׉?4ׁB! בCט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://JXV5DHpzUd6RJVlCurnadIU2IvUyd4uIE9RI2MEzj-0 ;`׉	 7cassandra://7aA8CkXkYUlAd4RdBmdS6X4m2LDSfDcvslqLinns4Tw͔`S׉	 7cassandra://uy_tsfIDiOOJoAswn9NyKGEOfjbRvOIlLWA8riWfnIY5`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://d23gMPZB7Sa-0u_d6PZ99T30lPVxR1jZhRpKIp8RcQM 	=͠[>)C]ט   {u׈         נ[>)C^U /9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׈E[>)C]׉E nal of IiMER
Journal of IiMER
Volume 12 Issue 1 May 2018
Research into ME
Published by UK Charity Invest in ME Research
www.investinme.org
׉	 7cassandra://uy_tsfIDiOOJoAswn9NyKGEOfjbRvOIlLWA8riWfnIY5`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://vas27OBX82x3hFAP2U_P8J7OmbbAfx2D6bwHDGacm3I 0`׉	 7cassandra://oUzQDgIeQldE3kiGrT_yVwpF57XpuD3uhfK14y7tWlQ͇`S׉	 7cassandra://2R3FOrYOv6sj_wyBaz9zWItEZm0OYJ-LvNKEYcKSmJg)8`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://nDV2kkVrz7266UqAN_hJHfQdKW0du0cGBgBicXKZdvI +͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://ZZxvgLKoE1KLBPwDiTWS6eSToCovncCIgzL2mjlIplA _`׉	 7cassandra://l4cfi_3rMtWceagLrgjlInDavpRdW4DtD5DcC9lh3vQ~`S׉	 7cassandra://jaQAt5vNM-LDy4GBZaKOBLNJKcxoYY6vaO9H7cUS01c'r`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://TpN8TeauSnwQy_e1gvjO_NoDDvJEc5p9gv24w3L8F24 {"͠[>)C]נ[>)C^Y T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E“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.”
- Dr. Leonard A. Jason
Invest in ME Research
o an independent UK charity finding, funding and facilitating a strategy of high quality biomedical
research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis, as defined by WHO-ICD-10-G93.3
o focuses on biomedical research into ME and the education of healthcare staff, the media, government
departments, patient groups and patients
o run by volunteers with no paid staff - no funding from government or government organisations
o overheads are kept to a minimum to enable all funds raised to go to promoting education of, and
funding for biomedical research into, ME
o a small charity but we do far more than most with growing number of supporters with big hearts and
determination to find the cause of myalgic encephalomyelitis and develop treatments
o funding more biomedical research than many other organisations
o we have links nationwide and also internationally and facilitate international collaboration
o founder member of the European ME Alliance (EMEA)
o organises annual research Colloquium and public Conference attracting delegates from 20 countries
o to bring best education and research to bear on ME and find/facilitate the best strategy of research
o focused on setting up UK/European Centre of Excellence for ME to provide proper examinations and
diagnosis for ME patients and coordinated strategy of biomedical research in order to find
treatment(s) and cure(s) - http://www.cofeforme.eu
o the charity welcomes support for our work – www.investinme.org/donate
www.investinme.org
Page 2 of 56
Invest in ME Research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 2 of 56
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://2R3FOrYOv6sj_wyBaz9zWItEZm0OYJ-LvNKEYcKSmJg)8`̵ [>)C]׉E3 Chairman of IiMER
6 Progress in ME
12 NICE Review Comments
18 Centre Research Blog
20 Thinking the Future
21 Quadram Institute Bioscience News
22 UK Biobank: An Open Access Resource
29 Farewell to a Friend – Anne Örtegren
36 A Harsh Debate about ME in Norway
41 Letter from America
43 IiMER’s Own Film Star
45 Conference Abstracts
All content in the Journal of IiMER is copyright to
Invest in ME Research and/or the authors.
Permission is required and requested from Invest
in ME Research before republishing from this
Journal.
DISCLAIMER
The views expressed in this Journal by contributors
and others do not necessarily represent those of
Invest in ME Research. No medical recommendations
are given or implied.
Patients with any illness are recommended to consult
their personal physician at all times.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
Welcome to IIMEC13
A Foundation of International Collaboration in
Biomedical Research
From the Chairman of Invest in ME Research
Invest in ME Research is an independent UK charity
facilitating and funding a strategy of biomedical
research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME or
ME/CFS) and promoting better education about ME.
The charity was built on the firm belief that biomedical
research into ME was crucial in order to make progress
in treating this disease. The education of healthcare
staff, the media, government departments, patient
groups and patients was also to be a priority - but
something that would develop from the research being
undertaken.
Although forcing research into ME into the mainstream
of academic and clinical consideration has taken too
long we do sometimes wonder where we would be if
we had not started our conferences and, later, our
research Colloquiums.
The international conferences were organised from the
beginning to provide a platform for research and a
means of facilitating education about ME.
The research Colloquiums now attract researchers from
around the world to a meeting where they are free to
discuss, share and collaborate.
Collaboration and working together have been themes
for our Colloquiums - with real international
cooperation forming that can only lead to a better
future for patients than would otherwise be the case.
www.investinme.org
Page 3 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://jaQAt5vNM-LDy4GBZaKOBLNJKcxoYY6vaO9H7cUS01c'r`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://ctRVNsx4uHPyC-iB-y0j6VbORq6LUQTSAEPd7OmMsEo `׉	 7cassandra://H0ckxiVBAFbOcjLpDxmG4V0ZZw6oiuHE8UMBXldvTZI͂x`S׉	 7cassandra://Ta7n5W3ehXNIbDACKsZNi4llZ4D6NJNJNoW35B-JRcw&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://nDhrUz4oInH66a8lW19Aq5rzp8nu8vcys0KAWbkboc8 0͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://4gqOTsaVMW-HkZsS6PyvW-Uy3QXQ_pQEa6ef97Vf8Ac L`׉	 7cassandra://yer-BOIk9EcQYWCV8_LnUvwALJAe6EGD6QgIWijG9SQt`S׉	 7cassandra://GwUQhnvzi6rlXQGohxdDKuuPwXrevZG5F5VihFxtzoM#Z`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://NZIDZ-XPh2iiyNoqenpu4_uY2fhg3RD28BsjpkC2fT8 ,P͠[>)C]đנ[>)C^\ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EoThis year we again have representatives from both the
USA National Institute of Health (NIH) and Centres for
Disease Control (CDC) attending our Colloquium and
Conference - endorsing our view of international
collaboration as a critical means to an end.
