׉?4ׁB! 'בCט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://rpM9WYM42xlJRcEr_dgezP8gF9iH_xT2FIbfDXJTmEA A`׉	 7cassandra://UEDcsPv_E7oQpIpJ8av9FBuhr4GY2qJHoqkni9h3Qp8Q`S׉	 7cassandra://IbbifsC3QVoABWItQDNSo5cbrrWw0frFpEQUEcvqIk8!K`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://O0Qa2ioUvFeKW506Ev_hS9tQI-o4NfZVzKQkuKwmLzQ l͠Xoj&SH"ט   {u׈         נXoj&SHO )2O9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׈EXoj&SH#׉E =A New Decade of Invest in ME – Research
www.investinme.org
׉	 7cassandra://IbbifsC3QVoABWItQDNSo5cbrrWw0frFpEQUEcvqIk8!K`̵ Xoj&SH$Xoj&SH#{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://6r1AltmpsNXKQggYvju3Mm6Qqtwah6VRnPaT6whc8mw z`׉	 7cassandra://S9xvqtFM2HBT1GHD64v2OAurO5PY1SCKt3lNaFa6K9Ax`S׉	 7cassandra://if_sMGv_OWqF6CFN9I6ICoIL8zwLkUvB7HSBqC85rYA,`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://RPnjPwiTgJYD7ict_8BXMoJnXFB51U7rfj2s2RfBiBc 6͠Xoj&SH*ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://WAGmBZjMC6h4q0HaIm6WOPTFlxEtSyDweubFaPCM1kg ` ׉	 7cassandra://bVFcfMJZwZN-MhGJh5cobTZvvM4kJMxbuF6ZgWO7p_8͂`S׉	 7cassandra://hHVSM1llbiFdnui74MxF5UIfaIbqaW1iwVPIU6GYDR0'`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://rqOKdgCOQtzE65GnmeG1bZDAEzM4mmHwxVfvkwqGv-oͼ(͠Xoj&SH+נXoj&SH% G(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH& ā9׉H "http://www.investinme.org/DVD.htmlGׁׁrנXoj&SH' .~?9׉H *http://www.investinme.eu/IIMEC11-DVD.shtmlGׁׁrנXoj&SH( E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH) l;9׉H 2https://secure.thebiggive.org.uk/charity/view/6239GׁׁrנXoj&SHW I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXoj&SHU d"9ׁH 2https://secure.thebiggive.org.uk/charity/view/6239ׁׁЈנXoj&SHS ̯9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXoj&SHR ҁ̯9ׁHmailto:info@investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EScience, Politics and ME
a book by Dr Ian Gibson
Dr Gibson led an inquiry into ME in 2006.
Without official funding, at a time when unbiased and independent analysis of ME by
establishment organisations and the media was lacking, Dr Gibson provided a checkpoint
which attempted to get publicity and change which would help ME patients
S MP
http://tinyurl.com/hl644uh
E
http://www.investinme.eu/IIMEC11-DVD.shtml
׉	 7cassandra://if_sMGv_OWqF6CFN9I6ICoIL8zwLkUvB7HSBqC85rYA,`̵ Xoj&SH,׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
Journal of IiMER
Welcome to IIMEC11
10 Years of Biomedical Research
10 Years
One Stupid Dot
Letter from America 1
QUADRAM
C of E for ME
EMERG
EMEA NEWS
Mike’s EU Marathons for IiME
Letter from America 2
4
8
10
19
20
24
26
29
30
33
43
Tackling ME/CFS in New Zealand 46
It’s a Funny Old World
Speakers at IIMEC11
Agenda IIMEC11
56
60
75
Invest in ME - Research
(UK Charity Nr. 1153730)
PO BOX 561
Eastleigh SO50 0GQ
Hampshire, UK
Tel: 02380 643736 07759 349743
E-mail: info@investinme.org
Web: www.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.
https://secure.thebiggive.org.uk/charity/view/6239
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 3 of 77
June 2016
Invest in ME Research
Invest in ME Research (transitioning from
Invest in ME) is an independent UK charity
facilitating and funding a strategy of
biomedical research into Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis (ME) and promoting better
education about the disease.
The charity is run by volunteers - patients or
parents of children with ME – but on a
professional basis with a passion for
developing a scientific foundation for research
into ME.
We do not receive, and have never received
funding from government or government
organisations.
The charity decided early on that biomedical
research into ME was crucial in order to make
progress in treating this disease. We also
decided that education of healthcare staff, the
media, government departments, patient
groups and patients was to be a priority.
Our conferences and, later, our research
colloquiums, were organised from the
beginning in order to provide a platform for
research and a means of facilitating education
about ME.
In order to bring the best research to bear on
ME and to bring the best education to
healthcare and patients we welcome your
support.
׉	 7cassandra://hHVSM1llbiFdnui74MxF5UIfaIbqaW1iwVPIU6GYDR0'`̵ Xoj&SH-Xoj&SH,{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://dqV8IKLeeAlhLQS5092NJtvJ-azo4MfRtQ_2VDKPIB8 .` ׉	 7cassandra://ji8SoY7RXSQHDMvXmhqjto1toi9p00zudfFkR0Jw-Ws͔`S׉	 7cassandra://iTHAmBH3qoR0ZE-0zmQYO0ee5QVVOAYM9SY0a84GdHg)`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://vx9I5MGqRqdqxxItYpbCFc5eqrYGoX-bWvtnV0dRvx0RD͠Xoj&SH2ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://VxvJGOL1WKUqwICHfSQKLL_s6cew4p4U-NceNBNxV5g OT` ׉	 7cassandra://MwVl4bbhglsFEv7_ePtDVWVfhChNzhYezt1Vb2Flv0gͨ?` S׉	 7cassandra://Ununq6V9walOOEkGc227FTwRiQpKyCuR-gP7bxEUaDc&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Sr1NJy88yxWbr1RDWLVLziBZIDndWfhSlBuDsMfTYxY͊͠Xoj&SH3נXoj&SH. E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH/ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH0 9׉H #http://www.investinme.eu/ldifme.orgGׁׁrנXoj&SH1 3(9׉H #http://www.investinme.eu/ldifme.orgGׁׁrנXok &SH` I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E	Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
Welcome from the
June 2016
about this disease and to biomedical
research which is the only way that the
cause of ME will ultimately be found. A
decade of commitment to research,
education and awareness has finally
succeeded in opening up new areas of
research.
Chairman
IIMEC11: 11 YEARS
A NEW DECADE OF RESEARCH
In 2015 Invest in ME arranged its
TENTH international ME conference -
an event bringing together many of the
world's most renowned scientists and
researchers to
London to meet
with healthcare
professionals and
patients.
In May of 2016 the
charity reached its
10th year
anniversary as a
charity.
By necessity Invest in ME
(Research) have had to create
and take opportunities in order
to make progress.
Ten years ago
Invest in ME was
formed to make a
change in how
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis was
perceived and treated in the media, by
health departments and by healthcare
professionals, and to educate, publicise
and lobby regarding ME and the urgent
requirement for public funding for
biomedical research.
A decade of biomedical research
conferences achieved - all underlining
the charity's commitment to education
After ten years as a charity
there are good signs of real
progress and, with enough
support, we can make this
permanent.
A strategy of high-quality biomedical
research has broken the mould of the
past and a new decade now brings new
and possibly decisive projects which will
finally overturn the barren landscape of
ME research which had been allowed to
exist for too long.
Ten years ago the ME research
landscape was different - no platform for
regularly showcasing or encouraging
biomedical research - no funding and no
recognition of the need
to fund biomedical
research into this
disease.
Yet now real progress
is underway – thanks
to the last ten years of
effort by IiME’s
supporters which has
forced real change.
These have been the
foundations upon
which we can build a sensible policy
toward research into ME.
The charity has two major high-quality
research projects underway – probably
the two most important research
projects for the future of ME research in
the UK - and is building a foundation for
translational biomedical research into
ME – a Centre of Excellence for ME.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 4 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://iTHAmBH3qoR0ZE-0zmQYO0ee5QVVOAYM9SY0a84GdHg)`̵ Xoj&SH4׉E	yJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
This strategy has been augmented with
education of, and participation in our
research projects by, medical students -
enhancing theirs and their peers’
education about ME and building a base
for the next generation of researchers.
We have for many years also been
introducing new areas of research and
new researchers into the field of ME – a
new idea initiated by the charity to
mainstream research into ME.
Last year the charity proposed and
facilitated the establishment of the
European ME Research Group - a
group of top European researchers who
will collaborate and establish multi-site
international biomedical research
projects which will overturn decades of
miserly funding being directed to ME
research and which
has discouraged good
research to be
formulated or
performed.
The charity is at the
heart of European
cooperation with its
participation in the
formation of the
European ME Alliance
involving 13 countries
in Europe and with the potential to
achieve.
The Invest in ME strategy of bringing in
researchers from other fields to help and
improve biomedical research into ME
has been successful and well worth the
effort and cost.
June 2016
Our conferences bring together patients,
researchers, clinicians and healthcare
staff and allow knowledge and
experiences to be shared – and has
been doing so for eleven years.
Our research colloquiums are bringing
together high-calibre international
researchers – concentrating on
biomedical research - that can help us
understand the cause/s and
pathomechanisms of ME.
The charity's proposal for a Centre of
Excellence for ME is possible to achieve
and it has set a target which can be
reached if enough support is given.
Our supporters deserve recognition for
all their support and efforts to bring
change to the landscape of ME research
and perception.
Due to imaginative and
positive support such as
the Let’s Do It for
ME campaign and
thanks to dedicated
supporters the charity
enters a new decade
which promises to
transition all the efforts
of the past ten years into
benefits for all patients
and their families - and also for
healthcare staff.
All of this brings momentum which then
spawns changes elsewhere - by
influencing others, by interesting
scientists and researchers in new
research areas and establishing a
change in how ME is perceived.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 5 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://Ununq6V9walOOEkGc227FTwRiQpKyCuR-gP7bxEUaDc&`̵ Xoj&SH5Xoj&SH4{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://pQ7tfZjMGYrQFliwE5it1yBMydykI9rkwEIrmznexWM l` ׉	 7cassandra://E1JTsbFKn68nnrEOQzMef5dpDAlKf-hXH-l70JEpzZw͝` S׉	 7cassandra://ijRjghArPkjyNDfbJpMy6hWYTMD8n8oHtAI28IajbK8'`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://XGPNxMnbbL58p7WOaEix9D-Dn582hrwgxYlmrOTLqN8KLL͠Xoj&SH8ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://w_bS25SQGXkLkyD9nXdjlK1zJ1Agk8jtAslWvNgMU0I `׉	 7cassandra://5cnbL76LQPZRxBwf3CrOrCRryDFxRFfuknNsaRFkcU0vK`S׉	 7cassandra://vBO4pqf6QhjqX-gorw_QexkVRG8v61HwMFI6wKdaZf8(q`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://VNkG_mpf-PGuFUw3LVhz59njxnJjVCexQS6aUWkC5d4 <͠Xoj&SH9נXoj&SH6 E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH7 E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHY I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E	Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
As we approach our tenth year as a
charity we may look back to some
progress and a good deal of change
occurring due to the efforts and
determination of the charity and its
supporters. As we look forward we will
continue to seek change.
If a disease is well understood then all
aspects of patient care may improve
whilst cures and treatments are being
developed. Understanding of ME and
finding the cause/s and
pathomechanisms can only be achieved
if research takes a clear stand of ME
being a physical illness as a starting
point and everything else is
consequential. There are now enough
clues, well presented over the ten years
of IiME conferences that need to be
followed up.
Clinical trials such as the phase III
rituximab trial in Norway and the UK
rituximab trial project funded by Invest in
ME Research give patients hope and
make healthcare professionals take ME
more seriously even before the trials
have begun or results have been
published.
Even the awareness of ME patients
being part of proper mainstream clinical
trials makes a huge difference to the
perception of this disease.
This we have witnessed already.
Invest in ME Research have never had
any doubt of ME being anything other
than a physical illness and we do not
believe there is sense or reason for
mixing flawed psychosocial views of the
June 2016
disease with biomedical views under
one umbrella.
We hope that our ten years of focused
approach and engaging with
researchers that have the skills to help
solve ME is beginning to bring results
and will continue.
Dear Kathleen,
I just wanted to thank you all for
setting up the charity and all the
hard work that you have done
over the last 10 years.
I became ill in 2005 and you set up
the charity around the same time.
Your charity has given me such
hope that some proper biomedical
research is being done.
There is a lot of positive
momentum now in ME and I know
the fruits of your labour over
these 10 years will soon pay off
big time!
Kind regards – H (ME patient)
By necessity Invest in ME (Research)
have had to create and take
opportunities in order to make progress.
After ten years as a charity there are
good signs of real progress and, with
enough support we can make this
permanent.
This is a good time to be involved in ME
research as we are at the beginning of
making discoveries. We are optimistic
for the future as patient power has made
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 6 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://ijRjghArPkjyNDfbJpMy6hWYTMD8n8oHtAI28IajbK8'`̵ Xoj&SH:׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
it possible for patients to show the types
of research they want and need.
We believe we can look forward, and
expect even more rapid progress in the
future – directed by agents of change
which have been or are being created.
The IIMEC11 conference and BRMEC6
research colloquium provide unique
opportunities to begin this new decade
of conferences with an intent to resolve
ME once and for all.
And for so many patients and their
families this will not have come a
moment too soon.
Welcome to IIMEC11 and BRMEC6
Kathleen McCall
CHAIRMAN INVEST IN ME -RESEARCH
June 2016
IiMER chairman Kathleen McCall thanks
our sponsors of IIMEC11 events
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 7 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://vBO4pqf6QhjqX-gorw_QexkVRG8v61HwMFI6wKdaZf8(q`̵ Xoj&SH;Xoj&SH:{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Cqw3AlBwqOPBZnZvNnkSPhdCzoJ3fIv6VEgPiXEZyCg `׉	 7cassandra://_3CHshQFJAuLgBDKlxBC9tlZWgU-vdBWlOa8IyEncUU͖`S׉	 7cassandra://r5mosFZ_KqGY8MY2RgN8xp4bszQBMhHEtdWeKASTu6Q)`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://5dRrSIu2N9fT5GnuS7PzivAlvuRROFKMmnSrjU6ViXE͠Xoj&SHAט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Z3faaT5vJFCTrqUlGkslxSyGuilW7ctO1JWG44PeEmI n?` ׉	 7cassandra://uwjoNJAJ7K4b6DkIuv_KwXbDeBWMkWcEaQsDOxqbNww͓`S׉	 7cassandra://e3j8PpL5leIHWrrFTTKyET75jPMTjLNHpw7-2CiVmJU(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://KvK9XRnB437GRu1fQ0NHPC02pg4rPLlM4L8nPZKKg8I{͠Xoj&SHBנXoj&SH< E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH= E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH> ,9׉H -http://www.investinme.org/IiME-Wristbands.htmGׁׁrנXoj&SH? ʁ!9׉H -http://www.investinme.org/IiME-Wristbands.htmGׁׁrנXoj&SH@ 7.9׉H -http://www.investinme.org/IiME-Wristbands.htmGׁׁrנXok &SH_ I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXok &SH^ j̹9ׁHhttp://Wristbands.htׁׁЈנXok &SH\ Ёw9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.org/IiMEׁׁЈ׉EnJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
10 Years of Biomedical Research - Invest in ME
Dr Leonard A Jason and Zachary Siegel
CENTER FOR COMMUNITY RESEARCH, DEPAUL UNIVERSITY, CHICAGO, USA
Leonard A. Jason is a professor of
clinical and community psychology
at DePaul University, director of
the Center for Community
Research, and the author of
Principles of Social Change. - See
more at:
http://blog.oup.com/2015/02/diseas
e-name-chronic-fatigue-syndromeme/#sthash.OYrlnLJU.dpuf
10
years of Invest in ME’s dedication
to advocate for a marginalized group
and the determination to allocate
funds in a neglected field needs to be
acknowledged and applauded.
This organization has been working
in the trenches of ME, and it has
been a notable and significant
contribution to the field.
Invest in ME has been able to
increase awareness and disseminate
knowledge to scientists, clinicians,
and patients within the ME
community. With limited resources,
but unlimited creativity and
imagination, these patients and their
supporters have showed the world
what can be done.
They are an inspiration for the world.
Stigma is still associated with too
many patients with ME, and this
might be partly due to our society’s
infatuation with unlimited energy,
Zachary Siegel is a research
assistant at DePaul University's
Center for Community Research.
He is also a freelance writer.
stamina, and endurance, and in fact,
these entities are more alluring than
money. Patients with ME continue to
encounter scepticism, and this is
regrettable, as patients first endure a
devastating illness and then they are
further victimized by our society’s
reaction to them. Far too many
scientists and health care workers
have been part of the problem, and
this has to change. The status quo is
not acceptable for patients with ME.
It’s only by us collectively being
involved in action that the situation
will change. And it has changed for
many other illness groups, such as
people with HIV/AIDS, who
demonstrated that it is possible to
bring about a sea change in the
treatment and respect for people with
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 8 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://r5mosFZ_KqGY8MY2RgN8xp4bszQBMhHEtdWeKASTu6Q)`̵ Xoj&SHC׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
this illness. To bring about this type
change is going to involve not just the
patients who have ME, but also their
friends and family members who do
not have this illness. The future of
this field is in connecting the many
patient and scientific groups into one
larger body that is united for change.
We welcome youth groups, civic
organizations, and not-for-profits to
get involved in one of the truly
neglected areas needing structural
changes in the way patients are
treated and their availability to quality
care.
In order to push forward, we need
research that involves
multidisciplinary efforts that will bring
together scientists from different
disciplines including virologists,
epidemiologists, individuals who
study the autonomic nervous system,
genetics, computer science,
immunology, and many other
disciplines.
This illness represents a great
challenge to medicine, and one from
which we will all learn the intricacies
and systems of the human body.
In addition to the massive amounts of
funding that are needed to better
understand this complex illness,
patients living in every country need
the best that medicine can offer.
The key to success is a team of
health care providers working closely
with patients, using services that
meets all of their needs.
I continue to believe that learning
how to pace and stay within the
energy envelope is the key to having
a better quality of life. But we need
Support Biomedical Research
into ME.
Invest in ME Research wristbands
http://www.investinme.org/IiMEWristbands.htm
Invest
in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 9 of 77
June 2016
much more basic research to find
ways to cure this illness, and one day
it will be possible, just as it has with
other diseases that have had
adequate funding for research. ME
received considerable media
attention over the last year, and we
now need to use this momentum to
bring about the changes that are so
desperately needed.
There is nothing as important for our
field as seeing patients as true
collaborators in service programs and
research that focus on better
understanding this illness, and their
voices and vision need to play an
instrumental role in setting the
agenda for the future.
