OMI-MERIT
includes already many of the leading clinicians.
Leading scientists and clinicians from around the
globe with expertise in immunology, virology,
genomics, informatics, molecular biology,
epidemiology, infectious diseases, oncology,
pathology, and clinical medicine – many presenting
at IIMEC8 or BRMEC this year including Dan Peterson
(Private practice, US), Olav Mella and Øystein Fluge
(Haukeland University Hospital, Norway), Sonia
Marshall-Gradisnik (Griffith Univ., Australia), Carmen
Scheibenbogen (Charité Berlin, Germany), Rosamund
Vallings (Private practice, New Zealand) and Mady
Horning (Columbia Univ., US).
The OMI-MERIT Priority Projects
The OMI-MERIT initial projects are as follows –
1) Treatment: Phase 1: A large-scale, randomized,
placebo-controlled trial of rituximab and
valgancyclovir
Goal: This rigorous, four-armed study will examine
and further validate two of the most promising
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
therapies in the field by comparing: placebo,
rituximab alone, valgancyclovir alone & combination
therapy of valgancyclovir plus rituximab. Exceptional
measurements of physiologic, genomic, virologic,
and immunologic markers will be made throughout
the course of the trial.
Importance:A large-scale, rigorous trial is needed to
confirm the initial findings of earlier smaller studies
and move ME/CFS to molecularly trackable disease.
Success of such a trial could move ME/CFS to a
mainstream process for additional diagnostic and
treatment trials.
2) An International Neuro Registry and BiobankPartially
Funded.
Goal:Supporting and expanding the largest and most
comprehensive, longitudinal ME/CFS information
source for research and collaboration will be the
result of this project. We will collect longitudinal
data and biological specimens from ME/CFS patients
and controls and characterize the ME/CFS
population by patient symptoms, laboratory and
molecular profiles through crowd-sourced
informatics and cutting edge tools in immunology,
genomics and molecular biology. Comprehensive,
standardized, sampling will include blood, CSF, urine,
stool, brain/CNS, and other tissues. Samples will be
available for additional studies in the MERIT list and
beyond.
Importance:There has been no large-scale,
chronologic characterization effort across the
ME/CFS population. The Registry and Biobank will
help establish clinical and biologic clusters in the
population, paving the way for diagnostic biomarkers
and cluster specific treatments. In addition, this will
provide a community resource for patients and is
central to additional collaborative projects.
3) Protein Panel in Treatment and Naïve Patients
Goal:Performing in-depth, cutting edge protein
analysis of selected specimens from the Biobank to
identify bacteria, viral, hormonal, antibody, cytokine
and other protein-based substances that might be
present in patient specimens. Specimens will be
selected based on expected yield from clinical data
and then discoveries confirmed in the larger patient
population.
Importance:This project aims to apply cutting-edge
protein detection systems with specific, ultrasensitive
ME/CFS related targets identified. Protein
markers are key in identifying potential biomarkers
and many new advanced technologies have never
been applied to ME/CFS before.
www.investinme.org
Page 32 of 36
׉	 7cassandra://nkPDxJilUjqLi41YqUZW8XPzIXtF2q1HoNDo0zmU2LQ&`̵ Xo jcd׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
4) Treatment: Phase 2: Other therapy mono and
combination pilots
Goal: To assess the effect of other touted treatments
that are currently available in the field and establish
immunologic and molecular parameters for
measuring the efficacy of such treatments.
Treatments assayed will include: Ampligen, Famvir,
Etanercept, Rifaximin, Issentris, and possibly others.
Importance:To determine a direction and baseline
for other potential drug therapies in the field and
assess which should receive additional allocation of
funds for research.
5) Immunologic Biomarker Exploration Studies
Goal:These exploratory studies will examine B-cell, Tcell
and Natural Killer cell responses to disease and
treatment groups using comprehensive, rigorous
methods many of which have never before been
applied to ME/CFS. It will seek to establish
immunologic baselines and variants from that across
the patient population.
Importance:For a disease that appears to have a
solid immunologic component to it, this study will
provide the most advanced, longitudinal
characterization of immune changes in critically
implicated cells over selected treatment and control
patients.
6) DNA Genetics-Funded
Goal:Use the most advanced methods to sequence
key areas of the human genome in a set of patients
and controls and affected families and unrelated
individuals. Utilizing advanced Human Genome
Project technologies, this project will undertake HLA
and other regional sequencing of areas of interest
for selected patients and families.
Importance:Establishing or refuting a role for
genetics and potential heritable risk in ME/CFS.