We can also see some of the spin-offs that have
occurred due to our Colloquium taking place - either
research projects, collaboration in planning projects or
in other events taking place.
Both the Colloquium and
Conference are high
quality, forward-looking
events that serve to
improve knowledge of
this disease and
generate and improve
international collaboration into ME.
As always the charity takes on the task of producing a
high-quality DVD of the conference with all of the
presentations included. This serves as a historical record
and is an educational tool for doctors and clinicians -
demonstrating the seriousness of this disease. For 2017,
our conference DVD reached even more countries and
allowed us to inform a wider audience.
Yet how do we speed up research and move the
direction away from the flawed approach to ME
research that has been the strategy of establishment
organisations that have not responded to the needs of
patients?
The strategy that Invest in ME Research has created is
to develop a Centre of Excellence for ME based on highquality
biomedical research and international
collaboration.
There are now four PhD students performing
biomedical research into ME at the Norwich Research
Park, where the hub for the UK Centre of Excellence for
ME is proposed. The charity continues to fund research
at UCL also by supporting the remainder of another PhD
studentship there.
The charity is doing more than most to provide a sound
foundation for research into ME and spends more,
proportionately, of its income on biomedical research
and associated activities than any other UK charity.
The Invest in ME Research strategy of bringing in
researchers from other fields to help and improve
biomedical research into ME is working. Our
conferences bring together patients, researchers,
clinicians and healthcare staff and allow knowledge and
Page 4 of 56
www.investinme.org
experiences to be shared – and IIMEC13 and BRMEC8
will see us entering our thirteenth year in doing this.
Our BRMEC8 is again a two-day event with biomedical
researchers invited from around the world. This year
will be the biggest yet with almost 100 top biomedical
researchers participating from over a dozen countries.
The IIMEC13 Conference allows researchers, clinicians
and patient/ groups/patients and carers to mix with
each other, discuss
together and network
with unique
opportunities – all
enabling a greater
understanding of this
disease.
In order to bring the best education and research to
London each year we welcome all support for these
events as there are significant costs involved in
achieving this. We are therefore extremely grateful to
our friends and supporters who have helped us via
online donations. We also wish to thank our sponsors
for IIMEC13.
The Irish ME Trust
A word of thanks to the
Irish ME Trust who, yet
again, will be sponsoring
one of the speakers to
the conference. IMET
have been a constant
friend and supporter of
IiMER, and of ME
patients. They have been
a leading member in the
European ME Alliance.
The Irish ME Trust has sponsored a speaker at all of our
conferences and we would like to thank them for their
continued support.
Norges ME Forening
Norway's ME Association (Norges ME Forening) is
sponsoring the IIMEC13 conference.
Norges ME Forening has been a long-standing
supporter of IiMER we are very grateful for this kind
donation. Thank you NMEF.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://Ta7n5W3ehXNIbDACKsZNi4llZ4D6NJNJNoW35B-JRcw&`̵ [>)C]׉E	Solve ME/CFS Initiative
Solve ME/CFS Initiative
(SMCI) has sponsored an
IiMER conference for the first
time but has already granted
awards to two of the research
groups which currently have
research underway that is
being funded by IiMER.
Thank you SMCI.
The Only Form of Graded
Exercise Therapy Acceptable for
People with ME
Thanks to Paul Kayes
Welcome to those attending Thinking the Future 2018,
BRMEC8 Colloquium, IIMEC13 international ME
Conference and European ME Alliance AGM.
Welcome to London,
Kathleen McCall
In This Issue
This issue of the
journal contains
views on the current
state of research
and advocacy in ME,
looking at past
mistakes and false
views that still
pervade the
landscape today and
have affected the
perception and
treatment of ME,
and especially the
research.
Has research moved
on?
We have an opinion piece from Professor Ola Didrik
Saugstad on the situation in Norway. If anyone were in
doubt of the danger from lack of progress then the story
of our friend, Anne Örtegren, is sobering. It is easy for
patients to continue to believe in those who have failed
them but we feel there are better choices. News from
the Quadram Institute Bioscience ahead of their move
to a state-of-the-art research, researchers such as
Leonard Jason who still provides input to ME research.
We have the UK Biobank presenting at our Colloquium –
an article of the work of this national/international
resource is in the Journal – answering the question what
can the UK Biobank do for ME. IiMER continue to use
our efforts to develop the UK/European Centre of
Excellence for ME in Norwich Research Park.
Exercise can be really beneficial for
people with ME, but it needs to be
the right kind of exercise.
This is a list of activities for us to
work through as part of a Graded
Exercise programme.
Don't take it on all at once, aim to
undertake one exercise daily - IT
WILL make you feel better, promise.
....................…….................................
Exercises:
Beat around the bush.
Jump to conclusions.
Climb up the walls.
Wade through the morning paper.
Drag my heels.
Push my luck.
Make mountains out of mole hills.
Hit the nail on the head.
Bend over backwards.
Jump on the band wagon.
Run around in circles.
Toot my own horn.
Pull out all the stops.
Add fuel to the fire.
Open a can of worms.
Put my foot in my mouth.
Start the ball rolling.
Go over the edge.
Pick up the pieces.
What a Workout!
Rest At Last.