By Dr. Leonard A. Jason and
Zachary A. Siegel
׉	 7cassandra://e3j8PpL5leIHWrrFTTKyET75jPMTjLNHpw7-2CiVmJU(`̵ Xoj&SHDXoj&SHC{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://_bc1wqvYe8W6kEfz9ld2ETXwfDV1tuNCsnh8MmMaKS0 *`׉	 7cassandra://aNBLbfHheis9Ho6aGf39wwfVKWD9NcvycVh9QSJpnoË́`S׉	 7cassandra://w8gMxUApa_yjjHnZEJTU6Z3K1xFfYZG4rk9qjC1dKlM&C`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://cQp0lz9Z-CQmwN8hPZsz_Ye1bXkBgyQv7BKKp4GHXe8ͮY͠Xoj&SHGט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://MNQ4FctbRq_wLCTgi1AOOxXhZdF_GSCjs1VfrIbBmcE `׉	 7cassandra://UQEDWlIi0YaccpYpW7V5KCepMCuMYCQUNKP5qHczmhc͛ `S׉	 7cassandra://CKMxGxje1ipmXULYDdwTYX8CUuIigTyKaTEqlMeqaak*`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://9R2NBlb0KP4QCdgz3YA4OHANeqB1HG-K9_Mdci25KMQ͛͠Xoj&SHHנXoj&SHE E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHF E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHl I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EKJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
10YEARs
studies for undertaking epidemiological
research on CFS/ME in the UK.
In 2006 Invest in ME was formed as a
charity by patients and carers of children
with ME. There were no funds let alone
paid staff but lots of passion to put
things right due to too much emphasis
having been put on psychosocial
paradigms following on from the 2002
CMO report.
The MRC annual report from 2002/03
stated
“Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ME
(CFS/ME): following the publication of a
Report of the Chief Medical Officer’s
Independent Working Group in January
2002, and at the request of the DoH in
England, the MRC convened an
independent CFS/ME Research
Advisory Group to develop a broad
strategy for advancing biomedical and
health services research on CFS/ME.
The research strategy was published on
1 May 2003, when the MRC issued a
highlight notice welcoming research
proposals (investigator-initiated)
covering the spectrum of research into
CFS/ME.
In addition, the MRC will investigate
usefulness of existing longitudinal
The MRC’s Council agreed the funding
of two clinical trials of treatments for
CFS/ME in March 2003. A trial led by Dr
Alison Wearden (University of
Manchester) will evaluate pragmatic
rehabilitation, a nurse-led self-help
intervention in the treatment of CFS
patients in primary care, against
supportive listening or treatment as
usual.
Dr Peter White (St Bartholomew’s
Hospital, London) will undertake a
randomised controlled trial of cognitive
behaviour therapy, graded exercise
therapy, and adaptive pacing against
usual medical care for patients with
CFS. This latter study is funded in
partnership with the DoH, the
Department of Work and Pensions, and
the Chief Scientist’s Office of the
Scottish Executive.”
Since the CMO’s report of 2002 the
debacle over the disastrous PACE Trial
is the clearest illustration of the failure
and the negligence shown by those who
have been responsible for funding ME
research.
Much of the charity’s early and
continued work was concerned with
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 10 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://w8gMxUApa_yjjHnZEJTU6Z3K1xFfYZG4rk9qjC1dKlM&C`̵ Xoj&SHI׉E
cJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
protesting the public funding policy of
favouring behavioural research over
biomedical one.
We held our first
conference in
Westminster,
London in 2006
in the hope that
politicians and
other healthcare
decision makers
could easily attend. Dr Ian Gibson, MP
for Norwich North at the time, opened
the first conference. He has been the
charity’s supporter and advisor ever
since.
We worked with ITV Meridian and
Norway’s Puls programme to allow their
excellent reporting on severe ME in the
UK and Norway to be seen. These
programs were made available for our
first 2006 conference DVD set and
formed a powerful and realistic
statement on how disabling ME can be
to patients and their families.
The 2007 we trialled a two-day public
conference format in London. Dr Ian
Gibson was joined by another Norfolk
MP Mr Norman Lamb
who opened the
second day.
We also started
producing the Journal
of IiME, a mixture of
science, education
and politics and as we
had no funds these
were printed by
ourselves using a
standard, slow home
printer - tedious as
well as time and ink
consuming all that
work was.
June 2016
We believe that everyone who attended
the 2007 conference left not only with an
enhanced knowledge gained from the
conference but also with renewed hope
for the future.
There were early signs of things to
come from Norway when Ellen Piro and
Eva Stormørken gave their presentation
explaining the reasons for the
Norwegian ME Association saying a firm
NO to the Norwegian NICE guidelines.
Their presentation received a great
ovation as it resonated with patients and
carers in the UK.
Invest in ME contributed to the review of
the UK NICE Guidelines (both the draft
version and the final version). We found
both documents unsatisfactory due to
emphasis on psychiatric paradigms to
manage/treat ME/CFS.
Invest in ME produced a 52-page
response that followed our 38,000-word
response to the draft guidelines.
The charity visited the CMO’s office to
meet with Dr Bill Kirkup, Deputy CMO at
the time. We requested that ME be
treated as a notifiable illness in schools -
but this was rejected.
Invest in ME have written to
past and current ministers at the
Department of Health and to the
Medical Research Council in
order to encourage more
funding to be allocated for
biomedical research into ME.
The chief executive of the MRC
contributed an article for our
Journal for the 2007
conference.
Invest in ME took over
distribution of the Canadian
ME/CFS Guidelines in the UK
on a not-for-profit basis. The guidelines
are now a basic requirement for any
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 11 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://CKMxGxje1ipmXULYDdwTYX8CUuIigTyKaTEqlMeqaak*`̵ Xoj&SHJXoj&SHI{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Ed4UGQgC0qm3M0TAFvIk8vXICm9lclOAIr-9iWxptoo 5`׉	 7cassandra://xdfu9V4kk0T59Xs-VswcU96RN4rieMMuJS1dKsfpDvo͖`S׉	 7cassandra://XIbm9XikaExH_fwpmQDOkwo5lg9P9IhpaAykPpF5xXw(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://jT5xZuI_5myTWaZ4Ag0gBHkTUR3vVwGdLstugLAoNQkͅ͠Xoj&SHPט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://cyxfg_PGOlKwSCuAZU2Zee7bGNvr6fkGlxt_LGS4IVk ;` ׉	 7cassandra://QQTPT6HV-EscmaBontnGWdtl8t2M4Z2Y-peIbUxVdewͽ` S׉	 7cassandra://YYjC-fLaqxnlPbWRBYnfMaa5FaEnLGARJaw-tjqztBU)v`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://RKFlrICfY-8b-JaHVpkgaQtMId29nuHe1Zw1oZ8eCEÉk͠Xoj&SHQנXoj&SHK E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHL 9׉H :http://www.investinme.org/InfoCentre%20-%20APPG%20Page.htmGׁׁrנXoj&SHM O+9׉H :http://www.investinme.org/InfoCentre%20-%20APPG%20Page.htmGׁׁrנXoj&SHN s{9׉Hhttp://www.euro-me.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHO E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHz I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E
Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
service model being developed for
diagnosis, management and treatment
of ME.
They are widely used in research such
as the Invest in ME funded B cell study
at UCL and gut microbiota at IFR/UEA.
The Norwegian phase III rituximab trial
selects patients
fulfilling these
criteria also.
We translated into
English the
Norwegian
documents
describing the
exciting news of
the Norwegian
government’s
intentions (MP
Laila Dåvøy was instrumental in
initiating this work in 2006-2007) to treat
ME more seriously and with a more
strategic approach, including creation of
centres of excellence for ME.
From 2008 Invest in ME began
participating in the All Party
Parliamentary Group discussions and
sent in many submissions. Sadly, the
health ministers at the time, Mr Alan
Johnson and Mrs Ann Keen, both
declined to take responsibility for the
situation with ME and declined
invitations to our conferences –
demonstrating a point which has been
consistent over the years – that apathy
toward ME patients has no party political
borders.
The charity was instrumental in forming
the European ME Alliance in 2008 – a
grouping of charities and patient
organisations within Europe who came
together to tackle issues around ME
affecting European patients and their
families.
June 2016
In 2009 the charity published and
distributed the unique book on ME,
Lost Voices from a hidden
illness, which was compiled by Natalie
Boulton and highlighted the situation of
those severely affected by ME and their
families. This book has
been ordered by
patients, support
groups, healthcare
staff and researchers
in twenty countries. It
was also ordered for
inclusion in the
syllabus by Chicago
University, USA.
Numerous research
activities to support TV, radio and
newspaper coverage of ME were
performed and IiME contributed to the
consultation and review of the NICE
Guidelines for CFS/ME.
The charity began its Biomedical
Research Fund to allow donations to
research projects to be made.
IiME organised and hosted the fourth
annual Invest in ME International ME
conference in London in 2009. The
focus of this conference was Severe
ME, an attempt to raise more
awareness of patients with severe ME -
a group of patients who were not
represented in research trials and
completely misunderstood by healthcare
services.
Prior to the conference Invest in ME
arranged for the American journalist,
Hillary Johnson, to visit London and give
a pre-conference presentation on the
evening before the conference to an
audience of researchers, clinicians,
patients and media people. Hillary’s
presentation concerned the USA CDC’s
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 12 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://XIbm9XikaExH_fwpmQDOkwo5lg9P9IhpaAykPpF5xXw(`̵ Xoj&SHR׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
influence on ME research throughout
the world.
Invest in ME submitted responses to the
published 5-year plan for CFS (ME)
from the USA Centres for Disease
Control. The charity also submitted
responses to the UK All Party
Parliamentary Group on ME.
In 2010, tired with continually sitting in
meetings with the NHS to discuss
services for ME -
yet with no
progress being
made, Invest in
ME formulated a
proposal for
biomedical
research to be
based at a
research and
examination facility
in the Norwich
Research Park in
Norfolk – a Centre of Excellence for ME.
The Norwich Research Park includes
multiple institutes and companies,
including the University of East Anglia,
Institute of Food Research and the
Norfolk and Norwich University hospital
as well as the Genome Analysis Centre
(TGAC).
Our proposal envisaged performing
translational biomedical research into
ME by researchers at the university
using a patient cohort which had been
diagnosed by an experienced clinician
using appropriate diagnostic guidelines.
Invest in ME formed a steering group to
initiate our proposal and entered
discussions with the university and
hospital and with a renowned clinician.
We had been in discussions with Norfolk
Primary Care Trust (PCT) also and had
secured a promise to fund the patient
June 2016
examinations. These discussions and
promotion of our proposal as one of the
best ways forward for securing proper
research and treatments for people with
ME in the UK and Europe continued.
IiME organised and hosted the fifth
annual Invest in ME International ME
conference in London. This had the
theme of “A New Era in ME/CFS
Research” to reflect the new awareness
and acceptance that only biomedical
research will allow treatments and
cures to be found for ME. The 5th
IiME conference (IIMEC5) was as
usual CPD accredited and a
platform for biomedical research.
Invest in ME continued its criticism
of the NICE Guidelines for
CFS/ME which we viewed as
lacking in any usefulness for
physicians or patients. We also
continued to criticise the PACE trial
as flawed science and a huge
waste of public money – money which
could have been far better utilised if
allocated for biomedical research into
ME.
From 2011 we were joined and
supported in our quest for a Centre of
Excellence with a new and visionary
fundraising initiative – Let’s Do It For ME
- formed by three house/bedbound
patients. Together we quickly raised
almost £10000 for our foundation project
to study the gut microbiota in ME
patients. For the charity this was a great
deal in terms of the usual budget.
This was a turning point in encouraging
people with ME and their friends and
families to actively fundraise for ME as
they do in many other illnesses. There is
still a long way to go to get to the level
of MS, cancer, heart disease etc. but it
was a good start and has continued to
grow.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 13 of 77
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
IiME organised and hosted its sixth
annual Invest in ME International
ME/CFS conference. This had the
theme of “The Way Forward for ME – A
Case for Clinical Trials” to reflect the
need for clinical trials of treatments for
ME which could make a difference to
the lives of patients.
The 6th IiME conference (IIMEC6) was
the first time that
Professor Mella
and Dr Fluge
presented on
ME/CFS in public.
They made a
lasting impression
on us and we
knew straight
away that these
two fine
Norwegian
gentlemen and their research were
something special and worth keeping an
eye on. We are honoured to have had
the chance to follow their progress year
after year.
The charity organised the first
Biomedical Research into ME
Colloquium in 2011 – named the
Corridor Conference – bringing together
researchers from different continents to
discuss and share knowledge about ME
– and also some researchers new to the
ME field. BRMEC1 was a new and
unique addition to IiME’s conference
events.
For the first and only time the British
Medical Journal (BMJ) accepted an
invitation to the conference and their
representative participated in the panel
discussion.
Prior to the conference the charity
arranged a special meeting of the APPG
in parliament and took along a number
of our researchers who we had brought
June 2016
to London for the IIMEC6 conference.
This allowed MPs to be given true facts
about the disease and the research
required.
Invest in ME continued to tackle the
unjust media portrayal of ME and made
an official complaint to the Press
Complaints Commission after a series of
unsubstantiated and biased articles
appeared in major
newspapers in a
seemingly
coordinated media
attack on sick and
vulnerable patients.
Although, predictably,
the PCC did not rule
in the charity’s favour
the bias and
inaccurate reporting
in these misleading
and orchestrated articles and the
unprofessional and flawed editorial
control were clearly shown by Invest in
ME to be present in the media –
something which would be symptomatic
of poor journalism shown later by the so
called Leveson Inquiry.
We also wrote to the Lancet about the
PACE trial and continued to argue that
flawed theories should not be funded by
the public.
In 2012 the three areas which have
needed attention and which formed the
basis of our work in order to benefit the
public and society have been - funding
for biomedical research, education
about ME and campaigning/lobbying to
ensure that ME is taken seriously and
that patients receive care from
healthcare staff who actually understand
the disease.
To this end the 2011-2012 was a year
where the charity did much work to
support our objectives. Many of these
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 14 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://yZmtN_-SKLBxjHh7KlwR8OEMXF-z4w2QxDT0AhsFrLE(`̵ Xoj&SHX׉E	Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
activities performed by the charity
overlap.
An example was the premiere screening
in the UK of a film about ME, Voices
from the Shadows, which allowed a
debate to be initiated about past
treatment of ME patients with a
message relating to the damage being
inflicted on families by flawed and
biased research. Invest in ME organised
the first two showings – one in Norwich
and one at the
British Library in
London. In Norwich
the Mayor of
Norwich attended
along with the
media, patients,
and family
members. In
London the British
Library provided an
imposing setting for
a serious debate on
this disease which the film allowed to be
initiated. Dr Nigel Speight spoke at the
screening on a panel which included a
local London councillor.
Our continued criticism of the PACE
Trial showed how badly wrong research
can go and how much money is being
wasted on deleterious and flawed
approaches to this disease by
organisations that are unaccountable.
June 2016
NHS services, GP training, press
complaints made by the charity and
other activities which the charity had
conducted. The charity had also written
to various organisations in order to
clarify errors and misinformation in
publications.
Invest in ME continued with its annual
conference events.
In May 2012 our seventh Invest in ME
International ME CPD
accredited Conference
(IIMEC7) took place in
London along with the
Clinical Autoimmunity
Working Group (CAWG)
which was a 2-day research
meeting, the BRMEC2
Colloquium, that IiME
organised in collaboration
with the Alison Hunter
Memorial Foundation of
Australia – working together
for over six months on
designing this research meeting. The
CAWG was an extraordinary meeting
with world-renowned experts in different
fields, not just ME and laid the
foundations for our future colloquiums.
On the evening before the conference
Invest in ME arranged and hosted the
pre-conference dinner and the charity
was delighted to have Norwegian
journalist Jørgen Jelstad
Invest in ME had been invited to be an
observer at the All Party Parliamentary
Group (APPG) for ME. The charity
provided input to meetings on points
concerning welfare reform, research,
presenting his speech
“Words Matter”. Jørgen has
closely followed ME
research and his
presentation provided a
great deal of food for
thought.
At the end of the 2012 conference we
announced our intention to try to set up
a clinical trial in the UK of rituximab for
ME patients.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 15 of 77
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cJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
As part of our strategy to initiate highquality
biomedical research into ME that
looked at causality of ME the charity
was finally able to fund its first research
project in 2013, the gut microbiota study
at IFR/UEA involving a three year PhD
studentship. This followed many years
of effort and fundraising and was greatly
assisted by the charity’s advisor Dr Ian
Gibson.
The charity and its supporters
contributed to the appeal by the
Australian Alison Hunter Memorial
Foundation and Australian PHANU for a
flow cytometer to be purchased to assist
research there.
The charity organised and held its 8th
annual international research
conference – with the sub-title of
Mainstreaming ME Research –
reflecting our view that ME was now
entering the mainstream research
activities being considered by research
establishments.
We also organised our third international
research colloquium in order to
encourage ME research. These events
established a core working group of
researchers and facilitated many new
collaborations – which was the intention
of the meetings. This also underlined
the charity’s conviction that a strategy of
biomedical research into ME is possible,
is sensible and will be the only way to
June 2016
find treatments/cures for ME.
As part of the charity’s attempt to
mainstream ME research into research
agendas and discussions of major
organisations we invited the chair of the
Royal College of GPs to speak at our
8th International ME conference. Dr
Gerada’s talk led to a lively discussion
with some surprising statements.
Following the colloquium/conference the
charity announced the beginning of its
rituximab clinical trial project. We also
announced that our advisor on the
project would be Emeritus Professor
Jonathan Edwards of UCL.
During 2013 the charity organised a
video conference call with Dr Martin
McShane - NHS Commissioning Board
Authority, Director – in an attempt to
influence DoH policy on ME. In the
discussion were the parents of a
severely affected young adult who had
themselves been victimised by the
social services due to complete
ignorance about ME.
We feel our strategy of biomedical
research with collaboration between
international biomedical researchers is
bringing change and a real prospect of
continued progress.
As we stated in our newslett – our
motives “are to make rapid progress in
translational biomedical research into
ME which will benefit ME patients and
their families and provide hope that
something is being done for them, that
there truly is a promise of better times
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://KsgGpcaUZ-CO7AGNq5cHp2hOJVZab4HQj9RypBTVISI&h`̵ Xoj&SH`׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
ahead and not just further delaying
tactics to waste more years”
By 2014 we could say that the charity’s
work had made an impact.
After a year of attempting to gain
interest in setting up a clinical trial of the
drug rituximab, following promising
results from the Norwegian Fluge et al.
study, the charity initiated a project for
the trial and related B cell research in
association with University College
London.
We began a fundraising campaign with
the help of the Let’s Do It For ME team
of volunteers. An initial target amount of
£350 000 was set and we thus started a
crowdfunding project into ME which had
not been tried before in the UK. This
was a daunting task but not one the
charity thought impossible to achieve –
and IiME's supporters rose to the
challenge with positive campaigns which
raised funds and awareness for this
disease.
The supporters of the charity have been
a credit to the community of ME patients
and carers and have demonstrated the
resilience of this population of sick
people.