7) Mass Spectroscopy/Environmental
Measurements
Goal:This exploratory study will search patient
samples for unknown compounds, toxins, proteins
and other substances that may be implicated in the
genesis of the disease or otherwise contribute to
immune dysfunction.
Importance: This would be the first systematic
examination of samples by the most reliable
substance identification techniques to begin to
establish an understanding of the contribution of
nutritional and environmental factors to ME/CFS.
8) Comprehensive Viral Testing
Goal:Establish a core of viral testing methodologies
that are useful and could be useful clinically. Testing
will include blood, urine, and saliva and other tissues
where available for specific viruses such as EBV,
HHV6, CMV, Parvovirus, HSV1, HSV2, and additional
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035)
(May 2013)
panel type testing for novel viral identification and
high throughput methods.
Importance: This project will set the standard for
clinical viral testing in ME/CFS and establish a
guideline for evaluation and treatment directions for
patients. Priority given to assays that have already
yielded promising clinical results in partner labs.
9) Advanced Immunologic Biomarker Study 2
Goal: This secondary immune study will look at
additional cell types that complement project #5
above, such as monocytes, macrophages and
dendritic cells.
Importance: This study extends our immunologic
understanding of the disease and its extent.
10) Treatment: Phase 3: Natural and Over-theCounter
substances-Moringa pilot funded
Goal:Examine the potential benefit of several over
the counter/natural therapies in a vetted scientific
setting. Substances examined will include: Moringa
oleifera, GcMAF, Vit B12, and Artemesinin.
Importance:This project will be a first application of
vetted scientific method and molecular science to
non-pharmacologic substances that have had
anecdotal benefits reported, thereby setting a
standard for mainstream measurement of ME/CFS.
Answers to inquiries:
1. The studies are listed in priority order, voted on by
the OMI-MERIT group, however each study will start
as soon as it’s funded. We have several donors that
have specified which project they will fund. We will
announce them as we are funded.
2. We have been fully funded for the OMI-MERIT,
Project #6, DNA Genetics study and we have been
partially funded for Project #10, a Moringa oleifera
study, and partially funded for Project #2 the
Registry and Biobank.
3. We will make announcements via Press Release,
the OMF e-newsletter, the OMI Website & Facebook
4.The Open Medicine Institute (OMI) is a Community
Benefits Corporation committed to applying a multidisciplinary,
big data approach to the health care
system to advance the understanding of “difficult”
diseases and improve patient outcomes.
5.The Open Medicine Foundation (OMF) is a U.S.
501(c)(3) nonprofit with an aggressive mission:
Invest in accelerating collaborative medical research
to find effective treatments and diagnostic markers,
current focus, ME/CFS.
Keep the community informed by disseminating
information on current research projects and results.
Bring together thought leaders from around the
world to brainstorm and participate in targeted
initiatives.
Encourage and engage the patient community to
take an active role in their own health care.
www.investinme.org
Page 33 of 36
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v̫̂9׉H -http://www.investinme.org/IiME-Wristbands.htmGׁׁrנXo jcd؁ B̦9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/Gׁׁr׉EJournal of IiME
Volume 7 Issue 1
8th Invest in ME
International ME Conference 2013
31st May 2013, London
Start
Presenter
07.45-08.50 Registration
08.55
09:05
09:20
10:05
10:45
10.50
11:10
11:40
12:25
12.30
13:20
13:50
14:35
15:05
15.10
15:30
16:10
16:40
17:10
17.30
Dr Ian Gibson
Dr Daniel Peterson
Dr Andreas Kogelnik
Rakib Rayhan
Plenary
Refreshment Break
Professor Greg Towers
Professor Mady Hornig
Plenary
Lunch
Dr Clare Gerada
Professor Sonya MarshallGradisnik
Dr
Amolak Bansal
Plenary
Refreshment Break
Professor Carmen
Scheibenbogen
Professor Olav Mella
Dr Øystein Fluge
Plenary
Adjourn
Immunological Basis of ME
B-cell Depletion Therapy Using Rituximab in ME/CFS - I
B-cell Depletion Therapy Using Rituximab in ME/CFS - II
Dr Ian Gibson - Questions
Conference Agenda
Presentation
Welcome to the Conference
Key Note Speech: The Mainstreaming of ME Research
Key Note Speech: Making ME Mainstream: Strategies for ME
Research and Collaboration
The Role of the Brain and ME
Questions
Retroviruses and ME
Pathogen Discovery in ME
Questions
Govt NHS Reforms: Implications for long term chronic conditions
such as ME – for GPs and Patients
Current Knowledge of Immunological Biomarkers
Clinical Immunology and Research on B-cell Abnormalities in ME
Patients
Questions
(May 2013)
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