Face Book Time.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 5 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://GwUQhnvzi6rlXQGohxdDKuuPwXrevZG5F5VihFxtzoM#Z`̵ [>)C]Ɓ[>)C]Ł{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://UOOElzvYN0zs0tBdqG0psjC4UKGeWhh24qx629toTxs `׉	 7cassandra://VH7FjcJ7l6yoXvb52_-z9n02b3TFLRGYZP9SfiIQ6E0͓`S׉	 7cassandra://D7qrK07M0n0QYrPVdQAaYpls3TZmGlI665BnRcTPXKM-	`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://9YWIhGL8LsqGqGKhb-OU6aS1k2Iin7uH5OkqHfQzfgM 	͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://k40Mpd5Dqq-MawQK17WOtS0MO_lzXb4WZFVgVQDVkgI 1`׉	 7cassandra://uZENFdqe5JuQXBJsmUbYg7jbmblxLm1rfgobVOiRt34͋W`S׉	 7cassandra://3FhaJqzWAVqU14K6Gk1ejQ2aC39aEwmCOPHM2YjE2_4(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://GMvRVXqQ0VxPZtjNaaO_DsWGLPs9sZHd0p7OyBmn_-w "͠[>)C]Ȓנ[>)C^X T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^W 89ׁH "https://api.parliament.uk/historicׁׁЈ׉E׉	 7cassandra://D7qrK07M0n0QYrPVdQAaYpls3TZmGlI665BnRcTPXKM-	`̵ [>)C]׉EAlthough, to be fair, it is maybe not the MRC with whom
we take issue as it does some excellent work in many
other fields. It is, instead, those whom the MRC have
charged with responsibility for ME.
They have failed miserably - or succeeded completely -
depending on whether the objective was to make
progress in research or to be gatekeepers for stalling any
progress.
If anyone doubts the lack of progress made let us look
back to a time long before the disastrous PACE Trial, way
before the worthless “expert panels”, before the Gibson
Inquiry, even before the CMO report of 2002.
In 1988 in Parliament MP Jimmy Hood tabled a motion
– “to require an annual report to Parliament on
progress made in investigating the causes, effects
and treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis”
30 years ago!
It is worthwhile reading again.
https://api.parliament.uk/historichansard/commons/1988/feb/23/myalgicencephalomyelitis#S6CV0128P0_19880223_HOC_296
Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
HC Deb 23 February 1988 vol 128 cc167-81674.36 pm
§Mr. Jimmy Hood (Clydesdale)
I beg to move, That leave be given to bring in a Bill to require an
annual report to Parliament on progress made in investigating
the causes, effects and treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis.
First, I should like to pay tribute to the many sufferers who have
written to me in the past few days telling me of their personal
suffering from the illness myalgic encephalomyelitis—an illness
that is also known as post-virile fatigue syndrome.
---------------------------------------------------------------The
ME illness was first observed in Britain 33 years ago in 1955, but it
was observed in other countries as early as 1939. Research into the
disease is being carried out in Britain at St. Mary's hospital in Paddington,
Glasgow university and establishments elsewhere. Research is also being
carried out abroad, notably in Australia and the United States of America.
Research shows that ME appears to be caused by virile infection,
combined with a disfunction of the immune system. There is no doubt
that ME is an organic disease. The nature of the disease is such that it
primarily strikes the central nervous system, the brain and body muscles.
Its most common symptom is a profound weakness of the body, which
results in even the most active of people being confined to their bed for
long periods, sometimes years.
Another symptom that is more distressing than that is the illness's effect
on the brain. Some normally bright, alert people find themselves unable
to function. Their concentration goes; they have difficulty speaking; and
even conversation leaves them completely exhausted. Sufferers lose their
jobs and their lives come to a halt. Children affected lose out on their
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 7 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://3FhaJqzWAVqU14K6Gk1ejQ2aC39aEwmCOPHM2YjE2_4(`̵ [>)C]ʁ[>)C]Ɂ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://ghAhAFTdkyv7z1pZ1Vwf-FDlQCF5m_fPYVVGX7da7do F` ׉	 7cassandra://xE7zJeYVuRj01HHCNYAMFoOCxAOw0CNYOibKwYbKovÚ`S׉	 7cassandra://VTBiyqEjd9fDng7QIJqtR6XQUfIzquOpqUr3nWFH7kA$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://DecQC5pKtGQweyAt4CgapMZ62iKp84JBGHRIZpjf-ug͍̠͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://r5OD7ouYdcZtDKSPEc_ITZ8uf6nIDkjvJ371tevtRSI ?`׉	 7cassandra://eseZJ5GArtPBXIO0qSC5a5xUn7JM8FpN2RXK66rROUḮ`S׉	 7cassandra://Ju52dy8swVyy-Ae4WoZjadAnmxSZS8Iu5_vnYaBhNzQ&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://CR2_vfcHApHaRpgXeQYPCa8Z5gk84t3NV-mK5ofV9d4 /̈͠[>)C]̑נ[>)C^d T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉Eeducation, sometimes for years. For many children the disease totally devastates their lives.
The greatest suffering of all is the anguish caused by misdiagnosis. On top of the physical and mental
stress caused by the disease, sufferers' agonies are compounded by being told that they are well, that
there is nothing wrong with them, that they are malingering, or that they are neurotic. It is widely
acknowledged that many incidences of suicide result from the refusal of doctors to accept that sufferers
are ill from myalgic encephalomyelitis.
The Bill is a simple measure which merely requires the Secretary of State to make an annual report to
Parliament describing the progress that has been made in investigating the causes, effects, incidence and
treatment of ME. Such 168a report would be of enormous value in drawing the attention of the medical
profession, sufferers themselves and others to whom sufferers may turn for help to what is known about
the illness. I cannot emphasise enough how vital it is to give proper recognition to the condition, as the
failure to recognise the reality of the illness causes sufferers such great and wholly unnecessary distress.
The following are authentic examples of suffering caused by ME. A mother wrote to me saying:
My son aged 18 died from this miserable illness last March. He was away at university and had
been ill on and off for two years. It all started with an attack of glandular fever. Now we look back
over this time and so many things fit into a pattern. He was an active, bright young man with a
zest for living and life. This illness got in his way. She concluded by telling me that her son
committed suicide.