We were privileged and grateful to the
Hendrie Foundation who agreed to
pledge funding toward the rituximab
trial. This allowed patients and carers
renewed hope in tackling this disease
and is now an international project –
both in the crowdfunding aspect and in
the research itself.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 17 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://mg9_ezIBwqUdreDt0T5E7TyHnuCG1c0ZoW480xvWXZE'`̵ Xoj&SHaXoj&SH`{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://ZOzuxeGC3mGMY4cOMuAqLPAbRJgCNGrrbEKBjSqnmjE O` ׉	 7cassandra://pWSQ2wKQnSEo_H5HhOdnoEurzSU1d5Ba3Zsv8T6QZwgͥ`S׉	 7cassandra://o5QEKCfIy8R39IBiUEYBshUYiPQKlaUpUDdQRlBNIEE,&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://oFz4nhTSDDaxcCKlpqBoscZJNe2I3sL7F7oOuBRlh5Y͉͠Xoj&SHdט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://DH_WSpR2874ggh845LdZLnf_HqmzLFHrtw-lVy2MGzI e`׉	 7cassandra://LCGDBEpwZdMYwHHnkviBc-sCjDQhFvpoBbyV4bJxBaA͓`S׉	 7cassandra://RDN2a8UgrG_C0LvrCE1ZLq0PrKE05UAjfe98Y59XdPI4`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://ogAN3fkEjhJJPfY4sToMZd8WwbgohtqpybzgDIeHdSM +\$͠Xoj&SHeנXoj&SHb E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHc E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHa I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
The charity has received donations and
support from many different countries
around the world. After an impressive
campaign lasting a year, in August 2014
the charity secured the initial target
amount (with pledges) of £350,000. To
allow the promising B-cell study into ME
to continue, and as part of the overall
research portfolio that Invest in ME has
with UCL and the consultants from
Epsom and St Helier University Hospital
and UCLH, the charity committed itself
to fund a new PhD studentship at UCL
that began in 2015.
The charity organised and held its 9th
annual international research
conference – with the sub-title
of Synergising Research into
ME – illustrating the objectives
of the charity in organising and
facilitating international
collaboration in research into
ME.
Following the IIMEC9
international conference the
charity agreed in principle to
fund further PhD students at
UEA/IFR and also two intercalating
medical students who would assist in
the research underway at UEA/IFR. One
student spent time at Cornell University
with Professor Maureen Hanson and
one at Oxford University under the
guidance of Professor Angela Vincent.
The charity also formed an Advisory
Board to help the charity plan a strategy
for research and provide advice on what
research to fund. We are very pleased
to have renowned researchers from
UEA, IFR, Oxford and UCL in our
Advisory Board.
In 2015 the charity made submissions
for the NIH Pathways to Prevention
Report (P2P). We also made an
analysis of the Institute of Medicine
June 2016
(IOM) “Beyond Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome: Redefining an Illness” report.
We continued our advocacy and support
for people with ME by formally
complaining to the BBC regarding poorly
researched and unbalanced reporting.
The BBC to its shame failed to respond
to any of the complaints made –
underlining the fact that although we
had begun to change the research
landscape it was still difficult to change
the practices of a publicly-funded
establishment organisation that is
unaccountable regarding the truth. One
can bring a
horse to water
but the horse
has to be thirsty
to drink.
2015 saw the
fifth international
biomedical
research
Colloquium and
our tenth
international ME
conference. And both events were the
best to date. A landmark achieved.
Over ten years only a small proportion
of the work that the charity and its
supporters has performed can be
mentioned. And in truth we never
imagined that it would take so much
effort to make the changes now being
seen.
Yet we enter a new decade of Invest in
ME research – better equipped than ten
years ago, more knowledgeable of the
disease itself and as passionate as ever
to produce a solution which will finally
see an end to the misery which people
with ME and their families have been
forced to endure for the last two
decades or more.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://o5QEKCfIy8R39IBiUEYBshUYiPQKlaUpUDdQRlBNIEE,&`̵ Xoj&SHf׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
One Stupid D ٜt
Stacy Hart aka @MamaChill hip hop/rap artist, diagnosed with M.E. in 1991.
Stacy still has M.E., 24 years after being diagnosed.
June 2016
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 19 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://RDN2a8UgrG_C0LvrCE1ZLq0PrKE05UAjfe98Y59XdPI4`̵ Xoj&SHgXoj&SHf{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://hOv2Reaxy1dYsg6ScDspf6kdJlZD9ZnRarlazYxBGPc `׉	 7cassandra://Aoai2xOUsRQmMbh6HHxFWMJz9FlTkH4dJu39sA8QGf8͕`S׉	 7cassandra://S8_zA7TkfVd6TE-gVFwDWurVUCP-dDC70JIvTLF3ZPY*`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://STRAuGjQctr1mbxat5Eq6IAL9xR6eq8pI2rQ-e6ro4Aˡ͠Xoj&SHjט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://w3x9qQuTq3vGppq42P40axx2T2urZYkz29ZrMbIMpms ` ׉	 7cassandra://pDjkUjBuv6jAkYto8s_D6A5Gmv86080Kmsb5iqKrZzA͟`S׉	 7cassandra://Lg-E60FwsYLA4jTXgzbr66_aXbLt0tZE9uI9CA8rcW0)v`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://p31YkEGrNOMb0EvociQ1gTcXvOBdOtLvqo76tXaDLEQt<͠Xoj&SHkנXoj&SHh E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHi E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHt I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E	Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
By Zaher Nahle PhD, MPA,
Vice President for Research and
Scientific Programs
Solve ME/CFS Initiative –
Los Angeles, California
Within the spectrum of
human diseases, ME/CFS is
“…one of the most
challenging.” That is how the
Director of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH),
Dr. Francis S. Collins,
described this disease in a
press release in late 2015
when he announced efforts
to bolster ME/CFS research
at the NIH. Collins, as the
head of a $32 billion research agency
investigating hundreds of complex
diseases, has a unique perspective on
medical challenges worldwide, which
makes his characterization of ME/CFS
especially telling.
But why is this disease so challenging,
“most challenging” in fact? The answer
is not simple yet the challenges can be
classified in two categories. “Humanmade”
challenges resulting from inept
policies and a lack of leadership and
“nature-made” challenges stemming
from the complex, multifactorial nature
of the disease itself:
First, solving medical mysteries
historically, particularly stubborn ones,
has been proportional to investment in
clinical investigations and basic
research. Lessons from polio to HIV
have taught us that repeatedly. It is,
therefore, consequential that the
meager research
spending on ME/CFS
to date continues to
sustain, if not fuel,
the challenging
attributes of this
disease.
Second, there is no
US national strategy
yet to tackle the
disease in a focused,
comprehensive way.
Such strategy would
create an aggregate
mass of scientists,
including the necessary infrastructure,
for studying this incredibly stimulating
area of science. Elements of such
strategy would include: (i) Making
ME/CFS a viable career path for
investigators by funding federal grant
opportunities in this area; (ii) Supporting
clinical and research mentorship
programs in ME/CFS; (iii) Developing
centers for excellence dedicated to
ME/CFS clinical and basic research; (iv)
Fast tracking FDA approvals of
promising drug candidates; and (iv)
Redefining the illness as one of the
“most challenging” diseases in medical
school curricula and other medical
education platforms, including those
associated with influential federal
agencies such as the CDC.
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׉	 7cassandra://S8_zA7TkfVd6TE-gVFwDWurVUCP-dDC70JIvTLF3ZPY*`̵ Xoj&SHl׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
Third, the serious deficit in
comprehending the natural history of the
disease is another key challenge. Case
in point are statements in the February
2015 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report
indicating that the committee “was unable
to define subgroups of patients or even to
clearly define the natural history of the
disease” recommending that “Studies
aimed at assessing the natural history of the
disease and its temporal characteristics
(onset, duration, severity, recovery, and
functional deficits) are essential for a better
understanding of ME/CFS and also are
important to further refine the diagnostic
criteria proposed in this report.”
Fourth, the reluctance of most
pharmaceutical companies to invest in
the ME/CFS field absent reliable
biomarkers is a challenge. In effect, this
virtually eliminates the bulk of the
financial and technological contributions
from the private sector. Therefore,
clever public/private partnerships to
stimulate such endeavors are needed.
These four issues define the “humanmade”
impediments to solving this
disease.
The complex nature of the disease is a
challenge itself; the biological pathways
associated with ME/CFS
pathophysiology are hard to investigate
since by all indications they affect
systems that are pleotropic by nature,
i.e., regulating multiple interweaved
networks and targets. Let’s illustrate this
last point with an example: Take
Cortisol, which is now being studied in
depth at the CDC through its ME/CFS
clinical multi-site program. It is a critical
steroid hormone regulator within
neuroendocrine signaling but also
regulates a myriad of key components in
the cellular energy production
machinery (i.e., bioenergetics) and
influences essential genes of
inflammatory cytokines as well, hence
altering our energetics capacity
June 2016
alongside our immunity and
inflammation status. Clearly, a singular
factor can potentially control complex
functions and systems that are
intertwined and interconnected. When it
goes awry, the consequences become
multifactorial. One can list many more
examples associated with ME/CFS,
from mitochondrial dysfunction, to
pathogenic factors to neurological
abnormalities to autonomic
deregulations that are all, by design,
complex, pan-disciplinary elements
crucial for our cognitive and physical
functioning.
At our organization, the Solve ME/CFS
Initiative (SMCI) and under the
leadership of Carol Head, SMCI
president, we work to mitigate these
challenges in several ways:
I. One, we continue to put resources
into projects that accelerate the
discovery process. We promote
this function by:
i. Supplying any investigator studying
ME/CFS the research materials
(specimens) they need, using our
Solve CFS BioBank; Our BioBank
and Patient Registry™ holds a
repository of physical samples from
ME/CFS patients to supports the
work of qualified researchers. This
important aspect of services that
our organization provides to
researchers, also represents our
efforts to link patients directly to
researchers and facilitate the use
of human materials in the process
of investigating ME/CFS.
ii. Funding meritorious grants through
a competitive peer-review process
to identify innovative technologies,
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 21 of 77
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
concepts and biomarkers. This
program is named the Ramsay
Research Grant Award Program
in honor of the Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis pioneer Dr. A.
Melvin Ramsay, who was the
recognized authority in ME from
1955 until his death in 1990. His
sound descriptions of the disease
have stood the test of time. This
grant program part of our
organization’s overall research
strategy to encourage participatory
investigations, accelerate new
discoveries and reduce barriers for
entry into the challenging yet
rewarding field of ME/CFS. The
Ramsay program has three main
objectives:
• INVEST in original ideas that will
clarify the nature, progression and
root causes of the disease.
• CREATE environments through
these pilot grants to help
awardees generate preliminary
data and compete for long-term
federal grants with the hope of
retaining these researchers in the
ME/CFS field.
• FACILITATE collaboration
among individuals committed to
solving this challenging medical
issue through our organization’s
network.
II. Two, we engage with
government leaders and policy
makers. This engagement in
advocacy is driven by two
fundamental beliefs: one, that it is
the responsibility of the
government to find cures for the
up to 2.5 million ME/CFS patients
in the US alone and not the other
way around; and two, that major
breakthroughs will be accelerated
June 2016
with significant funding from the
federal government, most
importantly NIH and CDC. These
discussions with key government
officials, which we consider
essential to our core mission,
establish a healthy partnership
with national and public health
organizations while
simultaneously maintaining the
pressure aimed at finding real
solutions to our disease.
III. Three, we are taking the lead in
developing a national registry
that can clarify the natural history
of the disease. This is done in
partnership with Genetic Alliance
PEER program and the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation, as
well as the ME/CFS community.
Such initiative will also facilitate
performing longitudinal and cross
sectional studies, informing
clinical trial design, sharing
information with organizations and
researchers for educational and
research purposes, collecting
demographic, epidemiological,
genetic, social sciences, health
disparity, comorbidity and
treatment outcome data,
conducting relevant and targeted
surveys and creating an
information hub that will benefit
the ME/CFS community as a
whole.
IV. Four, we maintain vigilance
against misleading information
and poorly designed studies and
disseminate information through
our multi-communication channels
(e.g., e-newsletter, print
publication, social media) to refute
suspect science and keep the
community up to date on current
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
affairs. We also bring thought
leaders from government,
academia and the private sector
to our patient community through
regular webinars and forums.
V. Five, we developed an
investigation framework of highpriority
targeted research
initiatives focusing on original
research. Initiated this year, this
program leverages in-house
expertise to help close the
knowledge gaps in our
organization’s three key research
focus areas: bioenergetics,
neuroendocrine biology and
immune dysfunction. We
conduct these targeted initiatives
through well-defined projects
initiated at our organization, either
independently or in collaboration
with researchers or medical
centers. Projects are typically high
risk/high reward and likely to
generate information useful to the
broader medical and scientific
ME/CFS community. Results of
these initiatives will be shared
with the community to spark
further studies. Currently, we
have several targeted initiatives in
the areas of bioenergetics,
metabolomics, functional
genomics, immune-senescence
and RNA interference that were
developed with commercial
entities like Metabolon, research
centers like Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center and
individual academic laboratories
at leading medical centers
nationwide.
To achieve all these ambitious goals, we
leverage other key assets at the
organization including:
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 23 of 77
June 2016
 a Research Advisory Council made
up of highly respected experts drawn
from diverse fields
 a broad-based network of patients as
partners
 deeply committed board members,
each of whom has a personal
connection to the disease.
We work to add value in our research
endeavors by pursuing the most
innovative applications and ideas in the
ME/CFS field to make this disease
understood, diagnosable and treatable.
We are always looking for collaborations
and partnerships in the United States
and abroad.
-----The
Solve ME/CFS Initiative (SMCI),
based in Los Angeles, is the major
nonprofit, US-based organization
focused on the debilitating disease
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) since its
founding in 1987 (then under the name
of CIFDS Association of America).
SMCI’s mission is to serve ME/CFS
patients through making the
pathophysiology of the ME/CFS
understood, diagnosable and treatable.
With emphasis on transparency and
rigor, the organization pursues its work
in a number of ways, including grant
making, bio-banking and patient registry
support, the design and implementation
of research programs in the basic and
translational sciences as well as
national advocacy, engagement and
multi-channel communications on the
most pressing and current ME/CFS
affairs.
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
Norwich to be Home to the Quadram Institute
The Quadram Institute is a new centre for food and health research to be located on the Norwich
Research Park. Under one roof the Quadram Institute will integrate research teams from the current
Institute of Food Research (IFR) and University of East Anglia’s (UEA) Faculty of Science and
Norwich Medical School with the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital’s (NNUH) gastrointestinal
endoscopy facility.
The Quadram Institute is the name of the
new hub for food and health research to
be located at the heart of the Norwich
Research Park, one of Europe’s largest
single-site concentrations of research in
food, health and environmental sciences.
Building of a new facility to house the
Quadram Institute began in February
2016, with an anticipated opening in
2018.
The Quadram Institute’s mission is to
develop solutions to worldwide
challenges in human health, food and
disease.
The opening of the new building will be
in 2018 quadram.ac.uk
The initial investment for the Quadram
Institute is being provided by the
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
Research Council (BBSRC) together
with its three Norwich-based partners:
the Institute of Food Research (IFR); the
Norfolk and Norwich University
Hospitals NHS
Foundation Trust (NNUH); and the
University of East Anglia (UEA).
The Quadram Institute will integrate
research teams from the IFR and UEA’s
Faculty of Science and Norwich Medical
School with the NNUHs’ gastrointestinal
endoscopy facility under one roof.
To be led by Professor Ian Charles,
currently Director of the IFR, the
Quadram Institute’s mission will be to
develop solutions to worldwide
challenges in human health, food and
disease. The concept for the institute is
to enable a step-change in food and
health science research by providing
new insights and accelerating innovation
that will deliver new foods and
treatments as well as proactive health
and lifestyle interventions, for the benefit
of society and the bio-economy.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 24 of 77
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
The creation of the Quadram Institute
underlines the collaboration of the four
founding partners and reflects its
strategy to work across four research
themes: the gut and the microbiome (the
gut flora); healthy ageing; food
innovation; and food safety. These
research themes will link closely to the
world-class plant and crop research at
the John Innes Centre and
bioinformatics at The Genome Analysis
Centre, both also located at the Norwich
Research Park, creating a powerful
plant-food-health pathway to deliver
clinically-validated strategies to improve
human nutrition, health and wellbeing.
The Quadram Institute will work closely
with the food industry, healthcare and
allied sectors to transfer its scientific
knowledge into practice.
“There is a unique set of resources and
expertise at the Norwich Research Park
enabling the new Quadram Institute to
be a world-leading innovation hub
across our areas of interest, namely the
gut, microbes, food and health. This is
an exciting time to have the opportunity
to be truly at the forefront of an
emerging new discipline of health and
food research. Recent understanding of
how food and our gut flora interact is
creating a fundamental shift in the way
we will understand and address the
impact of food on health. We will be
engaged in fundamental and
translational research, alongside clinical
studies and endoscopy and our goal is
to become recognised globally for
research excellence and clinical
expertise, and impact on patient care
and outcomes” said Professor Charles.
Professor Melanie Welham, BBSRC
Director of Science said, “The UK is a
recognised leader in bioscience
research, with Norwich being well
known for its strengths in food and plant
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 25 of 77
June 2016
sciences, as well as microbiological and
gastrointestinal research. The Quadram
Institute will enable us to bring together
world-leading scientists in custom-built
facilities to develop an integrated
approach to food, diet and health
research. The challenges these
scientists will be tackling are some of
the most important for people around
the world, socially and economically.”
UEA Vice-Chancellor Professor David
Richardson said: "The Quadram
Institute will be a unique
multidisciplinary hub for world-leading
research in the important fields of food,
diet and health. This partnership will
give Norwich Research Park
researchers the opportunity to make
cutting-edge contributions at the
forefront of this emerging discipline.”
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Volume 10 Issue 1
A Centre of Excellence for ME
An Opportunity for Major Progress
in Diagnosis, Treatment and
Research into Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
Since 2010 Invest in ME have been
promoting the concept of a Centre of
Excellence for ME and we have been
steadily building a foundation of
research that can be the basis for such
a Centre.
Our Executive Summary for MPs has
been updated and is here –
http://www.investinme.org/Documents/C
ofE/Invest%20in%20ME%20Research%
20UK%20Centre%20of%20Excellence%2
0for%20ME%20Executive%20Summary
%20for%20MPs%20Status%20June%2
02016.pdf
This
is a summary of the current status
regarding the Invest in ME Research
proposal for a Centre of Excellence for
ME Research and Treatment based in
Norwich, UK.
Background
 A seriously inadequate standard of
medical care exists for ME patients
in UK
 Very little and fragmented
biomedical research into the
condition
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 26 of 77
 Confusion between ME and chronic
fatigue has led to unscientific
research and ineffective treatments
 Medical professionals lack
understanding of, and training in
ME – a serious risk of mis-diagnosis
and missed diagnoses exists
 Medical students are taught from a
curriculum which uses flawed or out
of date information about ME
 ME identified as both highlighted
area and high priority by MRC – yet
MRC has continually failed to fund
adequate biomedical research into
ME
 ME is leading cause of long-term
absence from school due to
sickness for students and teachers
 ME is recognised by the Department
of Health as a chronic neurological
illness yet official guidance and
management are aimed at mainly
changing patients’ “false illness
beliefs”
 In 2015 The USA Institutes of
Medicine (IOM) recognised ME as a
serious, chronic disease
June 2016
׉	 7cassandra://LE-IW63AlMOCHa9rhYEbbhiqkzHcZdltSIdaRysRWjQ#`̵ Xoj&SHφ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
Our Objective
A Centre of Excellence for ME in East
Anglia, within the Norwich Research
Park, utilising and based on existing
facilities and resources would provide a
hub of scientific and clinical excellence
for ME within Europe
The research arm would be
funded initially by private/charitable
donations but these preliminary
research projects, coordinated in a
strategy, would lead to grant
applications to major public research
funding bodies
The clinical diagnosis and treatment arm
would be funded eventually by the NHS
- a key objective is that treatments are
made available for all.
Service Commissioning
Current status
A GP referral, via normal NHS channels
to a consultant-led service that links with
GPs with special interest.