Then there was Jill from Sussex, who said:
I have been to hell and back with this devastating illness. I am still not recognised or getting
proper benefits. I have received hundreds of letters about similar experiences from all over
Britain, as well as Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man.
Many well-known persons are afflicted with the disease.
Sufferers include the Dean of Westminster; David Provan, a Scottish international footballer who had to
retire from a promising career; a famous ballet dancer who is now confined to a wheelchair; and Clare
Francis, a well-known adventurer and authoress. I inform the House that one of its Members, my hon.
Friend the Member for Pontypridd (Mr. John), who is a sponsor of the Bill, is a sufferer.
I submit that the case for justice for ME sufferers is proved beyond all doubt. I have tried today to resist
the temptation to speak in strong terms about the failure of the medical profession to recognise myalgic
encephalomyelitis and the failure of the Department of Health and Social Security to recognise the plight
of ME sufferers. The sufferers are denied proper recognition, misdiagnosed, vilified, ridiculed and driven
to great depths of despair. They look to this House for justice. For them all I commend the Bill to the
House.
Question put and agreed to.
Bill ordered to be brought in by Mr. Jimmy Hood, Mr. Alfred Morris, Mr. Jack Ashley, Mr. Brynmor John,
Mr. Don Dixon, Mr. Alan Meale, Dr. Lewis Moonie, Mr. Sam Galbraith, Ms. Harriet Harman, Mr. Jimmy
Wray, Mr. Tom Clarke and Mr. Jerry Hayes.
Look again at the first two paragraphs of the above
motion - and this is from 1988!
The sad fact is that the above motion could have been
brought before parliament today.
Page 8 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://VTBiyqEjd9fDng7QIJqtR6XQUfIzquOpqUr3nWFH7kA$`̵ [>)C]׉EIn fact, this motion from thirty years is far more
advanced than some recent motions that have been
brought before parliament.
And what was the request from this bill from 30 years
ago?
“The Bill is a simple measure which merely
requires the Secretary of State to make an annual
report to Parliament describing the progress that
has been made in investigating the causes,
effects, incidence and treatment of ME.”
An annual report into progress!
Logical, simple, coordinated.
Something that any health department of chief medical
officer might well see as common sense for a disease
that affects so many and costs so much.
Yet thirty years on we have nothing of the sort.
We can wonder how things may have been if this
request had been enacted.
Thirty years have passed since the above motion was
made, and very little has changed, and the scale of the
failure of those chosen to deal with ME is apparent.
So many false starts and disingenuous actions by those
in influential positions!
Since the CMO report on ME from 2002 people in
positions of influence have had adequate opportunity to
support biomedical research into ME. Instead, we
witness dead-end “expert” panels and collaboratives
formed – coming and going every few years, ending in
failure, before another dead end initiative is set up. This
pattern of stalling tactics is there to be seen and should
fool no one.
It is tempting for some to believe those who perform a
180o change of direction to embrace “biomedical
research” into ME, or issue statements that CBT and
GET should not be offered as treatments – despite
having promoted these views for decades.
We do not believe in these epiphanies.
After years of collaborating or supporting those
proponents of the biopsychosocial theories of ME, the
motives for changing of views has more to do with selfinterest
and less than the good of mankind at heart.
Continually offering second chances to organisations
that repeatedly failed people with ME is a perverse form
of Stockholm syndrome. As we stated in our letters to
NICE we would advise people not to believe these
statements and only give trust when one sees concrete
action and permanent change.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
Are we any closer today to joining the pieces together
and creating the bigger picture than we were twelve
years ago when the Gibson Inquiry of 2006 suggested
that “£11 million should be made available for research
to redress the balance in an illness where too much
emphasis had been put on psychological ‘coping
strategies’ ”?
Yes and no.
IiMER were probably one of the first to begin discussing
the idea of international collaboration in research into
ME many years ago as the way forward. We embedded
this concept in all we do following the 2007 conference.
Now this term is being used more and more. Yet, if we
are honest, it is still not how we wished things to be.
If we discount the doubtful areas of research that have
received large funding in the past – what IiMER refers to
as the “Wrong Stuff” – then rather than real
coordinated collaboration what we see at the moment
is still largely sets of disparate research threads and
“territories” which continue to be, to a great extent,
competing rather than joining together.
Perhaps it is just the phase we are going through where
everyone is finding their place in the new world
www.investinme.org
Page 9 of 56
Research into ME
But what of research into ME? This brings us on to our
cover image – which sums up the state of current
research into ME.
׉	 7cassandra://Ju52dy8swVyy-Ae4WoZjadAnmxSZS8Iu5_vnYaBhNzQ&`̵ [>)C]΁[>)C]́{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://olVOyV3_oQRYOdQRzD-IuycM3IVMEwpYsoiCuSDVPGQ p` ׉	 7cassandra://QBeo7zcfp08u8JhRDUQrSb_TBvEerCRjll3VBKmY4Iw͈n`S׉	 7cassandra://ved5Xmby1nFYbh3qUd9is1ST8Oxnd5_55WrsOyWyloE&W`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://bmiJYeIuaHKJHfxQJxVulogwa8bRaRgyVoKJfn6gOCYn̈͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://8uKdAZAPrQH40vzs4CvabwfAVS6COkeklnJS8N0lRvY F`׉	 7cassandra://CX3h7GKqfQo44j1cDZxoidhALYsmqsXlbl_cOPe0bho̓5`S׉	 7cassandra://tWaO1JM7HfujwmWJl3FTtNA_OW_Xc1xXFoTa6uHQmn4&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://bStPXHhcXecn1QnTmDO80mkr7Ahm4hie2IGmc66dzJQ;͠[>)C]Бנ[>)C^^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉Efollowing the decimation of the flawed PACE Trial and
glimpses of realisation by the establishment that things
must change.
IiMER were arguably the first to develop the idea of a
Centre of Excellence for ME in UK – started almost a
decade ago – a while after the Gibson inquiry and after
that charity had sat in interminable meetings with
the NHS for years and which had achiev
by the time we walked out in disgust.
senseless meetings are still going on wi
sign of any progress.