Treatment of patients would be based
on sound scientific evidence
A hub and spoke model would exist
which would allow dissemination of
expert knowledge to GPs and/or ME
clinics nationwide and internationally.
Out of area referrals would generate
income.
Training opportunities for medical
students and other consultants, nurses
etc. would exist.
A unique training establishment would
be possible
Benefits
Our proposal is a unique opportunity to
establish European hub of scientific and
clinical excellence in Norwich Research
Park
Early and correct diagnosis of patients
would apply for all UK patients.
Several medical students funded by
IiMER have been intercalating in their
medical degrees and we will continue to
do this with more already planned
More plans exist to develop a strategy of
research involving international
collaboration
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 27 of 77
All elements of the centre model exist
and are ready to be integrated, with the
exception of a lead ME consultant that
the charity is progressing in discussions
with relevant parties.
The Foundation project at IFR/UEA
examining the gut microbiota in ME
patients started in October 2013. In the
autumn of 2016 there will be two more
PhDs starting and a further PhD student
funded by IiME is currently being
advertised.
B-cell research as part of a rituximab
clinical trial project began at UCL in
2014 and continues with a PhD currently
working and a student being funded
later in the year.
June 2016
The establishment of standard protocols
for effective diagnosis and clinical trials
would be complemented by
development of effective treatments,
leading to highly significant public
savings.
The hub and spoke model would
address seriously inadequate levels of
clinical service for ME in East Anglia
and nationwide
The development of a network of
domiciliary services to support severely
affected patients (currently seriously
neglected by the health service and
previously left out of research into ME).
Savings on existing consultant referrals
and staff - ME examination focused in
one area
The project is financially viable – the
Centre can start small and grow as
further funding becomes available
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Volume 10 Issue 1
The inaugural meeting of The European
ME Research Group (EMERG) –
initiated and funded by the charity - has
opened the possibility of a Europeanwide
collaboration which seeks
national and EU funding.
The charity is actively looking at
complimentary projects which will
increase the research knowledge base
and translate research into treatments.
The foundations are therefore already
set to establish a Centre which can act
as a hub for UK and European
research and work with other academic
organisations and researchers, as well
as other Centres of Excellence in
Europe and USA, Canada and Australia
and New Zealand.
LET’s C Research – A C of E for ME
Now the charity is launching a campaign
to raise awareness of the possibilities
with the Centre of
Excellence and gain
more support for the
firm establishment of
this biomedical research
and treatment facility for
ME.
So we ask supporters to
begin getting major support from MPs,
GPs, media, celebrities, schools,
businesses, research organisations,
families, friends.
Our logo will appear everywhere. We
are having t-shirts made for events in
which our supporters raise funds and
awareness.
A web page will be set up for this shortly
and progress will be published as and
when possible.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 28 of 77
Our Big Give page is here –
https://secure.thebiggive.org.uk/projects/
view/9169
June 2016
Already it is good to see some early
support for this campaign -
Our Twitter hashtags are
and
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
Creating a New Vision of Research
into ME in Europe
For a long time it has been the objective
of Invest in ME to forge international
collaborations between researchers.
IiME is a member of the European ME
Alliance (EMEA) and recently EMEA
has joined the European Federation of
Neurological Associations in order to
promote ME in Europe.
With our EMEA colleagues we also had
discussions on forming a European
Advisory Board which would allow
EMEA to discuss, initiate and fund
biomedical research into ME. This led to
further development of the idea.
During the Invest in ME BRMEC5
Colloquium in May 2015 discussions
with European researchers were
conducted about the future of ME
research and how better to coordinate
and link together research activity in
several European countries.
Based upon these conversations there
appeared to be overwhelming support
and enthusiasm from the group of
researchers whom IiME/EMEA have
brought together to work cooperatively
and more effectively.
Forming a group or consortium of
European researchers represents a very
progressive step in not only helping to
establish new collaborations and
cement on-going ones but also in
developing new research ideas and
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 29 of 77
priorities and bidding for funds that
would allow us to work together on joint
projects.
This is the genesis of EMERG - The
European ME Research Group
IiME convened the inaugural meeting in
London in October 2015 to bring this
together in the hope that rapid and
lasting progress can be made in the
research, treatment and cure for myalgic
encephalomyelitis.
EMERG has a vision of working
collaboratively to increase biomedical
research into myalgic encephalomyelitis
(ME) in order to find cause(s),
treatment(s) and understanding about
the disease.
This provides a powerful combination of
campaigning and raising of awareness,
building new research and accumulation
of data based on collaboration and
sharing of experiences and knowledge,
which will allow rapid progress in the
building up a strategy of high-quality
research into ME.
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Volume 10 Issue 1
The European ME
Alliance (EMEA) is
now composed of
thirteen countries
in Europe –
working together
to create change.
RISK OF SUICIDE DUE TO NEGLECT AMONGST PEOPLE LIVING WITH
MYALGIC ENCEPHALOMYEILITIS/CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME IN
SPAIN: FIRST SPANISH STUDY
LigaSFC May 12, 2016
“We will not be a just, advanced nor
democratic country as long as there
are people who have Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis who continue
being ignored and INVISIBLE”
- Juan Jimenez-Ortiz
Another International Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome Day is here.
But do people with ME/CFS in Spain
Have we anything to celebrate?
No, it does not seem so.
That is why the Spanish association of
PWME (people with Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis), LigaSFC, is
launching this very important study by
Juan Jimenez-Ortiz on the effects of
neglect, mistreatment and lack of proper
medical and social care which people
with ME/CFS in Spain live with.
For several decades, PWME in Spain,
their associations and their lawyers,
have been denouncing that this very
serious neuroimmune illness, which
affects one in 200 people, live with a
great number of social and political
factors which, added to their illness,
severely reduce their quality of life and
put them at risk of suicide (see the
numerous articles by the Collectiu
Ronda Lawyer’s Cooperative in
Barcelona). These factors include,
mainly, a lack of access to relevant
medical care and a precarious economic
situation due the lack of pensions and
other help which people too sick to work
are entitled to in Spain. Also the lack of
proper care of this illness by the health
administrations results in a general lack
of social support for PWME.
PWME in Spain have spent decades
saying that all they want is what other
people who are ill with other pathologies
have. But they don’t seem to be listened
to.
Socially aware and concerned Spanish
psychologist, Juan Jimenez-Ortiz, has
carried out a research study (for his PhD
thesis by the University of Valladolid)
with the title: “Depression, hopelessness
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 30 of 77
June 2016
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
in people with Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome: Risk factors and protection”
(2016).
The results of this research study are
highly worrisome. The
high level of risk of
suicide, depression and
hopelessness in these
patients is much higher
than in the rest of the
Spanish population due
to, mostly, the lack of
relevant health care
services.
STUDY AND RESULTS
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is one of
the Central Sensitivity Syndromes
(CSS). Although there are still some
questions regarding its etiology, the
research done up to now attributes it to
a significant alteration in the Central
Nervous System which affects the
immune and the endocrine systems.
This produces severe symptoms of
fatigue that is not solved by resting,
immune dysfunction, cognitive
problems, inflammations, and many
more organic alterations.
Due to these dysfunctions and
symptoms, PWME’s lives are severely
disrupted. All activities of daily life are
affected. Many studies, including this
one by Jimenez-Ortiz, show that the
effects of this illness as well as the
institutional abandonment (health care
and social care), added to the losses
that such an illness produces (work,
family and social relations) are related to
depression, hopelessness and risk of
suicide.
June 2016
The objectives of this study by JimenezOrtiz
were the following:
To measure the incidence of
depression, hopelessness and risk of
suicide in a sample of Spanish PWME.
To identify which
sociodemographic
variables or
circumstances were
related to suffering
depression,
hopelessness and risk
of suicide.
Concretize which
variables could be modified to reduce
the incidence of depression,
hopelessness and risk of suicide.
Propose a model of probability of
depression, hopelessness and risk of
suicide amongst PWME.
Jimenez-Ortiz proposed the following
hypothesis:
There is an incidence amongst PWME
higher than the rest of the population of
depression, hopelessness and risk of
suicide.
There is significant sociodemographic
and clinical data (circumstances)
regarding depression, hopelessness
and risk of suicide amongst PWME.
There are variables which can affect in a
positive manner these circumstances.
In this study, 205 Spanish people
participated, all of them diagnosed with
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome, 187 women and 18
men, between 27 and 71 years of age.
The participants were from the following
Spanish Regions: 7 from Andalucia, 1
from Aragon, 1 from Asturias, 5 from the
Canary Islands, 4 from Castilla La
Mancha, 15 from Castilla y Leon, 102
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 31 of 77
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
from Catalonia, 7 from Galicia, 22 from
Madrid, 1 from Murcia, 14 from Navarra,
5 from the Basque Country, 3 from La
Rioja and 18 from Valencia.
The most significant result in this study
is the incidence, amongst PWME, of risk
of suicide which is 12.75%, compared to
the incidence in the general Spanish
population which is 2.3%. The incidence
of depression amongst these PWME is
57.25%, compared to the incidence in
the general Spanish population which is
4%. And the incidence of hopelessness
amongst these PWME is 66.85% (there
are no studies of hopelessness in the
general Spanish population).
Some of the reasons which have been
found to be associated in a significant
manner to depression, hopelessness
and risk of suicide amongst PWME,
include:
To risk of suicide:
Not having medical care.
Having ME/CFS affect their capacity to
earn a living and the worsening of the
economic situation of their family unit.
Having to turn to family members for
help with activities of daily life.
Not being listened to by doctors.
To depression and hopelessness:
Having been put down and not treated
properly by the health care system.
Not having regular medical follow-up.
Having been sent for psychological or
psychiatric treatment and been labelled
as “rebellious patient”.
Having lost their job.
Having lost friendships due to the
illness.
June 2016
Not being believed when mentioning the
effects on their health of chemical
agents (chemical sensitivities).
Having had their intimate (sexual)
relationships affected by ME/CFS.
Having had ME/CFS affect their
economic situation.
CONCLUSIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
The results of this study are very
important because they show that:
PWME have the most significant areas
of their lives affected by this illness.
PWME feel invisible in all aspects of
their daily life.
The disruption crated by the symptoms
of ME/CFS added to the negative
experiences lived by PWME are related,
in a very significant manner, to
depression, hopelessness and to risk of
suicide.
Spanish PWME have higher levels of
depression, hopelessness and risk of
suicide than the rest of Spanish society.
Some of the Preventive Measures that
the author, Juan Jimenez-Ortiz,
proposes are:
The abandonment and neglect that
Spanish PWME live with from the health
care system, from the employment
world and from their social and family
lives has to be denounced and taken
seriously. This abandonment and
neglect generates suffering among
these PWME.
There is an urgent need to organize and
carry out educational and training
activities about ME/CFS for health care
workers, families and society in general.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
info@ligasfc.org
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 32 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://E5z6ZdD9JkcyMfTz_AnqgiqennPs37h2mcS6FB-9pzs'.`̵ Xoj&SHϛ׉EKJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
My name is Mike Harley; I’m from Bristol
and I’m about to run my 6th of 28
planned EU
marathons for
charity, that’s
one in every
member state.
On Saturday
4th June 2016
I’m heading
out to run the
Stockholm
Marathon
before another
2 marathons
this year: Gdansk in Poland and
Toulouse in France.
I want to raise the profile of ME all over
Europe and connect charities,
researchers and patients together to
share resources and
lobby their
governments for
biomedical research
and progress.
Ultimately I want to
help affect a change
in the UK/across
Europe but also a
real shift in the
perception of this
awful,
indiscriminating
illness.
The icing on the cake
for me would be to make it through all
the marathons in one piece and see
some of my friends well on the road to
full recovery.
I hadn’t heard of ME really before my
friend Ian came down with it over 9
years ago. Ian is one of my oldest
mates and even though for much of the
last decade he’s been too ill to work and
lost some of the best years of his life to
ME, he’s always been the same positive
person throughout.
After a few years of no real
improvement and not seeing him as
much as before, I wanted to find out a
bit more about what was making him ill
and what could be done. He’s taught
me a lot about the inconsistencies in
treatment, both the lack of up-to-date
knowledge from GPs and funding for
biomedical research from governments
not just in the UK.
It wasn’t until he told me about Invest in
ME and the work they’re doing with the
top scientists and researchers that I
started to learn more about ME and how
‘well folk’
can
potentially
help them to
find a cure.
Around the
time that I
got involved
with
fundraising,
Invest In
ME were
already on
the way to
crowd-funding enough to set-up a
Rituximab trial, B-Cell research and
beginning to finalise plans to create a
UK ME treatment and research centre in
Norwich drawing upon their strong ties
with some of the best researchers and
scientists from around the world.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 33 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://HGpfzLefYvwW5dTR_Xi_Bmz40NyavzOLdkIjpR_-azw*`̵ Xoj&SHϜXoj&SHϛ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://f4zIAEakRdKPdf9tiFNDTPlRoMvPn5osj9pgM7z51EE `׉	 7cassandra://3fK-JsUQc9MLagy41TudOd6OOEI3d_yPkLGKTo8EZvc͒6`S׉	 7cassandra://1Ll2MrywG3E-_uv5pXuS2Qg0_TrRGBf1I4W4xe_Cs-A)5`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://iTQfA6GndnbfuE9z8tMJn15bdtX-EZ8t5jhgLEj5rCs͋g͠Xoj&SHϨט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://uTAF351d8cvkVDHoTDGh338VsBVOsQ2_U2xqkRe0zDk #}`׉	 7cassandra://QwY8sZzVxs6yznF9OD-BuAsYVrQRxCsMTMY3r-RhaeA͛`S׉	 7cassandra://GZR8kESvUzoQ0JhcOZbVHd0QySCUexblc_3kHFXi_9Q,`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://S3UMFEVTWvbdzXDDGF3YGoBscpVAMr3SnwOZpYgnIlU˯͠Xoj&SHϩנXoj&SHϝ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϞ ̒->9׉Hhttp://92in92.blogspot.co.uk/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϟ OF́9׉Hhttp://92in92.blogspot.co.uk/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϠ O_́9׉Hhttp://92in92.blogspot.co.uk/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϡ Ox\9׉Hhttp://92in92.blogspot.co.uk/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϢ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϣ 9׉H *http://www.justgiving.com/mikeseumarathonsGׁׁrנXoj&SHϤ !9׉H *http://www.justgiving.com/mikeseumarathonsGׁׁrנXoj&SHϥ B%9׉Hhttp://www.mikeseumarathons.eu/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϦ 9׉H (http://www.facebook.com/mikeseumarathonsGׁׁrנXoj&SHϧ !9׉H (http://www.facebook.com/mikeseumarathonsGׁׁrנXok &SH~ I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXok &SH} |9ׁH &http://www.facebook.com/mikeseumarathoׁׁЈנXok &SH| F9ׁHhttp://www.mikeseumarathons.euׁׁЈנXok &SH{ 9ׁH (http://www.justgiving.com/mikeseumarathoׁׁЈ׉E
Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
I was very impressed with what they had
achieved given the fact that the work is
done entirely on a voluntary/nonsalaried
basis; compared to other
charities they seemed to be the only
ones doing anything really pro-active to
help people
get better.
It’s not my
first
sponsored
challenge
for
biomedical
ME
research; I
led a team
to visit 92
football
grounds in
92 hours in
2014 on a trip where we raised over
£4000, were featured in 11 TV regions,
BBC radio and over 70 football club
matchday programmes.
It was on this trip that we felt a huge
wave of support from ME patients and
their families, not just on social media
where they really kept us going, but also
when they turned up at the grounds to
wish us well, often with food,
sponsorship and their stories to tell.
We met sufferers in wheelchairs, really
ill young children, people of all ages and
severities. It really was a life-changing
experience: they were all such nice
people who through no fault of their own
were ill and weren’t getting any help.
When the challenge was done, I felt that
I really couldn’t just leave things there.
Most weren’t well enough to fight for
funding and attention themselves and
with very few people around to stand up
for them I had to find something bigger
and carry on; I think the injustice of their
June 2016
situation really angered me (and still
does) if I’m honest.
On to this challenge and I can tell you
that I’ve done 5 so far: London (UK),
Prague (Czech Rep), Helsinki (Finland),
Dublin (Ireland) and Thessaloniki
(Greece).
I’ve met with
charities, media
and patients and
it’s been an
incredible
experience;
everyone has
been really
receptive and
super-friendly.
Since I started
the challenge last
May, I’ve
acquired over
1000 followers, £3200 in donations and
clocked up nearly 2000 miles in training.
I’m not a natural runner by any stretch,
I’m short, not very sporty and pretty
ignorant when it comes to technique
(mental and physical).
But like all good underdogs, as with the
people I run for and represent, I’m
determined and up for the challenge
despite the cost, lifestyle change and
commitment required.
I’m driven by the good wishes and
support from the friends I’ve made
within the community as well as the
gross injustice that I’m seeing with
regards to the treatment of ME patients.
The support I’ve had makes it really
easy to carry on.
Having done the UK previously (I may
well do it again at the end to wrap things
up!), my 1st race and return to running
was in Prague. Prior to the race I met
the family of an ME patient there with
connections to their leading ME charity.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 34 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
I had patients come to cheer me
on in the race and I found the
same sense of frustration and
injustice that I had read about in
the UK.
I met patients and ME charity
representatives in Finland and
Ireland also and interviewed an
ME patient of 25 years from
Greece; all were the same –their
governments classified ME as a
psychological problem and refuse
to support biological research.
I’m always keen to write a blog
where I find out more about the
treatment and perception of ME in
each country. These pieces are
by far and away the most viewed
posts; patients and their families are
really keen to see what is happening in
other countries and join together in
solidarity.
The people that I interview have
explained that they need to remain
relatively anonymous and not to publish
their names as they fear investigation by
social security/insurance companies
who might claim that they are ‘working’.
It’s a desperate situation in my view
when patients aren’t able to publicly
fight for their right to treatment.
The UK PACE trial and its legacy clearly
has had a huge impact on the rest of
Europe and the way ME is viewed and
(not) treated.
I’ve tried hard to raise awareness of ME
on the challenge so far. I’ve had blogs
published and interviews on Running
Bug (300K followers), BBC Radio and
regional newspapers.
It has been difficult though.
ME sadly still seems to be viewed with
suspicion and huge ignorance by
national media –perhaps the
government agenda of neglect and
denial is being adhered to there too.
June 2016
One national newspaper approached
me to write a piece on the challenge
but have failed to publish it despite
claiming to be happy with the quality.
In any case, I’m here to do everything
I can to help Invest in ME.
I’m strongly urging anyone who
is doing a sponsored event to pick
them as their charity, we all know
someone with ME and biomedical
research is the way that you can
help them.
Big thanks to everyone who has
supported and sponsored me so far,
I’m really enjoying the challenge and
feeling that I’m doing something
worthwhile to help my new friends
and, of course, my good friend Ian.
Find me on Twitter @mikesEUmaras
If you’d like to sponsor me, text ‘IIME82’
and £5 to 70070
I can also be found at
www.justgiving.com/mikeseumaratho
ns
and at www.mikeseumarathons.eu
and on Facebook at
www.facebook.com/mikeseumaratho
ns
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 35 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
www.justgiving.com/mikeseumarathons Page 36 of 77
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
׉	 7cassandra://6YZzNBN5nBLNt_Dba_J2anDl6-k2P815jPfYBb_IOL4&8`̵ Xoj&SHϱ׉ENews from N orway
On 10th of April the Norwegian Research Council
announced that they would be inviting mainly
patients and family members but also healthcare
practitioners to submit suggestions for research
topics into ME. The deadline for these submissions
was 3rd May.
The Research Council acknowledges that there are
different names being used such as CFS and ME and
considers it a serious and fairly common condition
with or without pain. The cause/s are unknown,
biomarkers for the condition have not been found
yet and there is disagreement on the symptom
based criteria.
As a consequence there are no effective treatments.
The Norwegian Health Directorate estimates that there are between 10 000
and 20 000 patients with CFS/ME in Norway. Many experience considerable
health problems over a long period of time and feel that they are badly served
by the healthcare system. The research activity has increased over the last
few years, both in amount and approaches, but the need for research and
better understanding of CFS/ME is still extensive.
Why this approach?
There are many ways of identifying the knowledge requirement. The health
programmes within the Norwegian Research Council now trial an approach
which has been named ‘needs identified research’. It will be research that
gathers knowledge that is particularly called for by healthcare users, and
which can provide benefit in a relatively short time period. The Research
Council therefore invited participation to identify research areas that can form
a basis for new research projects.
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What happens after 3rd May?
The Norwegian Research Council will set up a broad based user panel
that consists of patients, family members, healthcare professionals,
healthcare authorities and researchers who will advise on the research
need and type of research that would be useful for patients with
CFS/ME.
This will be achieved through a three stage process toward prioritising
concrete research projects.
The first task of the user panel would be to evaluate proposals or
research questions that have been received by the 3rd May deadline
(stage 1). Based on the user panel’s prioritisation of proposals the
Research Council will send out a call for researchers to respond to.
In the first instance researchers are invited to send in a simple
application with a short project description (stage 2).
The user panel evaluates and grades the applications on the basis of
how they answer the need and expected benefit set out in the call. A
selection of researchers who have sent in applications will be then
invited to send in full applications (stage 3).
These applications will be treated in a similar manner as ordinary
applications to the health programmes. The planned deadline for a
simplified application will be 7th September and for the full application
23rd November 2016.
The Research Council will publish a short general report on the
research proposals that have been received. The announcement and
invitation for a simplified application (stage 2) is scheduled to be
published on the Research Council’s website in June.
None of the user panel members can submit or be involved in an
application for a research project. Names of the panel members will be
announced in early May.
o
rway
׉	 7cassandra://BunkiS3ikXuk1NaWlUBVj9Fzu9y_QY9Dn6oZDsbfpSw&E`̵ Xoj&SHϷ׉ENews from N rway
The Norwegian ME Association works
to improve the condition for MEpatients
through informing both
patients and health care workers,
health authorities and politicians
about ME and about new research on
ME. The association also arranges
talks and conferences as well as
informal meetings where patients can
meet other in the same situation. The
association has local chapters in
almost all counties.
During 2016 the Norwegian ME
Association has responded to calls for
input regarding new laws concerning
child protection services, services for
disabled persons and education for
disabled children.
In January the association published
the report from a large survey of ME
patients experience with Nav. NAV
administers a third of the national
budget through schemes such as
unemployment benefit, work
assessment allowance, sickness
benefit, pensions, child benefit and
cash-for-care benefit.
Many ME patients report that they find
it difficult to get the benefits to which
they are entitled. The report showed
that the treatment of patients varies
wildly between offices, and that there
is little knowledge of ME within Nav.
Since the report was published, the
association has been invited to
present it at several Nav offices, and
we hope to go to many others.
We are very pleased to see a growing
interest in ME as experienced by the
patients.
Representatives for the association
has also talked at ME conferences,
both arranged by patients and by the
health authorities
The Norwegian ME Association is
often asked to provide background
information for articles in magazines
and newspapers. Representatives for
the association has also been on the
news on national radio several times.
The association has a large website
filled with information on ME. The
website is updated regularly, both
with research news, and “human
interest” stories. A guest blog has
become very popular.
Recently, the Research Council of
Norway invites patients to tell them
what research into ME was needed.
They received more than 700 replies.
A board of researchers and patient
representatives, two from the ME
Association, will soon start to look
through the ideas and identify
projects.
׉	 7cassandra://U9IUiATC9QHv-6ow0Hk-08a4V4KEjKcmbS0iR7GSWlE4>`̵ Xoj&SHϸXoj&SHϷ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://3nk4iAIP-nDpzRpIrBrGK4yN5Lrc3qPrFJHuYGOX8zI ` ׉	 7cassandra://-IPAJ4nJJ14Xp4fsWGb3W6Ia9Zns3OZSGd050BZMJIA͔` S׉	 7cassandra://lNLZPchXD8CBYfv7oBobFGpZnmV-LvGm-Vif9yLYfrk)g`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://xrvcm0OJQ9HBbTW_svXIpOl9X8mauyioflU1FnOT5j0H͠Xoj&SHϻט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://TEv1ZzifH5Nc5fD7t5LurFuQJ62etbh25fosg0KKack C`׉	 7cassandra://sF3m_CCaOEbrZntxq4AmzRiVSUtrutyNUkSb9-uJwW8́`S׉	 7cassandra://S5zvjU-sEQ4oio2lup7bSoK7CsjFtyOtG6cUc_6udcI%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://bI46xz4xHXSE7FCAQuuYnl4dlxgSCndatjzxYS7y1rI͠Xoj&SHϼנXoj&SHϹ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHϺ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok&SHЫ I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E	mJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
From Norway Haukeland University Hospital:
Brief status of the Project on Genetic
Predisposition to ME / CFS
A published study shows a clear
genetic predisposition to ME (Albright
et al, 2011).
This was a population-based study in
which risk of ME was 2.7 times
higher in first-degree relatives of CFS
patients, 2.3 times higher in second
degree relatives, and 1.93 times
higher in cubic relatives, compared
with the risk of ME in the general
population.
Our research group at the
Department of Oncology, Haukeland
University Hospital, has in recent
years been contacted by several
independent families with striking
incidence of ME and they all have
wanted us to do further analysis on
mapping of genetic predisposition.
We believe mapping of gene
changes in affected patients will be
an important step forward in the
understanding of disease
mechanisms.
We conducted exome sequencing
from both CFS patients and healthy
family members, where all the coding
regions of the genome, including the
flanking intro regions were
characterized. This technique is
considered experimental diagnostic /
research and is not considered a full
investigation of all genetic variants
that exist in a human. Initially we will
only answer the question of what is
the molecular genetic predisposition
to ME disease in our patients. Exome
that constitutes the coding parts of
genes including the flanking intron
portions, is approximately 1.5% of the
total DNA of a human cell, but about
85% of all known mutations is still
located therein.
We imagine that some families may
have genetic variants of immune
genes such as HLA genes, where it
is known that specific HLA types are
correlated with various autoimmune
diseases. HLA genes in ME are
being examined in a specific project
at OUS, led by Benedicte Lie, Marthe
Viken and Torstein Egeland.
At Haukeland Hospital, we are most
concerned about families with
significant incidence of ME disease,
often with multiple siblings with onset
relatively early age, often with a
relatively severe illness, and
preferably with ME disease in
successive generations.
We believe some such families may
have genetic variants directly in the
"effector system" for symptoms
(which symptoms are created), and
where the detection of such variants
can tell us about disease
mechanisms.
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׉	 7cassandra://lNLZPchXD8CBYfv7oBobFGpZnmV-LvGm-Vif9yLYfrk)g`̵ Xoj&SHϽ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
We have completed exome
sequencing in a total of 18
people, from two different
families with significant
incidence of ME disease
among first and second
degree relatives. We have
started analysing a third
family.
Regarding the two families
for whom we have completed
exome sequencing and
subsequent analysis, we
have several relevant gene
variants that are being
investigated further.
Currently we have focused
on an interesting genetic
variation (mutation) that all
the sick persons in one family
have, and which occurs in
approximately 2/1000 of a
European general population.
The variant also occurs in a
few of the patients included
in our clinical trial.
We focus our efforts towards this
variation now and have taken skin
biopsies (all cells in the affected have
the same gene variant) for cultivating
cell cultures and closer examination
of energy metabolism.
We have created cells in which the
mutation is "inserted" by means of
gene transfection, and where we can
"turn up" the expression of the
mutated variant significantly, and see
the implications for the cells.
We believe the version we're dealing
with now may be relevant to the
disease, and data so far fits in well
with the work we otherwise perform
now, to identify disease mechanisms
of ME closer.
04/15/16
Øystein Fluge Olav Mella Ove
Bruland
June 2016
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Page 41 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://S5zvjU-sEQ4oio2lup7bSoK7CsjFtyOtG6cUc_6udcI%`̵ Xoj&SHϾXoj&SHϽ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://lk4tVIIHIhnGD8WS-MzShbH6xSHzpXxlO6EPW8Aqkfo A`׉	 7cassandra://ILslapaDvV2mkb5oIeuXoMW_eDvrlD0ziLARaZKA8fA͍`S׉	 7cassandra://bSV1OFzACx4S8TVJJsk3ZpdWWDybHHdBC8dXAsLu0cw(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://9tfZaMR17d4gSDOZ74-kn2O0wNcYz04_9bANXjyVJ3gͩ4<͠Xoj&SHט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://k8Ii3QJOedmUL1xb1-PkPy5wEf91Vs3V8j8FCAY2oMA `׉	 7cassandra://NVmvGicLiUHmyQJgF2eZ1XMHZBNX5tTkWRDgCxHsmQE͘`S׉	 7cassandra://ZVP56DOub4b0cRgbuEksgwJQDtH_BZ7TZdqjYQY3Occ,`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://TE75fuvGUGiIRbwcx6u2_lyfp7X5JCvo77qvIj0E7KU l͠Xoj&SHΟנXoj&SHϿ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH OG9׉H Zhttp://me-forskning.no/oppdatering-fra-haukeland-om-prosjektet-pa-genetisk-predisposisjon/GׁׁrנXoj&SH Od9׉H Zhttp://me-forskning.no/oppdatering-fra-haukeland-om-prosjektet-pa-genetisk-predisposisjon/GׁׁrנXoj&SH Ó*9׉H Zhttp://me-forskning.no/oppdatering-fra-haukeland-om-prosjektet-pa-genetisk-predisposisjon/GׁׁrנXoj&SHÁ 19׉H Dhttp://me-forskning.no/oppdatering-fra-haukeland-om-rituxme-studien/GׁׁrנXoj&SHā Nl*9׉H Dhttp://me-forskning.no/oppdatering-fra-haukeland-om-rituxme-studien/GׁׁrנXoj&SHŁ E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHƁ (9׉H (http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2139GׁׁrנXoj&SHǁ /C̂9׉H (http://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2139GׁׁrנXoj&SHȁ ]9׉H https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2016/05/03/researchers-medical-errors-now-third-leading-cause-of-death-in-united-states/GׁׁrנXoj&SHɁ h`T9׉H 8http://www.discoverylife.com/tv-shows/mystery-diagnosis/GׁׁrנXoj&SHʁ /yo9׉H 8http://www.discoverylife.com/tv-shows/mystery-diagnosis/GׁׁrנXoj&SHˁ @=9׉H =http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2003/07/07/a-sudden-illnessGׁׁrנXoj&SH́ 9׉H =http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2003/07/07/a-sudden-illnessGׁׁrנXok &SHЎ I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
http://me-forskning.no/oppdateringfra-haukeland-om-prosjektet-pagenetisk-predisposisjon/
10
May 2016
Update, RituxME study
Multi-centre study RituxME
completed enrolment of all 152
participants in September 2015.
By the summer holidays, all patients
in Bergen, Trondheim, Notodden and
Oslo will have completed their course
of treatment, and study centre in
Tromsø provides final treatment in
September.
As known RituxME is a double blind
study, meaning that neither the
patient nor treating personnel know
whether the individual patient is
receiving active medication or
placebo.
Blinding is maintained until the last
participant has finished one year of
follow-up after stopping treatment,
and we will therefore be able to break
the code in September 2017.
The results of RituxME study will be
published in a scientific paper during
2018.
Research biobank at Haukeland
University Hospital has been
expanded with blood tests before
treatment from all participants, and
together with samples from previous
studies and the ongoing
cyclophosphamide study, these blood
samples form a unique source for
research on disease mechanisms
and a possible biomarker.
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 42 of 77
June 2016
There is currently a lot going on in
the laboratory at Haukeland, and
there is collaboration with several
national and international institutions
on studies such as autoantibodies,
immune signatures, cell metabolism
and genetics, where samples from
the biobank are being used.
We continue to collect samples for
the Biobank at fixed time points
during the trial, right until the last
patient has completed follow-up.
Kari Sørland
Programme coordinator
http://me-forskning.no/oppdateringfra-haukeland-om-rituxme-studien/
׉	 7cassandra://bSV1OFzACx4S8TVJJsk3ZpdWWDybHHdBC8dXAsLu0cw(`̵ Xoj&SH׉EmJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
When the hoof beats are zebras
By Maureen Hanson
An analysis by Johns Hopkins
researchers claims that a third of all
deaths in the US annually are due to
medical errors. This finding not
only calls for better reporting of such
errors, but also for better medical
training to prevent them. But death is
not the only outcome of medical
errors—instead, unnecessary patient
suffering can result.
Anyone who binge-watches the TV
show Discovery Life: Mystery
Diagnosis will soon detect a pattern,
one that demonstrates the need for
improvements in medical training. A
typical show might have a young woman
suddenly taken violently ill with an
apparent stomach flu. But instead of
getting better, she continues feeling
nauseated and weak. She has to drop
out of college. At home she develops a
myriad of symptoms—such as night
sweats, sore throat, swollen glands, and
difficulty reading and speaking. She
visits a doctor, who tells her she has
strep throat. Despite antibiotics, she
doesn’t get better, then goes to an
internist, who tells her she should see a
psychiatrist.
Professor Maureen Hanson is Professor of
Molecular Biology and Genetics at Cornell
University and conducts NIH-supported
research on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome. She is with The OpEd
Project’s Public Voices Fellowship at Cornell.
This continues on for several more
scenes—sometimes several years in the
life of the ill person whose story is being
told—as one after another wrong
diagnosis is made. The mistaken
doctors are always played by actors, as
no doctor who gave the incorrect
diagnosis would like to be identified.
Finally, a smart doctor figures out what
is wrong, and is identified by name and
appears on the show. The grateful
young woman now has a diagnosis, and
sometimes a treatment, often leading to
a happy ending.
Such could be a show made to describe
Laura Hillenbrand’s journey to a
diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome
(CFS), also known as myalgic
encephalomyelitis, as described in her
vivid, and often shocking, New
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Page 43 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://ZVP56DOub4b0cRgbuEksgwJQDtH_BZ7TZdqjYQY3Occ,`̵ Xoj&SHЁXoj&SHρ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://pk-AGUR7mZuKaZki54GJ2i43eIy0uHVVMz0zGVBRdLY ` ׉	 7cassandra://wNR2eaxiPg1CmnOKc1JXCHmXVFX2nzGvl3Ly52Z64wMͿ` S׉	 7cassandra://3INRvFTR9y7Ndj7nHtFbNtHlXk0uokgFGo6Q-NuOPmk))`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://M3abhCzxUllPJc-0SpoGzxVuw4U2wuYTrL7U3SB3V-8Z͠Xoj&SHט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://G_cYeR9Z41NXA2n7lwJl898I9X-0fqm4Ytm1l7yDsqo P`׉	 7cassandra://ECOFDC21yp5_8mN7anmw72VAXV0ksoO3b3h4RF1pgTs`S׉	 7cassandra://wfVrdvc1B0eLlEg1UU4mPb37Kns6ihKbZpnAMYTKqtc)`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://gWWwfXf1ITYajk4foYhHZ0faBqumrwWq0JxMB6Xw1ZE Hd͠Xoj&SH נXoj&SHс E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHҁ OG̒9׉H =http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2003/07/07/a-sudden-illnessGׁׁrנXoj&SHӁ .9׉H 7http://www.vkingpub.com/VkUpload/201411281620358357.pdfGׁׁrנXoj&SHԁ OՁE9׉H 7http://www.vkingpub.com/VkUpload/201411281620358357.pdfGׁׁrנXoj&SHՁ zda9׉H !http://www.cdc.gov/cfs/diagnosis/GׁׁrנXoj&SHց O}k9׉H !http://www.cdc.gov/cfs/diagnosis/GׁׁrנXoj&SHׁ %x9׉H 4http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3691015/GׁׁrנXoj&SH؁ n9׉H 4http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3691015/GׁׁrנXoj&SHف E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SHځ ̤9׉H ohttp://www.nap.edu/catalog/19012/beyond-myalgic-encephalomyelitischronic-fatigue-syndrome-redefining-an-illnessGׁׁrנXoj&SHہ /̽A9׉H ohttp://www.nap.edu/catalog/19012/beyond-myalgic-encephalomyelitischronic-fatigue-syndrome-redefining-an-illnessGׁׁrנXoj&SH܁ L̸9׉H Ghttp://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=19012GׁׁrנXoj&SH݁ /e9׉H Ghttp://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=19012GׁׁrנXoj&SHށ G̷9׉H 6http://www.nap.edu/html/19012/MECFScliniciansguide.pdfGׁׁrנXoj&SH߁ ؁9׉H Vhttp://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/279089-when-the-hoofbeats-are-zebrasGׁׁrנXoj&SH 9׉H Vhttp://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/279089-when-the-hoofbeats-are-zebrasGׁׁrנXoj&SH ̣9׉H Vhttp://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/279089-when-the-hoofbeats-are-zebrasGׁׁrנXoj&SH )I(9׉H Vhttp://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/279089-when-the-hoofbeats-are-zebrasGׁׁrנXoj&SH ̻9׉H Vhttp://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/279089-when-the-hoofbeats-are-zebrasGׁׁrנXok &SHЦ I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנXok &SHХ !<9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.org/IIMEׁׁЈנXok &SHФ ݁=9ׁH !http://thehill.com/blogs/congressׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
Yorker article. But while she eventually
did receive the correct diagnosis, she
didn’t get a happy ending. For there is
no effective treatment for most victims of
the disease, and she remains ill and
rarely able to leave her house.
As a researcher who surveys CFS
patients who volunteer as experimental
subjects, I have learned that a long
journey to be diagnosed with chronic
fatigue syndrome is not unusual.
In fact, it is common for individuals with
symptoms of CFS to go through multiple
years of misdiagnoses, most seeing an
average of 4-6 doctors or more, often
being told they have a psychiatric
disorder, before they find a doctor who
has learned enough about CFS to
identify the disease.
The Centers for Disease Control
estimates that fewer than 20% of
Americans who have CFS have been
diagnosed. Part of the blame for this
problem lies in medical training, in which
students are told the famous adage: “If
you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not
zebras.” In other words, if symptoms
appear to fit a common disease, then
that is the best diagnosis.
This idea, when not applied properly, is
the origin of many of the errors
chronicled by the Mystery Diagnosis TV
show. Because though some diseases
are less common than others, that
doesn’t mean they don’t exist—every
rare disease has its victims.
Another lesson from the show’s
episodes: advocating for yourself can
save your life. A striking number of the
patients or their caregivers came to a
suspected diagnosis or consulted a
knowledgeable physician through
researching their own symptoms on the
web or in the library.