The Gibson Inquiry
recommended an investigation
of those vested interests in ME
that have so manipulated the
research and treatment services. Dr
Gibson suggested a standards
committee because too often patients
had to live with the double burden of
fighting for both their health and their
benefits. This has not occurred. Instead, it has
been left to an independent journalist from outside
the UK to expose the flawed PACE Trial and all of its
underlying intrigue.
Yet, compared to even five years ago there are changes
which have occurred.
Thanks to leading organisations, such as Invest in ME
Research, a great deal of international collaboration has
been initiated, some more funding has been found
(though still mostly from philanthropic and charitable
sources).
The recent NIH award is encouraging but far less than
Invest in ME Research suggested in our response to IOM
and P2P Reports ($250 million dollars for the next five
years).
However, our cover image shows the reality of the state
of research into ME today – lots of pieces to a puzzle,
without anyone really knowing what the bigger picture
will look like, even though there are hints.
The landscape for ME still seems like a jigsaw puzzle
with an historical lack of funding meaning that relatively
few players have been able to start to create the big
picture.
In research it is common for false starts to occur when
attempting to find the cause(s) and treatment(s) for a
disease. The fact that ME has had far fewer false starts,
let alone breakthroughs, than other areas of research is
also an indication of the pitiful attention that has been
given to it by successive governments and health
departments and by disingenuous establishment
representatives.
Biomedical research into ME has not been well served
in UK or elsewhere for a generation. Patients are
(literally) sick of the biopsychosocial approach to ME
and fatigued by the constant false belief that exercise
will make them better.
r lack of funding have been political
n part, and more to do with reasons
ated from researching this disease.
s has had consequences in scaring
off new research interest, in avoiding
ME being brought into
mainstream biomedical research
and lacking any sort of strategy.
gress from seed funding research
ccasional philanthropic means has
ed.
is has done is to create more puzzle
pieces and nothing has been joined together.
So many disparate pieces of research – uncoordinated,
using precious funds raised mainly by patients and poor
use of the comparatively small research capacity
available.
Until very recently nobody has been looking at the
whole puzzle, with genomics technologies now
assisting.
This is why Invest in ME Research has been developing a
strategy since 2010 to develop the UK/European Centre
of Excellence for ME – where a hub of research, based
in Norwich Research Park, can be created to build up
the bigger picture and then add research onto to it as
knowledge develops.
To create hypotheses to establish how things may link
up.
Already, in recent discussions on research, we can see
that our Centre approach is functioning and addressing
other missing aspects of the big picture that have been
allowed to be ignored – such as overall standards and
outcome measures which can be used by all. The basics
are still lacking and there is an urgent need to raise the
standards.
This is why Invest in ME Research has spent so much
effort in facilitating international collaboration between
trustworthy biomedical researchers who wish to work
together – such as the European ME Research Group
(EMERG) concept.
This is why common data elements is required and why
the recent NIH work on that may be crucial to move
forward.
Page 10 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://ved5Xmby1nFYbh3qUd9is1ST8Oxnd5_55WrsOyWyloE&W`̵ [>)C]׉EThis is why we need a specialism in ME – a clinical
consultancy attached to the research.
And this is why we need up to date information that is
not serving the biopsychosocial ideology or some
careers.
These are all elements that Invest in ME Research have
been developing for years, with few resources and with
little support other than from the great supporters that
we have.
It is why we need to complete the
establishment of the foundation for
the Centre of Excellence that we have
started - to join research and create
the future rather than rely on the
status quo that benefits some
organisations and individuals – but not
patients.
An organisation can
achieve a lot in five
years – or it can
achieve nothing.
appreciate.
We need momentum and international collaboration in
research – and this is what Invest in ME Research
provides with its cpd-accredited Colloquiums that are
designed to bring together researchers, clinicians,
patient groups and patients/carers in order to make
progress in research into ME.
This year’s Colloquium has almost one hundred
biomedical researchers from around the world, from all
of the main centres of research into ME and the CDC
and NIH, binding these research elements together and
creating new ones.
The Colloquiums are created by a small charity with
great supporters without support from large
establishment organisations or paid employees doing
the work.
But then the Colloquiums are the real thing – not
carrying any baggage from the wrong stuff or weighed
down by affinities to the BPS lobby.
Moreover, they are successful – often even helping
those who choose not to support the charity.
It is five years since we began funding the first
biomedical research project at Norwich Research
Park.
An organisation can achieve a lot in five years – or it
can achieve nothing. The difference is often down
to individuals – those who have the passion and
dedication to make change - or those who fail to do
anything and are comfortable with seeing no
change, merely making disingenuous platitudes
aimed to assuage patient opinion.
We have been reminded in recent times of how
fragile life is and how healthcare is so important for
a just society. Even “established” diseases that have
comparatively large research funding and correct
The NIH initiative is along the lines we foresaw when we
initiated our proposal for a Centre of Excellence.
The IiMER concept and development is based on a
sound foundation and trusted biomedical researchers
who are not serving their own agendas and has no
baggage associated with it that can cause harm to
people with ME.
The key to making ME a disease that receives the
highest priority is an objective that we need to attain by
establishing basic building blocks and a foundation on
which to progress – funding for proper, high-quality
biomedical research; education about the disease; and
correct perception of the disease. These
aforementioned building blocks happen to be the basic
objectives of the charity.
We do believe that a corner has been turned and more
good news is coming – some from IiMER.
However, time will tell if we are heading for a new dawn
– or watching the stars circle.
perception amongst health departments are not
without issues. We have seen examples of this close up.
The negative early results from the Norwegian Phase III
trial has created a vacuum in research into ME. It
directly affected the charity’s plans for research and
forced a major reassessment of our strategy and that of
our supporters.
We were recently grateful to learn that the pledge that
was provided for the rituximab trial from
the Hendrie Foundation has now been
granted for use by the charity in other,
future biomedical research.