June 2016
Standard blood tests are given to
someone who arrives complaining of
long-lasting fatigue, malaise, and
muscle pain. But no abnormalities are
seen in such tests of patients with
CFS. This leads to the favorite
diagnosis of doctors who don’t want to
spend time dealing with a patient with
unexplained symptoms:
depression. Indeed, some CFS patients
do become depressed—after being ill
for years, losing their jobs, being
maligned by friends and family, and
repeatedly being told that there is
nothing physically wrong with them. But
not all CFS patients become depressed,
and even those who have psychological
problems also have a physical illness of
unknown origin. More sophisticated
tests, ones more often found in research
labs rather than medical testing labs,
have revealed immunological and
neurological abnormalities in CFS
patients. But these are difficult to
translate into a simple, easily
administered test.
Why is a diagnosis important, given that
there is no effective treatment for most
CFS victims that can restore their prior
functioning? Because recommended
therapies for misdiagnosed illnesses
often can do harm, increasing the
severity of CFS. Inappropriate drugs or
lifestyle changes—such as types of
exercise harmful to people with CFS—
can causes patients to become worse,
sometimes with long-term detrimental
effects.
Improved training of physicians about
CFS is needed if patients are not going
to continue being unwilling characters in
real-life episodes of Mystery Diagnosis.
A 2010 survey of medical
textbooks revealed that only 40% even
mentioned CFS. Until recently, little has
been done to dispel early and
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Page 44 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://3INRvFTR9y7Ndj7nHtFbNtHlXk0uokgFGo6Q-NuOPmk))`̵ Xoj&SH׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
stubbornly persistent notions of the
psychological basis of the illness.
Fortunately, the National Institute of
Medicine undertook a year-long
study of the scientific literature, and
concluded that that CFS is a “serious,
chronic, complex, and systemic disease
that frequently and dramatically limits
the activities of affected patients.”
The report provided a simple set of
diagnostic criteria that could be
applied by a physician in general
practice or any speciality to determine
whether a patient should be diagnosed
with CFS.
June 2016
A Clinician’s Guide the Institute
produced should reduce the time to
diagnosis—and help knowledgeable
patients advocate for themselves.
Originally printed in THE HILL
http://thehill.com/blogs/congressblog/healthcare/279089-when-thehoofbeats-arezebras
From
IT's A FUNNY OLD WORLD - MEDICINE and ME
http://www.investinme.org/IIME-Cartoons-2013-01.htm
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׉	 7cassandra://wfVrdvc1B0eLlEg1UU4mPb37Kns6ihKbZpnAMYTKqtc)`̵ Xoj&SHXoj&SH{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://lkoXkef3pb_r8sl3CGndNZiclVC-Sj9MrpAmRr168pU b`׉	 7cassandra://v6O_vSHOK3L7YGO-x30FG8J_KggnO-EAz2m4ZyuRZmc͉`S׉	 7cassandra://2FmXgR3yjLdP4ngNPPWU0rGwJEtEkL-NuBVOkCMQpnQ*>`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://0TBGGJRNK8pZKUFy2g42KompKqqa5tKXpQGetWEczq4 %P͠Xoj&SHט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://bUw-cdxTsbj0DtDSnQZfUoPkBBOpBJ1Gg0-YZNdFLPE kh`׉	 7cassandra://L3Q-JTyLi95t7UcN-OEUvmh8NrpDX2zcQl97sKmfC_Q͈`S׉	 7cassandra://vOw1v6Imfoy7tUpDLltoRq68K9MUtjMbEmTCRO2V-ro%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://_LuQNU_-rGCQDOJ1_cfl4TePt5xNORK8qO4pkxAWnsA}͠Xoj&SHנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHА I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
Within its population of 4.5 million, New
Zealand has an estimated 2000025000
ME/CFS patients1. An
advantage of this nationwide number is
that a significant proportion of these
have been evaluated and diagnosed by
a single general health practitioner, Dr
Rosamund Vallings, of our team who
specialises in ME/CFS in her Auckland
medical practice. Moreover, with her
specialised clinical knowledge of this
illness and international role her patient
contact extends nationwide and she
facilitates training for other health
practitioners throughout the country.
There is also an effective national
ME/CFS organisation, ANZMES, and
various regions within the country have
their own support groups that are
invaluable for affected patients. This
means for study purposes in depth
information is available for at least a
proportion of New Zealand patients.
For this patient group variables beyond
Warren P. Tate1, Eiren C. Sweetman1,
Alex J. K. Noble1, Christina D. Edgar1,
Grace Bateman1, Angus Mackay1,
Margaret M. Ryan2, Lynette D.
Hodges3 & Rosamund Vallings4
1Department of Biochemistry,
2Department of Anatomy, University
of Otago, Dunedin & Brain Health
Research Centre and Brain health
New Zealand, 3School of Sport and
Exercise, Massey University,
Palmerston North, & 4Howick Health
and Medical Centre, Auckland
the design of a study, like ethnicity, that
can confound subsequent evaluations
can be managed by careful selection of
patients. Our New Zealand
environment brings into play the
concept of ‘precision medicine’ where
intense study of a small number of
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׉	 7cassandra://2FmXgR3yjLdP4ngNPPWU0rGwJEtEkL-NuBVOkCMQpnQ*>`̵ Xoj&SH׉E	jJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
patients can balance the disadvantage
of having only a limited base number of
patients available for recruitment.
‘Precision medicine’ is being applied to
‘rare diseases’ internationally where
patient numbers are naturally small,
and yet intense molecular studies are
starting to reveal new biological
insights into these illnesses2.
Despite the advantages of a small wellcharacterised
patient group, those
health practitioners in New Zealand
who understand that most ME/CFS
patients do not recover from their
illness, are often reluctant to take more
than a very small number of such
patients into their practices.
Additionally, until very recently,
medical students received no formal
training in ME/CFS, and so graduated
without the necessary knowledge to
assist their professional response
when confronted with a potential
ME/CFS patient. There are still pockets
of practitioners who remain sceptical of
the validity of ME/CFS as a distinct
illness. This often leads to frustrated
patients looking constantly for an
empathetic health practitioner in their
own town or city who has some
knowledge and understanding of their
illness.
The confusing and conflicting publicity
in 2015 from opposite sides of the
Atlantic on the nature of ME/CFS has
not helped this situation in New
Zealand. On the one hand, the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academy of
Sciences in the United States
published a report in February3 that
emphasised the serious and chronic
nature of the illness. The authors
expressed regret that many
practitioners had not taken patients
June 2016
more seriously. It further concluded the
disease needed a new name to replace
the name used in the United States,
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). The
well-meant suggestion of Systemic
Exercise Intolerance Disease (SEID),
emphasising post exertional malaise
as the key characteristic of the illness,
Professor Warren Tate
however, would be unlikely to add more
gravitas to perceptions of the disease
from either the public or the health
profession. On the other hand, a
conflicting Lancet Psychiatry report
was published in October, updating4
the PACE study of 20115 arising from
Oxford University, which together with
associated publicity advocated
exercise and positive thinking as the
best mix for alleviating ME/CFS
symptoms
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׉	 7cassandra://vOw1v6Imfoy7tUpDLltoRq68K9MUtjMbEmTCRO2V-ro%`̵ Xoj&SHXoj&SH{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://kztIVtWWPn8gvXPyRoKnGtlp-y2omDThkosjHF7DrnE i` ׉	 7cassandra://jIwpnO6eEf0bmPFo5wi1rEzsRpIwl_hqbUB9PBBesa0ͷ` S׉	 7cassandra://1VaO4RTFNUsjpj-29WDgzIBT2TTI8OGcfhzxhRWh_HQ*`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://vmi9AcTyABrj7IwOBPXs80xX2QfWIUfN-JO92TL9LswV|͠Xoj&SHט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://7lAkoKu7GMbfZ6geEn5Us7Cl-VtOKbBn0xm7icq4UG0 ` ׉	 7cassandra://zpbpUL9TuGCHYhpMh5eKtcH-ZXRvXFNrRF2eCffMeUQͭ` S׉	 7cassandra://0rjww7LjbXjB28qtFaGujl6cwanHBux15tuTE2Ym1r0(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://sB7soE7Bkn2QkaiqcRzl46GA2DSvdVUDiXgGgHcB5iQOx͠Xoj&SHנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok &SHД I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E~Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
For those chronically affected patients
here in New Zealand who have tried
everything possible to manage their
ME/CFS over a long term of the illness,
the additional apparent quotes in the
publicity surrounding the follow up
PACE study article from the authors -
that it was a minority who thought
ME/CFS was a chronic illness and was
caused by a virus - were not well
received. Indeed, many believe their
illness to have been triggered by a viral
infection - often Epstein Barr-mediated
glandular fever. Such ME/CFS patients
have often used highly innovative ways
to achieve a constructive life despite
the serious restrictions to their life
choices because of the symptoms of
the illness. Post activity malaise has
been a real part of these debilitating
effects. As discussed in one of our pilot
studies below, this can be documented
after exercise by physiological testing.
Ironically, medical students in training,
and the wider group of health
professionals in New Zealand, regard
the Lancet as an iconic fount of medical
knowledge, and have enormous
respect for Oxford as a research
University. Therefore, those who rely
on such sources, and have no prior
contact with ME/CFS patients or
appreciation of the often lifetime
debilitating features of the illness, will
be left with a distorted view of ME/CFS
not helpful to the management of their
patients.
Despite this confusion, the situation in
2016 in New Zealand is looking
promising for New Zealand patients.
Now, at the University of Otago Medical
School, in a module on unexplained
diseases, teaching and discussion on
the topic of ME/CFS is facilitated by
WPT to what has proven to be a highly
June 2016
responsive young audience of 3rd year
medical students. The most common
question asked, albeit with some
anxiety by the medical students in their
sessions on ME/CFS is ‘How do I
respond to an ME/CFS patient?’ My
(WPT) simple response has been
‘Acknowledge that the patient is ill and
needs your empathy and help - while
you are determining whether their
illness is consistent with the clinical
guidelines for ME/CFS’. They, and all
General Practitioners in New Zealand
now receive the 2014 edition of the
international ‘Primer for Clinical
practitioners’6 to which Dr Vallings
contributed as part of the international
writing panel. In addition, Dr Vallings
has written two excellent books, one for
adult patients and their practitioners7,
and one for teenagers8 bewildered by
an ME/CFS mediated dramatic change
in their health status. It is anticipated
the situation for ME/CFS patients
countrywide will improve as tomorrow’s
young doctors graduate and spread
throughout the workforce. The students
were surprised that, despite the lack of
general community knowledge and
understanding of ME/CFS, the number
of New Zealand patients is about half
of those diagnosed with Alzheimer’s
disease in New Zealand9. In common
with ME/CFS, Alzheimer’s disease still
has no simple molecular diagnostic
test, and as yet no effective therapies.
ME/CFS however, receives much less
publicity, less national and international
focus, and considerably less research
funding than Alzheimer’s disease, and
so there is critical need for better
knowledge and a higher public profile.
However, despite ongoing confusion
as to the nature of ME/CFS, much new
exciting global research and
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׉	 7cassandra://1VaO4RTFNUsjpj-29WDgzIBT2TTI8OGcfhzxhRWh_HQ*`̵ Xoj&SH׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
serendipitous observations have been
made in the 4- 5 years since the
unfortunate focus on the retrovirus
XMRV10, a false lead that appeared at
the time to be so promising. The
Norwegian trials of rituximab as an
antibody therapy for lymphoma that
serendipitously gave ME/CF patients a
period of remission is an exciting
observation that can direct our focus to
better understand the disease11.
Recent important ME/CFS studies on
plasma cytokines12, and on miRNAs in
plasma13 and Natural Killer cells14, as
well as a miRNA study for a biomarker
signature in the related disease,
fibromyalgia15, have added valuable
information. Given the environment
described above in New Zealand, we
have initiated a research programme
on ME/CFS that is patient focussed,
and is leaning towards the principles of
precision medicine for understanding
each patient, by using comprehensive
molecular studies in the hope that this
paradigm might reveal new information
on the illness that is of national and
global significance.
An illustration how a detailed molecular
focus on individual patients - precision
medicine - can provide valuable
information for such an unexplained
disease as ME/CFS was starkly
illustrated by the personal intense
molecular study published in Cell in
201216 with over 40 authors by a
Stanford University medical geneticist
Michael Snyder. He followed his own
molecular profile over ~ 2 years and
related it to relatively minor illnesses
such a common cold and an upper
respiratory infection. The title of the
paper was ‘Personal omics profiling
reveals dynamic molecular and
medical and phenotypes’. Apart from
June 2016
determining the sequence of his
genome, Snyder carried out complex
analyses like exome sequencing,
transcriptome sequencing, small RNA
sequencing, shotgun proteome
sequencing and metabolome analysis
repeatedly through the 2 year period on
samples of plasma and blood cells, and
these were linked with clinical tests.
Informative changes in gene
expression profiles were revealed in
response to the viral illnesses and they
could be related to specific molecular
pathways that were affected.
Such a profound longitudinal study and
analysis is beyond what can be done
even with a small group of ME/CFS
patients because of cost alone.
Nevertheless, a distilled down study is
possible that could still provide
valuable information. Changes in the
expression of genes, proteins and
plasma metabolites in a chronic
disease like ME/CFS that has acute,
steady state, and relapsing phases
might be highly informative to reveal a
deeper layer of understanding. The
costs of genome sequencing have
plummeted to ~$2000 - $5000 per
genome depending on whether
detailed analysis of the results is
included, and while providing valuable
information it seems as yet not to
provide compelling data that would
immediately improve the situation for
individual ME/CFS patients.
In line with these concepts, we are now
in the data collection stage for two
small pilot studies, each with 10
patients, recruited in two separate
regions of New Zealand. They are
matched by age/gender with healthy
controls, with one of the studies having
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9Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
a comparative cohort of multiple
sclerosis (MS) patients, as an example
of a ‘fatigue illness’ distinct from
ME/CFS. Our goal is to examine and
correlate changes in plasma cytokines
and miRNAs, with the cellular
transcriptome, and the proteome in
purified immune cells. In the second
study we are planning to link these
molecular analyses to an exercise
regime that measures physiological
parameters before and after exercise.
These two pilot studies in turn are
preliminary to a planned larger study
with 40 carefully evaluated patients
from Dr Vallings health
practice.
To
understand
the disease
mechanism of
ME/CFS in
our NZ cohort
at a molecular
level,
June 2016
coding, small and large noncoding
RNAs, and initiating a study of the
proteome.
We have become acutely aware that
the key to validating results from small
patient studies, whether it be for rare
diseases or the pilot studies we are
conducting,
are
appropriate
biostatistical analyses. This is a
dynamic field and new ways of
analysing data are constantly being
developed that can extract richer
information from low numbers of
patients, providing
random
variables
outside the
study
design can
be
controlled.
It
is
sobering
a
comprehensive
analysis has
been undertaken in an
initial pilot study group. Peripheral
blood samples were taken from the
study participants and plasma,
lymphocytes and neutrophils extracted.
From the plasma and lymphocyte
immune cells total RNA (including
small RNAs) was isolated using a
mirVana™ PARIS™ RNA and
Native Protein Purification Kit.
Total protein was also obtained from
the lymphocyte and neutrophil cells for
western and proteome analysis. So far
we have obtained and analysed data
on both cytokines and microRNAs from
plasma in one of our pilot studies, and
are awaiting the results of analyses on
the transcriptome encompassing
that of the
750 000
studies that
have
suggested
statistically significant leads for therapy
development only a handful have stood
up to rigorous testing and
development17. That is a challenge for
us in taking a ‘precision medicine’
approach to these studies. In
consultation with an experienced
biostatistician we are exploring a
number of mainstream statistical
approaches in an attempt to ensure
apparent molecular differences
between ME/CFS patients and controls
have validity. There is an advantage in
having two independent statistical tests
so that if an effect is found with one test
it can be confirmed with the other.
Since our studies are discovery tests,
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׉	 7cassandra://vwXyajfTq7BuaLPhY8FlfOsr9vgIVmFTrRKpmev3m1o&`̵ Xoj&SH׉EGJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
the ability to confirm a result derived
from one patient cohort with the other
cohort of our second pilot study
supports further analysis. MicroRNAs
are of great interest as potential
disease biomarkers since they are
present and highly stable in virtually all
biofluids, and appear to be acutely
sensitive to changes in various
physiological processes 18-19. They
have emerged as important biomarkers
and modulators of numerous
pathophysiological processes. Our
approach, guided by the ‘precision
medicine’ methodology aims to
investigate any correlation between
circulating cytokines and miRNAs in
plasma samples from individual
patients within our two study groups. In
our ME/CFS pilot studies for example,
we have found differences between
multiple cytokines and a particular
microRNA. This implies a connection
between these cytokines with the
microRNA. Of interest for our initial
results is a recent study by Su et al.
201520 where two cytokines were
shown to induce a microRNA in
macrophages in chronic inflammation.
Recently, perhaps relevant to ME/CFS
a number of dysregulations in
microRNAs have been reported in
patients suffering from pain - in
complex regional pain syndrome,
cystitis-induced chronic pain, and
irritable bowel disorder, both in the
affected tissues, and reflected in the
circulation. Such microRNAs are
implicated functionally in pain
processing based on studies in animal
models of inflammatory and
neuropathic pain, and in vivo studies
have found dysregulated microRNAs
influence the post-transcriptional
June 2016
modulation of genes implicated in pain
generation and maintenance21.
Several clinical studies have
highlighted the potential of plasma
microRNAs to be biomarkers for
complex regional pain syndrome and
for fibromyalgia. For example, Orlova
et al. (2011)22 used whole blood
samples from 41 patients with complex
regional pain syndrome and 20
controls in a study analysing miRNA,
cytokines and correlations with
numerous clinical
parameters.
Unsurprisingly, expected cytokines
such as VEGF were elevated in the
disease group compared to controls
and a miRNA-signature was evident.
Extensive correlation analyses
revealed that 4 miRNAs were positively
correlated with disease-associated
pain level, one other was correlated
with the occurrence of migraine within
the patient cohort and an extensive
array of miRNAs was found to correlate
with the levels of circulating
cytokines22. A similarly designed 2013
study investigated the miRNA profile of
the cerebrospinal fluid in fibromyalgia
patients23, a disease with many
commonalities to ME/CFS, identified
10 miRNAs differentially expressed
between affected patients and healthy
controls. Most notably, the study found
that decreased levels of miR-145-5p in
the CSF were associated with reported
symptomatology such as pain intensity
and fatigue24.
To investigate changes in miRNA
expression, we used TaqMan® Array
MicroRNA cards to assay for 754
human miRNAs in the plasma
samples. Megaplex™ RT Primers
complement the assays on the cards
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Volume 10 Issue 1
and were used to convert the miRNA to
cDNA. To improve assay sensitivity
and account for the limited abundance
of some miRNAs, a preamplification
step using Megaplex™ PreAmp
Primers was included. Data was
assessed using the BioC/R package
HTqPCR (high-throughput qPCR)25.
MiRNAs with ‘undetermined’ ct values
or ct values >35 were removed from
the analysis. A norm rank invariant
method was used to normalise the
data. The two study groups have
initially been compared using a nonparametric
Mann Whitney U test to
determine statistically significant
miRNAs.
To complete our molecular study of the
pilot study group we are also
completing full transcriptome and
proteome analyses of the ME/CFS and
healthy control individuals. At present,
as stated above, transcriptome
analysis of the 20 participants in our
first pilot study is underway. Total RNA
was extracted from lymphocytes
purified from the original blood
samples, using the same extraction kit
as for the miRNA analysis. We are
investigating by HiSeq analysis both
small RNA (NEXTflex small RNA
libraries), including miRNA, and total
RNA (TruSeq stranded total RNA
libraries (ribozero human/rat/mouse).
The proteome analysis will analyse
total protein extracts from the patient
and control subject’s lymphocyte cells.
Samples will be compared by sensitive
global proteomics profiling using the
mass spectrometry facilities in the
Centre for Protein Research, University
of Otago. The approach will allow for a
semi-quantitative comparison of
protein profiles using for example
spectral counts or extracted peak
intensities. It will be of significant
interest to see if the results of these
June 2016
analyses correlate in any way with our
miRNA and cytokine investigations to
suggest disease mechanisms or
pathways.
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Our second pilot study conducted by
exercise physiologist, Dr Lynette
Hodges at Massey University, aims to
link exercise performance with
molecular analyses. The exercise part
of the study has examined differences
in fatigue parameters among three
study groups, ME/CFS patients, MS
patients and healthy controls. Each
group performs repeated incremental
exercise tests separated by 24 hours.
Incremental exercise tests utilised an
increased power requirement each
minute and measured oxygen
consumption, carbon dioxide
production, respiratory exchange ratio,
and power output, among other
parameters. Each incremental exercise
test was followed by a steady state 5
min exercise test conducted at the
anaerobic threshold, measuring
cardiac output. In contrast to the other
two groups ME/CFS patients uniquely
had lower power output on the day 2 reexercise
test, consistent with the
reported characteristic of the disease,
post-exertional malaise. Cytokine
analysis data on plasma samples from
these subjects have just been
collected. Applying miRNA analysis in
this collaborative exercise study is
appealing; it has been shown that
circulating miRNA-signatures are
distinct enough to enable
discrimination between eccentric and
concentric exercise23 and so they also
may provide valuable indicators of the
post-exertional malaise experienced by
ME/CFS sufferers. It is hoped that we
can also add data on the expression of
coding genes, and of small and larger
noncoding RNAs, together with altered
protein profiles to give a more
Page 52 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
comprehensive understanding of the
compromised physiology in ME/CFS
relating to this post exercise malaise.
ME/CFS lends itself to longitudinal
intensive molecular study to
understand fluctuating health through
relapse and recovery and steady state
health periods, just as the Snyder study
described above monitored molecular
changes through compromised health
episodes with viral illnesses. The
precision medicine approach can be
used to analyse what is happening in
individual ME/CFS patients, and
determine whether there
are
common
mechanisms behind the
relapses in each
member of a small
cohort of patients.
Additionally, pregnancy
in some women
ME/CFS patients can
lead to a significant
alleviation
in
symptoms, perhaps
because of increased
blood
suppression
volume,
of
allergic responses,
and their changed hormonal
profile.
Understanding what dysregulated
pathways are reversed in this situation
through molecular analysis may give
further insight into the nature of
ME/CFS. Additionally, new technology
is now available that can assess
mitochondrial functions in isolated
blood cells and that may be additional
information that can be added.
We work towards a goal of providing a
diagnosis that combines multiple
molecular biomarkers linked to
References
1) Welcome to ANZMES. The
Associated New Zealand ME Society
Inc, Auckland, New Zealand.
http://www.anzmes.org.nz
2) Newman SK, Jayanthan RK,
Mitchell GW, Carreras Tartak JA,
Croqlio MP, Suarez A, Liu AY, Razzo
BM, Oveniran E, Ruth JR, Fajgenbaum
DC (2015) Taking Control of
Castleman Disease: Leveraging
Precision Medicine Technologies to
Accelerate
Rare
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Disease
Page 53 of 77
June 2016
dysregulated biologically plausible
pathways, and understanding the
compromised physiology and can lead
to more effective treatments for the
heterogeneous symptomology of the
ME/CFS patient group, not only aiding
clinicians in choosing treatment
options, but perhaps also helping in the
stratification of patients in clinical trials.
Acknowledgements: We are grateful
for support from ANZMES the national
ME/CFS group of New Zealand,
Lottery Health Fund of New Zealand, H
S and J C Anderson Charitable Trust, a
private bequest.
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Volume 10 Issue 1
Research The Yale Journal of Biology
and Medicine 88:383-388.
3) Committee on the Diagnostic
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for
Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
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Washington (DC): National Academies
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4) Sharpe M, Goldsmith KA, Johnson
AL, Chalder T, Walker K, White
PD (2015). Rehabilitative treatments
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5) White PD, Goldsmith KA, Johnson
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Davenport T, Friedman KJ, Gurwitt A,
Leonard LA, Lapp CW, Stevens SR,
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June 2016
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Journal of IiMER
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AV, Monsalve V, Oltra E (2015)
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dysmetabolism. Biomarker Medicine
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21) Anderson HH, Duroux M, Gazerani
P (2014) MicroRNAs as modulators
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
It's a Funny Old World
#thingsdoctorssaytopeoplewithME
With a disease such as ME humour
can sometimes help in balancing the
absurdity of the patient’s situation with
hope for a better way forward.
When the establishment organisation
responsible for using public funding to
research diseases such as ME has
failed consistently (influenced by
vested interests), where the
Department of Health and Chief
Medical Officer avoid taking any
responsibility for treating the disease
with any serious action and where
successive health ministers do not
even register the disease on their
worklist of important subjects – then
what is left for a patient or his/her
family to do?
All of the above, of course, influences
how many healthcare professionals
still continue to view and treat the
disease – sometimes showing an
immense talent for ignorance and
insensitivity that might be candidates
for some record book, were it not for
the negligence that it so clearly
illustrates.
Hopefully conferences such as
IIMEC11 and the resulting DVD can
dispel some of this ignorance and
neglect – and increased knowledge
and education are weapons that the
patient community can use to counter
this.
But humour can help one deal with it.
So here, thanks to Ali Head and
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 56 of 77
friends, are a selection of quotes from
patients who have been on the
receiving end of some awkward, some
ridiculous, some incomprehensible
and some just downright stupid
observations from healthcare staff –
and others.
“well, I'm going to have to give you the
CFS diagnosis. But no employer will
want you.”
“well if you don't follow your GET/CBT
plan it means you want to keep
yourself ill”
GP: "ALL my patients complain of
tiredness".
- Exactly. Doctors & patients
need diagnostics for this
disease
"there's no such thing as CFS"
After neg bloodwork: "I've tested you
for everything I can treat." - Infectious
Disease Specialist
“Oh dear you must be very tired...”
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Volume 10 Issue 1
Follow up with Gastroenterologist 'U
need to take a step back and address
your mental state'
"Well a lot of that will be because of
your weight"
At cardiologist for myocarditis,
cardiomyopathy, POTS, - ''so you're
here because you're fatigued? 3x
week sport will cure you!”
Psychotherapist when challenged "WE
think it's something in your
PERSONALITY that keeps you ill"
(tied to 'benefits' situation)
GP: “I don’t think there
is anything wrong with
your heart, You Just
have ME GP: but I don’t
believe in ME”
“finally going to GP due
to worsening symptoms
from consistently
overdoing it& being referred for GET
for deconditioning”
'No illness could be that complicated -
you must have imagined it!""
- I wish . . . . ! !
Doctors attributing any new symptom
to your ME diagnosis, making them
miss other ailments/illnesses f.ex.
breast cancer
Apparently my fibromyalgia is caused
by childhood trauma, according to ME
clinic psych.
At ME clinic with psych. I told of
woman who died from ME. She
replied "no one dies from fatigue”
My GP often dismisses my symptoms
and labels me with health anxiety. who
wouldn't want answers to symptoms?
June 2016
I asked about poss POTS diagnosis,
GP told me no point in testing as it’s
just another label with no cure.
Why don't you just go for a run around
the block!
In a consultation with my GP, she
said: "Shall I pray for you? We could
do it now!"
“You just have an atypical depression”
“The death of your boyfriend is
probably holding you back to full
recovery.”
“I suffer with
Fibromyalgia & M.E.
One Dr told me it doesn't
exist.”
"I can try you on these
new meds and if they
help you I can try them
on my other ME patient".
“Part of it is that you're getting older
too! (Thanks, I'm 53 not 73. I see old
people more fit than I am.)”
“You def have a fatigue/pain
syndrome but I don't want to label you.
(Thanks, my boss will love that)”
"u either choose2get better or
continue2live like this. Rheumy said
this2me.I have ME&fibro”
“So how is your relationship with your
parents?”
"I am completely baffled by your
symptoms" one of the more honest
Drs.
“Do you believe in ME?” – Psychiatrist
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Page 57 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
"It's mind over matter". If only I'd
known, I'd have thought myself better
years ago!
"Well ME and Fibro are all just terms
for pain and fatigue that is
unexplained, I can't help you"- neuro!!”
"Everyone gets tired. You need to
push through it." Went from moderate
to severe within weeks...
"I've never heard of ME. I'll google it"
Medical Assessment Unit doc trained
in Ireland.”
When asking if anything could with
excessive sweating. "No it's just the
chronic fatigue"
"You need to see a psychiatrist" Went
to psychiatrist, got clean bill of MH
"It was psychotherapist I meant"
Neurologist; "FM? That doesn't exist,
neither does that other thing what do
you call it? ME?"
"People who work here think it’s a
mental illness" (CFS clinic)
"The only thing I know about ME is
Graded Exercise Therapy" Said by
neurologist 2016 After 29+ yrs of ME
I have great life, great job, boyfriend, I
just don't feel well; "Cause of her CFS
is depression"
“I'm not sure how to help you.... Why
don't we try antidepressants??”
- But I'm not depressed
"Oh I don't like to refer people with ME
or fibro for wheelchairs as I believe it
makes them lazy"
A UK specialist told me to "Get a
boyfriend and an active sex life, if you
want a cure"
- NHS have left me to rot for
12 yrs!
'You have the right attitude to get over
M.E'
I've still got the same 'attitude'
years later, I'm still ill
“I don't "do" fatigue, I hope you grow
out of it” - consultant immunologist
"you’re listening to your body too
much”
" you’ve had glandular fever but you’re
well over it now "
I was seeing a specialist for something
else and I mentioned it and he said "
oh come on don't give me that"
“Why don't you try actually going to
the gym.”
“When are you going to pull yourself
together get off antidepressants and
get back to work”
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 58 of 77
June 2016
“Having ME might be "inconvenient"
but there is really nothing I can do”
“No, no children get ME” ...suggesting
it's a psychosomatic adult illness..
”go home and do some exercise.”
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Volume 10 Issue 1
“Come back and see me when your
head is spinning and you're spitting
blood like in operas”
“There’s no such thing as me/cfs it’s
just another fancy word for tiredness
an that’s what u have go”
'If blood tests don’t show anything
we'll assume you have ME’
"I'm old school. I don't believe in these
new mumbo jumbo illnesses, you're
lazy and want time off work"
“When you feel a bit tired you mustn't
give in to it. GP after I'd had ME for
years and had to give up work”
Very recently: “No one at the Surgery
is experienced with dealing with it
(CFS) because it's a rare condition”
“None of the GPs in this practice are
interested in taking you on as a patient
because you say you have ME”
"Have you tried any exercise?" (The
stairs?? And once a week a bath I
nearly die after)
"You have a high heart rate but we
don't know why"
One GP I saw said to me get a full
time job and a husband and you will
be fine!!!! So in my head I leapt across
the table and bitch slapped her!
“It's all stress related work, on your
inner issues” (only stress was no
answer or help being seriously ill)"It's
anxiety" (No it's really NOT)
"You have caused your condition of
CFS by choosing to lie in bed for
years"
Invest in ME (Charity Nr. 1114035) www.investinme.org
Page 59 of 77
June 2016
'all teenagers get tired and you're
probably lazy too, there's nothing
wrong with you'
“At age 16, "have a baby, a good
shake up of your hormones should
sort it." I had a baby in my late 20's
guess what - it didn't sort it.”
“6 years ago, (10 years into having
M.E.), I had a bad relapse, bedridden.
Doctor was called for a home visit; it
was the doctor who had given me my
initial diagnosis. He said "oh, I thought
you were better, M.E. usually goes
away by itself after 2 years" ....It took
almost 2 years before I received the
diagnosis, did he think once he'd told
me what it was it'd go away? Doh!!
Needless to say, I've since changed
doctors.”
"Probably just an adolescent pre
occupation with health"
"What do you expect, you ARE middle
aged?" I was 38
DWP Doctor in 1994
"Were you attending church
when you developed ME?"
׉	 7cassandra://w6EGWkzxQQKAEBCvPj1RJNFwrIWFN67sHVmojlGVVVI#)`̵ Xoj&SHXoj&SH{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://fY-qxopFUjRQzGjuB4iIVCjkoHcbHzm6HIZiH4Q51Bg |r`׉	 7cassandra://Tn7k9GOc3NQWwWfYXy0uTuh9-gE9lBsJAMUFt_8Akok`S׉	 7cassandra://JfcIPEQW9otr4ZOwn-kqEOyiPYmoKpm63xm9HCnGy9I&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Jjp5p5JbADpf7qeK6hJumKKbCk4tqA42ZcA0vaArj84ͷd͠Xoj&SHט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://WK51hLLYuQoTJgibw5deQGuuIopL-bCmm09caohtkEg y`׉	 7cassandra://mbOGj8GPsJMii_78XKrr2CgkgdZpa5Iqf07ZbdJwIY0jA`S׉	 7cassandra://Yc2wsaDhXJeh1ahn5-to8Im6efpDWhw81E2lE9PI75w"$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://JiOPv6wLFeyy23Ge2DzQpiBq5jN5sNmowo_Gk2L7R3Aͨ͠Xoj&SHנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXoj&SH E(9׉Hhttp://www.investinme.org/GׁׁrנXok&SHб I9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EJournal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
Dr Ian Gibson – Conference Chair
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.
Dr Vicky Whittemore
Program Director in the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke at the National Institutes of Health in the United States.
Dr. Whittemore is a Program Director in the
Synapses, Channels and Neural Circuits Cluster.
Her interest is in understanding the underlying
mechanisms of the epilepsies including the study of
genetic and animal models of the epilepsies.
The major goal is to identify effective treatments for
the epilepsies and to develop preventions. Dr.
Whittemore received a Ph.D. in anatomy from the
University of Minnesota, followed by post-doctoral
work at the University of California, Irvine, and a Fogarty Fellowship at the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.
She was on the faculty of the University of Miami School of Medicine in The Miami
Project to Cure Paralysis prior to working with several non-profit organizations
including the Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance, Genetic Alliance, Citizens United for
Research in Epilepsy (CURE), and the National Coalition for Health Professional
Education in Genetics (NCHPEG). She also just completed a four-year term on the
National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council.
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
ABSTRACT:
Not available at time of going to press – to be added later.
Professor Olli Polo
Chief of the Department of Pulmonary
Medicine, Tampere University Hospital,
Finland
ABSTRACT:
Not available at time of going to press – to be
added later.
Professor Carmen Scheibenbogen
Professor for Immunology and Deputy Chair
Institute of Medical Immunology Berlin Charite,
Germany
Head of the Outpatient Clinic for Adult Immunodeficiency.
Clinical Training in Hematology and Oncology.
Research interest in CFS/ME, Immunodeficiency, Cancer
Immunology.
ABSTRACT
Autoantibodies to adrenergic and acetylcholine receptors in CFS/ME
Carmen Scheibenbogen, Institute of Medical Immunology, Charité, Berlin
Autoantibodies directed against neurotransmitter receptors are causing various
types of autoimmune diseases. Recently we were able to demonstrate elevated
antibodies against beta2 adrenergic receptors and muscarinic acetylcholine
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Page 61 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
June 2016
PRESENTERS
receptors in a subset of patients with CFS/ME. Patients with elevated
autoantibodies frequently had increased IgG levels, ANA titers and/or T cell
activation. We therefore suspect that the autoantibodies can activate immune
cells carrying these receptors by imitating adrenaline/ acetylcholine stimulation.
Various other symptoms of CFS/ME could be explained by an overstimulation of
the sympathetic/parasympathetic nervous system. In patients who were treated
with rituximab in the Norway trials elevated autoantibodies normalized.
Loebel M, Grabowski P, Heidecke H, Bauer S, Hanitsch LG, Wittke K, Meisel C,
Reinke P, Volk HD, Fluge Ø, Mella O, Scheibenbogen C. Antibodies to ß
adrenergic and muscarinic cholinergic receptors in patients with Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome. Brain Behav Immun. 52: 32-39, 2016.
Dr Geraldine (Jo) Cambridge
B cells, Rituximab and ME/CFS
Dr Jo Cambridge is Principal Research Fellow
Inflammation, Div of Medicine Faculty of
Medical Sciences, UCL
Her group focuses its interests on B cell depletion
(an idea which they introduced (with the Professor
Jo Edwards) approximately 10 years ago for the
treatment of rheumatoid arthritis), exploring more precisely how the technique
works and trying to explain the marked variation in response between different
patients
ABSTRACT
B cell biology and Rituximab treatment in
Patients with ME/CFS
G. Cambridge and F. Mensah
Centre of Rheumatology Research, Division of
Medicine, University College of London
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Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
June 2016
PRESENTERS
Use of Rituximab: Before the use of rituximab, the strongest accepted evidence
for an association between B-cells and systemic autoimmune diseases such as
lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, was that clinical disease was associated with serum
autoantibodies. The ability to remove B-cells with rituximab (given in 2 injections 1
week apart) has revealed factors that are important for both inducing remission and
resumption of symptoms. Firstly, we found that our patients with high levels of
autoantibodies had a significantly more pronounced and predictable clinical
response to rituximab than patients with no autoantibodies. Secondly, B cells are
killed very quickly by Rituximab – within a week of the infusions - but the kinetics of
the clinical response (taking from 1- 5 months after depletion), suggest that it is a
constantly generated B-cell product (?autoantibody) and not B-cells themselves
that need to be reduced for remission to occur. Thirdly, a considerable proportion of
B cells are not depleted, being resident in protective niches in lymphoid and
inflamed tissues, and autoantibody levels can often remain raised, in the presence
of considerable improvement of clinical symptoms. Taken together, this would
suggest that only a proportion of parent B cells and autoantibodies are actually
directly ‘pathogenic’. However, as patients eventually do relapse, the autoimmune
response underlying the pathogenesis of disease must be self-sustaining. Patients
are thus not ‘cured’ by Rituximab and symptoms can worsen again when the
peripheral B cell compartment begins regenerating (6-9 months after infusion of
rituximab), although some patients can have extended remission even after B cell
return. Side-effects are rare and although reductions in serum total antibody levels
can occur, effects on protective immunity are mild and serious infections rare. We
have therefore learned much about how rituximab works in autoimmune rheumatic
diseases but in ME/CFS patients, we are just beginning. As ME/CFS is such a
heterogenous disease, our research is focussed on investigating B cell biology in
these patients in order to qualify differences from healthy individuals and thus to
identify those patients most likely to respond to rituximab and related therapies.