The Hendrie Foundation has been an
incredible supporter showing not only
advice and support but also huge
integrity – a particular attribute that we
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 11 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://tWaO1JM7HfujwmWJl3FTtNA_OW_Xc1xXFoTa6uHQmn4&`̵ [>)C]ҁ[>)C]с{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://eCYeP2enh1aKP_iHSg1w08SvF-UhWgqN79oqN8DSr9k ` ׉	 7cassandra://vxOxDqta-eHEbUsySqKZNFxyl2k5vsAdcdMCwmOO7Ng}`S׉	 7cassandra://UgN4N-YCiwwdnlNsZOfvHkU3DHSV0NIjsAqOKb0tRcg%y`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://WhBn9IUhksJr2kdoKroI0LgiQlVBVD1EEVum1O2OHAAǩ͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://5E_MZVIkM9WmLwhqSr5cA1yR4Uoekp3k3tJDpT1hLxo rf` ׉	 7cassandra://OXlBc4adrGqRBmbeaF5COL4fo4UAKDkTW9UnxzmmeRcu`S׉	 7cassandra://1igm8f_MF24H8ovU-7JH50d4h7UCRmhR45_dL1tjNrc `̵ ׉	 7cassandra://W0EyeNdirnyA7TIy593jL6KQAev9qebVxh-tmcfPZkgͯ̀͠[>)C]ԑנ[>)C^j T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉ENational Institute for
Health and Care Excellence
Guidelines for ME
Correspondence with Professor Mark Baker
Centre for Guidelines Director
Whilst preparing for the planned NICE Stakeholders'
Workshop in January to review the NICE guidelines for
ME it was, in our opinion, necessary to make one
request to NICE which we felt could not be delayed.
We requested that NICE remove the recommendations
for Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Graded
Exercise Treatment (GET) immediately from the existing
guidelines due to the possible deleterious effects on
people with ME.
All of the correspondence can be seen on our website
here - http://www.investinme.org/IIMER-Newslet-180101.shtml.
We
felt that it must have now surely been realised by all
that CBT and GET are inappropriate for treating ME and
in many cases have proven to be deleterious to the
health of patients.
The PACE Trial, which was supposed to prove the
efficacy of CBT and GET for ME, has been sown to be
flawed and a complete waste of taxpayers’ money.
Reanalysis of PACE Trial results by Matthees et al (once
the data was forced to be released from the authors
following a legal challenge) stated -
"This re-analysis demonstrates that the previously
reported recovery rates were inflated by an average of
four-fold."
The PACE Trial is now being used as an example of how
not to perform research – and it is widely seen as
flawed and is ridiculed. Several articles by David Tuller
academic coordinator of the concurrent masters degree
program in public health and journalism at the
University of California, Berkeley, have exposed these
flaws and demonstrated that the PACE Trial cannot be
considered valid.
We believe that a full review of the NICE guidelines, that
may take two years or more, will leave patients exposed
to these harmful treatments (CBT and GET) and it is not
acceptable.
By removing the recommendations for CBT and GET
from the existing guidelines now, with an addendum or
correction of some sort, it could go a long way to
establishing some trust in NICE from patients that was
forfeited when the previous guidelines were published
and the views of patients were ignored.
Thus began an exchange of letters between Professor
Mark Baker of NICE and Invest in ME Research.
The final letter from Professor Baker and our summary
are illustrative of a system that has failed people with
ME in the past and risks continuing to fail them in the
future
By retaining CBT as a recommendation then this only
helps those organisations and individuals who continue
to promote biopsychosocial theories about ME for their
own vested interests and will continue the threat to the
welfare of ME patients.
CBT in the existing NICE guidelines is tightly connected
to GET as it asserts that fear of exercise and false illness
beliefs perpetuate the condition.
If the treatments mentioned (CBT and GET) are already
accepted to be “inappropriate”, “unacceptable” or
“unsuitable” as recommended by the existing guidelines
then your (and NICE’s) duty and obligation to sick and
vulnerable patients is to remove them immediately.
There is no other logical course to take.
Summary from Invest in ME Research 9th
February 2018
Following the exchange of letters with Professor Baker
we have summarised our views on the statements we
have received.
The replies we have received force us to be very
concerned about influences still affecting NICE guideline
development for ME.
 Professor Baker believes withdrawal of the
guidelines would result in the entire support
structure being removed. He has said that the
services that are now provided to patients will be
withdrawn if the existing guidelines are withdrawn
immediately.
Page 12 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://UgN4N-YCiwwdnlNsZOfvHkU3DHSV0NIjsAqOKb0tRcg%y`̵ [>)C]׉E We have said we disagree with that.
The reality is that the services offered currently
are sparse at best and detrimental to patients’
health at worst and rarely meet the needs of
patients.
It now must surely be recognised that, in fact,
there is a distinct lack of services for ME
patients, then we do really think it again
illogical to worry about services disappearing.
To what majority view is Professor Baker
referring? Is the majority view that of doctors?
We doubt it!
Is the “majority view” that of the lobby of
psychiatrists who have so dominated the
debate regarding what guidelines are imposed
on people with ME, and what research is to be
funded?
This seems a very odd conclusion in the
circumstances.
 As all doctors will be told that a new set of
guidelines will appear then new services will
result from that.
CCGs still have a responsibility to patients.
In addition, we have suggested that NICE has a
choice of action – if NICE does not wish to
remove the existing guidelines then just adding
the addendum that CBT and GET are no longer
valid recommendations would be appropriate.
The extremely poor or inappropriate services
currently offered should not be a reason to
retain flawed guidelines that harm patients.
 Professor Baker stated that “the actions of some
service agencies (health care commissioners,
children’s services, schools and benefits agency
amongst others) ”....is not something which NICE
has direct influence over”.
 Professor Baker claims that NICE guidelines are
responsible for services being provided because
they will disappear without them – whilst at the
same time claiming that NICE has no direct
influence over those services using them.
It is hard to follow this reasoning.
 The actions of some service agencies (health
care commissioners, children’s services, schools
and benefits agency amongst others) are the
direct result of the NICE guidelines and the
recommendations therein and NICE must be
held accountable and take responsibility.
 Despite admitting the unpopularity of the guidelines
with patients, which Professor Baker and NICE state
they "clearly now empathise with", Professor Baker
states that the majority view has been that they
have done some good.
 The guidelines must surely be created to
benefit patients.
Professor Baker admits that they are unpopular
with patients. Yet patients are only offered
empathy - not action.
Mere words being thrown around without any
substantiation or detail is not just careless - in
this situation it is disingenuous and maybe even
dishonest.
If Professor Baker and NICE state that a majority
view supports the retention of the existing
guidelines then they must provide details of
whom that majority consists of.
For it is not amongst patients.
 Professor Baker believes that the guidelines
legitimise the diagnosis.
 Yet how could that be when few services have
been offered, when the services that are
offered are inappropriate and when Professor
Baker acknowledges the horror stories
confronting him where patients are not treated
seriously?
How can it be when the diagnosis of ME is so
unreliable and unclear?
 In short, we contend that the NICE guidelines
have done nothing to legitimise the disease.
 In fact, they have maintained an ignorance of
the disease and allowed patients to be harmed -
and continue to allow patients to be harmed.
 Legitimation is not what patients feel.
 We also contend that doctors have been ill
served by these existing guidelines and cannot
help their patients.
After two or three decades of seeing this
disease mishandled and starved of funding for
proper research then we can attest to the fact
that it has been anything but legitimised.
Even the main protagonists of the BPS ideology,
an ideology that has so completely raped this
illness with its misinformation and vested
interests, have stated that they do not see ME
as being a disease – but instead a behavioural
illness that can be cured by quack treatments.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 13 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://1igm8f_MF24H8ovU-7JH50d4h7UCRmhR45_dL1tjNrc `̵ [>)C]ց[>)C]Ձ{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://qGBNn1wwqCaiBqEGiovHuEOBL5po0NckxVUUs0U0OEk |` ׉	 7cassandra://BJPHyvSeitF5FUOGQ5OCwkNNlxoWyAhh-i3vaKlW7hAz`S׉	 7cassandra://zR6vMXUaOfV5Ue9CGNywkbLwYQaTLq3DdXWfE6Qu19w!`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://o463pqHNed65NvawzS9v0TO0G0Ua6GYBgYdZDDxs2Cwͳ̀͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://95knov93KJuudHEZHv-XlWmUsP3yZRQIAcP_tZWi3xk /` ׉	 7cassandra://6E-fitQ33q5PEJa60-ZCDUGarqP7vshsN8va4qZ7tjḾ`S׉	 7cassandra://DLkNjAkr3M8yx2UwYLAPFUs50Dta0D2c4sqNlJ50nWQ%E`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Dg-t13dnlSDL5IparObon7x1cclm1e0PhY6_JUkxS0sͮ̔͠[>)C]ؑנ[>)C^f T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EG The existing NICE guidelines have done nothing
to legitimise or help ME patients and the
services that are on offer are mostly
inappropriate or sparse – influenced totally by
the existing NICE guidelines.
 Professor Baker has stated that the existing
guidance is carefully worded with the implication
that doctors are somehow not only aware of the
“nuances” mentioned by Professor Baker, but are
also understanding them.
 We have to disagree.
If NICE recommend CBT and GET and if these
therapies harm patients then no amount of
crafted wordsmanship in the world will avoid
the situation where patients are harmed.
 We have stated that the “nuances” and
“craftsmanship” of the wording in the existing
NICE guidelines to which Professor Baker refers
are lost on doctors, and on almost everyone,
except NICE.
 Professor Baker states that the (existing) guidance is
very carefully worded to protect patients and is
"deeply concerned" at the actions of some service
agencies (health care commissioners, children’s
services, schools and benefits agency amongst
others) which clearly do not represent the wording
and intentions of the guidance.
Professor Baker then states that this is not
something which NICE has direct influence over and
can only suggest that we direct our ire on those
responsible for irrational decisions and the
misquoting of our guidance.
 This is an astonishing statement to make - and
far from true.
 Of course NICE directly influences what doctors
prescribe.
 It is NICE who are responsible for the
recommendations which doctors are compelled
to take into account.
 This statement demonstrates that NICE still
really has no idea at how much damage these
existing guidelines have done, and no idea of
what damage they continue to do.
 Professor Baker suggested that we direct our ire on
those responsible for irrational decisions and the
misquoting of our guidance.
 Our "ire" is actually directed at those
responsible for irrational decisions or decisions
that make ME patients worse.
Page 14 of 56
www.investinme.org
Professor Baker admitted that the guidelines
would be replaced entirely.
Professor Baker has agreed that CBT and GET
are perceived and experienced by patients as
harmful.
We believe that Professor Baker accepts the
claims that patients have been harmed by CBT
and GET
It therefore defies logic to retain harmful
recommendations for two more years or morewhen
it is clearly understood that patients are
being harmed by these recommendations.
 Professor Baker stated that the PACE Trial has had
no effect on the recommendations of NICE (despite
last summer the surveillance review quoting the
PACE Trial).
 In our letter to Professor Baker we did not refer
to PACE as being the base of evidence for NICE
guidelines.
We only intended to refer to PACE in case
Professor Baker came back to us to deflect our
argument that CBT and GET need to be dropped
by referring to PACE.
 Yet NICE did use it to base its decisions in the
surveillance review of 2017
 We have stated it is illogical, and harmful to
patients, that NICE retain the existing guidelines
when it is admitted they are not fit for purpose, are
not what patients want and potentially harm
patients, and will be discarded in any case.
 NICE must follow the USA and remove
recommendations for using CBT and GET as
treatments for ME with an addendum to the
existing guidelines.
 We have requested that this addendum is
communicated to other healthcare agencies around
the world who have misguidedly used the existing
NICE guidelines as any basis for their own treatment
of ME patients.
 We began this series of letters to Professor Baker
due to the comments attributed to him and NICE.