B cell Research into ME/CFS: Fatigue is a major component of many systemic
autoimmune rheumatic diseases where it is usually associated with the presence of
inflammation and cytokine production. After rituximab, a marked reduction in fatigue
indices has been reported, possibly due to reducing cytokine (usually interferon-α)
production through removal of activating autoantibody containing immune
complexes. The fatigue and other symptoms experienced by patients with ME/CFS
differs in that no frank inflammatory site has been identified and the fatigue and
other symptoms seems to be induced by both physical and mental stressors. We
have hypothesized that dysregulation of metabolic re-programming in B cells may
influence normal differentiation to appropriate (?Auto?) antibody secretion and
memory B cell generation. Rituximab would therefore work by stopping the
production of as yet only tentatively identified pathogenic antibodies. Following on
from our already published data on B cells which showed that a certain marker,
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Page 63 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
CD24 was up-regulated or retained by newly generated B cells, we have been
using cells from patients and controls to follow B cell development patterns in
response to certain stimuli. We have also established an in vitro system in which we
can compare the metabolic function of B cells in ME/CFS patients with healthy
controls. This system can also be used to examine the effect of soluble factors such
as cytokines and antibodies and agonists/antagonists binding receptors shared
between the immune and nervous systems.
G. Cambridge, PhD,
Principal Investigator.
Professor Tom Wileman
Professor of Infection and Immunity & Director at Biomedical
Research Centre at University of East Anglia, Norfolk, UK
Professor Wileman is Professor of Infection and Immunity & Director and Director at
Biomedical Research Centre at Univ. of East Anglia.
He was Head of Dep. Immunology and Pathology
and Virus Cell Biology Group at Institute of Animal
Health; Assistant Professor at Dep. Medicine at
Harvard Medical School and Claudia Adam's Barr
Investigator in Cancer Research, Dept. Molecular
Immunology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard
Medical School; Fellow of the Parker Francis
Pulmonary Research Foundation, Dept. Cell
Biology, Washington Univ. Medical School.
ABSTRACT:
Tom Wileman
The human virome contains eukaryotic viruses that infect host cells and prokaryotic
viruses that infect bacterial communities within the microbiota. The virome of
healthy individuals interacts with the microbiota and the host immune system to set
an inflammatory threshold that can influence susceptibility to many diseases
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Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
June 2016
PRESENTERS
including diabetes, cardiovascular disease and the metabolic syndrome. Modulation
of the immune system can also stimulate bystander resistance to pathogens.
Human prokaryotic viromes are relatively stable but they can be altered by diet and
disease and this can influence the diversity of the microbiota. Changes in
prokaryotic virus populations can lead to gene transfer able to influence microbial
antibiotic resistance, virulence and metabolism. Recent work shows that the
diversity of the enteric virome increases during inflammatory bowel disease and
that this can reduce the diversity of microbial communities leading to dysbiosis and
inflammation. We have developed methods to study the enteric virome of patients
with chronic fatigue syndrome/ME to see if similar changes occur during the
development of this debilitating disease.
Professor Don Staines
The National Centre for
Neuroimmunology and Emerging
Diseases (NCNED), Griffiths University,
Australia
Dr Staines is a public health physician at Gold Coast
Population Health Unit. He has worked in health
services management and public health practice in
Australia and overseas. His interests include collaborative health initiatives with
other countries as well as cross-disciplinary initiatives within health. Communicable
diseases as well as post infectious fatigue syndromes are his main research
interests. A keen supporter of the Griffith University Medical School, he enjoys
teaching and other opportunities to promote awareness of public health in the
medical curriculum.
ABSTRACT:
Not available at time of going to press – will be added later.
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Page 65 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
Professor Simon Carding
Leader, Gut Health and Food Safety
Programme Institute of Food Research,
Norwich Research Park, UK
Professor Simon Carding Professor of Mucosal
Immunology at University of East Anglia and Institute
of Food Research. Following his PhD at London he
held postdoctoral positions at New York University
School of Medicine, New York and at Yale University
School of Medicine, New Haven, USA. He then
moved to the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA as Assistant and later
Associate Professor. He joined University of Leeds as Professor of Molecular
Immunology in the Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology in 1999. His scientific
interests are in understanding how the immune response in the gut functions and in
particular, is able to distinguish between the commensal microbes that reside in the
gut and environmental microbes that cause disease, and in the mechanisms by
which the body's immune system no longer ignores or tolerates commensal gut
bacteria and how this leads to immune system activation and inflammatory bowel
disease.
ABSTRACT:
Despite excellent ME/CFS research being carried out in several centers and groups
across Europe it remains fragmented and uncoordinated. With the support of the
UK-based charity Invest in ME - Research EMERG has been established with the
aim of developing a coordinated programme of European-based research to
identify the underlying causes of ME/CFS and to develop more effective forms of
treatment that can be supported by trans-national and national funders.
׉	 7cassandra://59H6LHyvkaLNZeEQ4KxDv415KNMVF1u4EgSjH7IT5yM*,`̵ Xok &SHЇ׉E	Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
June 2016
PRESENTERS
Professor Mady Horning
Markers of Immunity and Metabolism in ME
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 New York, USA 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 neuropsychiatric
conditions, including autism, PANDAS (Paediatric
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.
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
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
and schizophrenia, examines the role of viruses and immune responses in the
pathogenesis of these disorders.
ABSTRACT:
Not available at time of going to press – will be added later.
Professor Maureen Hanson
Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor, Department of Molecular Biology
and Genetics, Cornell University, New York, USA
Maureen Hanson is Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor in the Department of Molecular
Biology and Genetics at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Previously she was on the
faculty of the Department of Biology at the
University of Virginia in Charlottesville and an NIH
NRSA postdoctoral fellow at Harvard, where she
also completed her Ph.D. degree. While most of her
prior research has concerned cell and molecular
biology in plant cells, she began a research
program on ME/CFS after noting at a 2007 IACFS
meeting the paucity of molecular biologists studying
the illness. Her lab was part of the 2012 multicenter
study organized by Ian Lipkin's group at Columbia
University to assess the actual role of XMRV in
ME/CFS. Dr. Hanson has a current project to examine the microbiome of ME/CFS
patients and controls, in collaboration with Dr. Ruth Ley (Cornell Microbiology) and
Susan Levine, M.D. (Manhattan, NY). Dr Levine is also collaborating with Dr.
Hanson on an immune cell gene expression project that involves Dr. Fabien
Campagne and Dr. Rita Shaknovich at Weill Cornell Medical School in New York
City. Dr. Hanson's third project concerns analysis of blood samples from individuals
performing a two-day cardiopulmonary exercise test at Ithaca College under the
supervision of Dr. Betsy Keller
ABSTRACT:
The Search for Biomarkers in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome
Maureen R. Hanson (presenter), Ludovic Giloteaux, Julia Goodrich, Anthony
Walters, Susan Levine, Ruth Ley
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Page 68 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://5SFzVL_i-BUDuEbr_51Uy8gL55snyM-baaVa-xfOyDg&)`̵ Xok &SHО׉E2Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
Biological markers (biomarkers) are objective measures of biological phenomena.
Among possible biomarkers are the physical appearance of an organism or its
components, amounts of molecules or cell types, responses of cells or tissue to a
stimulus, enzyme activities, gene sequences, or level of interactions of one
molecules with another. Many potential biomarkers for the identification of victims
of ME/CFS have been measured in the past in the hope of understanding the
pathophysiology of the disease. Such studies have revealed abnormalities in
function, population and gene expression in immune cells, disturbances in brain
morphology and operation, abnormal gas exchange parameters in exercise
physiology, discordant levels of plasma signaling proteins, and atypical autonomic
function.
While these abnormalities have provided some hints about the biological basis of
the disease, much more information is needed to understand its underlying cause.
Furthermore, the existing biomarkers are cumbersome to implement in a medical
office setting, not available to be performed typical medical testing labs, and are not
able to identify all patients that can be diagnosed with the disease by an
experienced ME/CFS physician.
We explored the possibility that levels of inflammatory proteins in the blood, in
conjunction with bacterial species abundance in the gut microbiome, might serve as
biomarkers for diagnosis if the intestinal microbiome is disturbed in ME/CFS. We
examined the bacterial microbiome in 48 ME/CFS patients in 39 healthy controls by
sequencing regions of DNA that allow identification of the different types of bacteria
that are present. We found that ME/CFS patients had reduced diversity in bacterial
types in comparison to healthy individuals, a finding that has also been reported in
Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. While there is no set of species detected
that is present in ME/CFS patients that is absent from healthy individuals, we
identified a number of taxonomic groups that were represented in different
abundance between ME/CFS patients and controls. By applying a statistical
method to the blood analyses and the bacterial compositions, we were able to
classify 83% of the subjects correctly as either patients or healthy individuals. Our
results are consistent with an ongoing damage to the gut that leads to greater
microbial translocation into the blood, which could then have adverse effects on the
immune system.
The difference in population structure of the microbial community may be
contributing to some ME/CFS symptoms and to their severity. However, there is no
evidence that the disturbance in the gut microbiome is a cause of the disease
rather than being one of its symptoms.
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Page 69 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
Professor Elisa Oltra
Professor Elisa Oltra is a professor of Cell and Molecular
Biology at the Universidad Católica de Valencia “San Vicente
Mártir” where she also works as a researcher in the area of
stem-cell and cancer
Dr. Elisa Oltra is a professor of Cell and Molecular
Biology at the Universidad Católica de Valencia “San
Vicente Mártir” where she also works as a researcher
in the area of stem-cell and cancer.
She obtained an M.S. degree in Biochemistry at the
Universidad de Valencia (Spain) and later earned her
PhD in Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology at
the University of Miami, FL (USA) where she stayed
for her post-doctoral training and later, as Senior Scientist till 2006 when she
moved back to Spain.
During her studies at the University of Miami she identified alternative 5´UTR
sequences involved in regulating cell-cell communication through mechanisms of
differential connexin43 expression in the heart.
She also isolated a novel essential protein (Ini) and demonstrated its participation in
mechanisms of transcription and splicing.
In 2009 she started a project to investigate the molecular basis of Fibromyalgia
having identified at present irregularities in RNAseL expression and miRNAs profile
changes in the participating patients which could lead to a deeper understanding of
the disease.
In 2012 she joined the IVP Valencian Institute of Pathology, also at the Universidad
Católica de Valencia where she is currently studying a specific type of vesicles: the
exosomes, as mediators of stem-cell based therapies.
She is also academic director of the first officially accredited Master degree in
Biobanking in Europe in collaboration with the Spanish Network of Biobanking at
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Page 70 of 77
June 2016
PRESENTERS
׉	 7cassandra://vqAJqGHAeDtD5JuLcCLUdqsqGyVCqHyIeyEItsENeKg$`̵ Xok&SHе׉E
Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
IIMEC11
June 2016
PRESENTERS
the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid (Spain). From
https://publons.com/author/361418/elisa-oltra#profile
ABSTRACT:
Molecular Biomarkers of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
Elisa Oltra, Jaime Cuquerella, Armando V. Mena-Durán,
Vicente Monsalve and Germán Cerdá-Olmedo
School of Medicine, Catholic University of Valencia (Spain)
Summary
At present no objective diagnostic method for ME or related diseases exists. A lack
of reliable markers not only leads to misdiagnosis but limits the possibility of finding
effective treatments and/or preventive actions as well. MicroRNAs, also called
miRNAs or miRs, are a set of small molecules that work as important modulators of
gene expression in tissue-specific physiologic pathways, in response to
environmental cues and in disease. Their high stability in body fluids has already
shown the use of these small nucleic acids in the diagnosis and prognosis of
certain type of cancers and other diseases, appearing as attractive biomarker
candidates for the development of precision medicine programs. Encouraged by
the idea that miR profiling must be altered in ME patients and related diseases, we
and other researchers have pursued the analysis of miRs in blood and other body
fluids finding alterations that need to be understood. In our initial study, we
performed a genome-wide expression profiling of these miRs in Peripheral Blood
Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) of patients with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia
comorbidities (N=11) and population-age-matched controls (N=10) using human
v16-miRbase 3D-Gene microarrays (Toray Industries, Japan). This analysis led to
the identification of a miRNA signature of 5 of these small nucleic acids that
showed marked down-regulation (6-fold or higher). In addition, the low levels of the
hsa-miR223-3p, hsa-miR451a, hsa-miR338-3p, hsa-miR143-3p and hsa-miR1455p
could be validated by real-time quantitative PCR amplification (qPCR), an
alternative method for measuring the expression levels of these molecules. At
present, we are extending this study to a larger cohort of participants presenting a
more varied symptom profiling than those that participated in our pilot study with the
aim of unveiling symptom and symptom-severity-associated miR profiles. We are
including additional body fluids and sub-fractions in our analysis to determine the
most appropriate sample to use for a liquid biopsy-based diagnostic method of ME
and related diseases.
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Page 71 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
IIMEC11 PRESENTERS
Professor James Baraniuk
Professor of Medicine at Georgetown
University Medical Centre, Washington,
USA
James N. Baraniuk was born in Alberta, Canada, south
of Banff. He earned his honours degree in chemistry
and microbiology, medical degree, and unique
bachelor's degree in medicine (cardiology) at the
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. Thereafter,
he moved to Akron, OH, USA, for his internship and internal medicine residency at
St Thomas Hospital.
After another year of internal medicine residency at Duke University Medical
Center, Durham, NC, he trained with Dr C.E. Buckley, III, in allergy and clinical
immunology. He moved to the laboratory of Dr Michael Kaliner at the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, MD, and there began his
long-standing collaboration with Dr Kimihiro Ohkubo. After 2 years studying
neuropeptides, he joined Dr Peter Barnes' laboratory at the National Heart and
Lung Institute, Brompton Hospital, London, UK. Dr Baraniuk returned to
Washington, DC, and Georgetown University, where he is currently Associate
Professor with Tenure in the Department of Medicine.
ABSTRACT:
Not available at time of going to press – will be added later.
Professor Ron Davis
Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics at
the Stanford School of Medicine in
Stanford, California, USA
Ronald W. Davis, Ph.D., is a Professor of Biochemistry
and Genetics at the Stanford School of Medicine in
Stanford, California.
He is a world leader in the development of biotechnology,
especially the development of recombinant DNA and genomic methodologies and
their application to biological systems.
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Journal of IiMER
Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
At Stanford University, where he is Director of the Stanford Genome Technology
Center, Dr. Davis focuses on the interface of nano-fabricated solid state devices
and biological systems.
He and his research team also develop novel technologies for the genetic,
genomic, and molecular analysis of a wide range of model organisms as well as
humans.
The team's focus on practical application of these technologies is setting the
standard for clinical genomics.
ABSTRACT:
Big Data Approach: Severely ill ME Patient Cohort
Our first major effort with multiple patients was to collect a large number of
molecular observations on patients with ME/CFS. Once published these data could
serve as the basis for a large number of hypotheses that NIH and other government
agencies might fund. The cost of this type of study will be very expensive per
patient. In order to reduce the overall cost it was recommended by the OMF
Scientific Advisory committee to study severely ill patients because they should
show the largest molecular signature. With a larger signal fewer patients can be
used and still achieve statistical significance. This study has been called the Big
Data Study of Severely Ill CFS Patients. These patients are bed bound so do not
visit clinics and have not been studied. We send a medical team to each home in
the San Francisco Bay Area to collect blood, urine, saliva, tears, and stool. We will
be collecting more molecular data on each patient at one time point than has ever
been collected in any study in history.
While we were seeking funding for the Big Data Study we tested some of the
technologies on a few severe and not severe CFS and healthy control patients. We
discovered that the metabolome (the small metabolites found in the blood and
urine) of the serium gave clear indication of metabolic abnormalities. Preliminary
results indicated that glycolysis may be impaired with glucose being routed to fatty
acid synthesis. Possibly more important, the metabolites in the citric acid cycle in
the mitochondria were lower than in healthy controls and some almost
undetectable. This cycle generates most of the energy (ATP) for the body. It makes
it clear that this is no psychosomatic disease. From preliminary analysis it would
appear that not only ATP is low but also ADP, AMP, GTP and in some cases
uracile. These cofactors are involved in hundreds of molecular reactions in the body
including in the brain. Their decrease would cause a large number of body
functions to be abnormal. We don’t know which cells in the body are being affected
(possible all cells) and are currently studying the various white and red cells with a
variety of commercial and custom technologies.
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Page 73 of 77
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Volume 10 Issue 1
June 2016
Sufferers of M.E., carers, family and friends, all want to know
what causes M.E. in order to determine how the condition can
be prevented, treated and cured. ….. With over 3000
scientists at the Norwich Research Park, consisting of 4 world
leading research institutes, a university and a teaching
hospital, it is one of Europe’s largest single-site concentrations
of research in Food and Health and Environmental sciences.
Having academic excellence across a range of diverse, but
related fields, in one location is a very powerful way to deliver a
step-change in potential outcomes across a number of health issues. Importantly,
the new centre for food and health, due to open at the end of 2017 at the Norwich
Research Park, takes co-location to a new level as it uniquely integrates academic
excellence with clinical expertise; by bringing together the Institute of Food
Research with aspects of the University of East Anglia’s medical school and
science faculty with the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals' gastrointestinal
endoscopy facility, working alongside industry. The new Institute will provide a
novel holistic, systematic and integrated approach to deliver faster innovation as
well as helping to inform government policy on a range of gut and diet
related issues including M.E. The development of this new centre,
together with the other expertise and facilities located at the
Norwich Research Park, puts it in a very good position to lead a
UK and European Centre of Excellence for biomedical research
for M.E. to provide possible prevention and solutions.
-
Professor Ian Charles Director of Institute of Food Research
IMEC10 conference
Together Under the Umbrella
Invest in ME are members of European ME Alliance (EMEA) – who are members of
the European Federation of Neurological Alliances (EFNA). The Together Under
the Umbrella campaign will lead to an increase in public, political and scientific
support for all brain and brain-related disorders, resulting in reduced stigma.
http://undertheumbrella.eu
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Page 74 of 77
׉	 7cassandra://AY7rNOPmqjwsgD7HKK8jFfMrjib3IG6nPktAwueyvTc(`̵ Xok&SH׉EConference Agenda
Start Presenter
07.45 Registration
08.55 IiME
09:00 Dr Ian Gibson
09:10 Dr Vicky Whittemore
09:35 Professor Olli Polo
10:00 Professor Carmen
Scheibenbogen
Presentation
Welcome to IIMEC11
10 years – Looking Back, Looking Forward
Keynote Speech: NIH Research into ME
Clinical Diagnosis of Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
Autoantibodies to adrenergic and
acetylcholine receptors in CFS/ME
10.30 Coffee/Tea Break in the Great Hall
11:00 Dr Jo Cambridge
B cells, Rituximab and ME/CFS
11.25 Professor Tom Wileman Gut Virome in ME
11:50 Dr Don Staines
Update from NCNED: Receptor
identification and intracellular signalling
12.30 Professor Simon Carding European ME Research Group
12.45 Lunch in the Great Hall
13.45 Professor Mady Hornig
Pathogen Discovery in ME
14:25 Professor Maureen
Hanson
14:55 Professor Elisa Oltra
The Search for Biomarkers in ME
Molecular Biomarkers of Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
15.25 Coffee/Tea Break in the Great Hall
15:55 Professor James Baraniuk Exercise testing and orthostatic tachycardia
16.20 Professor Ron Davis
Big Data Approach: Severely ill ME Patient
Cohort
17.10 Dr Ian Gibson
Plenary Session Status of ME Research
17.30 Adjourn (Note: the agenda, format and times are subject to change)
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Page 75 of 77
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