These comments have made us wonder how these
would be translated into action.
 Professor Baker’s reply to us – a few hours before
the stakeholder meeting – clearly seemed to be
contradictory to the comments that Professor Baker
made to the participants in the stakeholder meeting
and raised major concerns for us as to the actual
way NICE were intending to proceed.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://zR6vMXUaOfV5Ue9CGNywkbLwYQaTLq3DdXWfE6Qu19w!`̵ [>)C]׉E This, and further replies to our initial request to
remove CBT and GET from existing guidelines,
baffled us.
 The fact that Professor Baker has stated that the
existing NICE guidelines will be torn up indicates
this realisation that NICE and the existing guidelines
have failed.
 What patients have said has proven to be true. Yet
NICE did not listen.
 We detect even now that these messages still have
not been taken on board.
 Comments such as “we will tear up” the existing
guidelines need to be translated into immediate
action.
 We have words from NICE - but no action.
 NICE must separate the decision on the
continuation of the existing guidelines from the
review of them.
These are two separate matters – linked by the fact that
NICE has already decided to tear up the existing
guidelines and that Professor Baker accepts that CBT
and GET are harmful to ME patients.
 The existing guidelines must be
withdrawn or NICE must add an
addendum that CBT and GET are no
longer recommendations.
 The refusal to add an addendum to
existing guidelines to remove BOTH
CBT and GET is illogical in the
context of the remarks made by
Professor Baker/NICE.
To avoid further harm to patients they would remove
the drug immediately.
 This is the same situation that NICE now face with
CBT and GET for ME.
 Professor Baker has written to IiMER that he
“will discuss at the highest level at NICE what
remedial action to help patients we can take in the
meantime.”
We hope that this will result in issuing the
addendum to the existing guidelines that removes
CBT and GET as recommendations for ME – or
otherwise the withdrawal of the existing NICE
guidelines for ME immediately.
 We do not share the euphoric tributes to NICE for
arranging a workshop where the audience is told
everything that they want to hear.
Our recommendation to ME
patients and their families is
not to trust comments by NICE
and not to trust NICE at all –
until the day arrives that NICE
actually deliver and
The refusal to withdraw the existing
guidelines whilst they are torn up and
new guidelines are developed carries a
level of illogical reasoning.
Professor Baker has admitted the existing guidelines are
unfit, he has accepted the horror stories of patients
being coerced into trying CBT and GET and being
harmed by them, he has heard of insurance companies
denying benefits when people refuse to agree to try
these flawed theories recommended by NICE.
operationalise guidelines for
ME that really do reflect the
reality and needs of ME
patients and their families.
 Years of experience of establishment tactics
involving wasting several years on initiatives that
are already designed to deliver nothing of
consequence have made us wary
of the corrupt systems in place.
 Based on their track record
NICE do not yet deserve any such
trust.
 ME patients have had very little
bargaining power over the last
decades thanks to the insidious
and immoral network of BPS
protagonists who have
influenced all policies on ME in
the UK and taken over decision making in weak and
apathetic research councils and government
departments.
In all of this how can it be logical, or moral, or safe, to
retain these existing guidelines, and especially the
disastrous and damaging recommendations for CBT and
GET?
If a drug is recommended by NICE for a disease and
some time later the drug is found to be harming
patients then surely NICE would take steps to remove
that drug.
They would not retain it as a recommendation, to be in
use for two years whilst they developed a new guideline
for the disease.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
 What patients have been able to retain is the ability
to give or withhold their trust in new initiatives that
promise change to improve their lives. In the world
of social media, where the playing field has been
levelled in recent times and allowed patients to
challenge biased research, this provision of trust by
the patient community can be a useful commodity.
 We therefore do not give NICE our trust.
Our recommendation to ME patients and their families
is not to trust comments by NICE and not to trust NICE
at all – until the day arrives that NICE actually deliver
and operationalise guidelines for ME that really do
www.investinme.org
Page 15 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://DLkNjAkr3M8yx2UwYLAPFUs50Dta0D2c4sqNlJ50nWQ%E`̵ [>)C]ځ[>)C]ف{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://JzbOKuC24RcC5WKyBAOgED5MM3WHJio5DDfzsbF2Bco ` ׉	 7cassandra://8j6SWnomYVqXJ7-aPz5uRJdHFrT7nY3bOzqmuE1tAgEy`S׉	 7cassandra://feQQlYgOpeQK5FFCrrjVrMBobqIvvvZbrJzt0do_6PI"Z`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://0pvEFnbMNLwpDngAEM_VxxiX4R-F68s6p1pxXfS2T5wΨ̐͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Hv7Sl3-kOjH-o1n_JXWNXdMKRaM5crsIZklrbtkP8Ls `׉	 7cassandra://eDeT14Qm6EHjc66iZndyIn0QelxgEaWzLIze15ah_Mgz`S׉	 7cassandra://7pTymK9wDUoeLCj4Hx5FpViFqYOJqlDWcOlQz26Jd-E#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://K1MFCsNs5soac_2FJwD2dQhYEVNz2T6FZXv7dNq9e28 ͠[>)C]ܔנ[>)C^z T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^y ̤9ׁHmailto:info@investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^x ̱9ׁHhttp://pastconferences.shׁׁЈנ[>)C^w ܁!9ׁH  http://www.investinme.eu/IIMEC13ׁׁЈ׉Ereflect the reality and needs of ME patients and their
families.
Currently that date would be somewhere in two years
time.
NICE can bring forward that date by acceding to our
request to add an addendum immediately to the
existing guidelines to remove recommendations for
BOTH CBT and GET - or by withdrawing the existing
guidelines for ME immediately, and issuing a press
release to doctors in UK and abroad that NICE has found
the existing guidelines to be unsatisfactory, that they
are going to be torn up and completely revised.
If NICE do this then trust will surely be given by ME
patients.
Sir Andrew Dillon might even find it within himself, on
behalf of NICE, to issue an apology to ME patients for
the wasted years and the distress and the harm which
the existing guideline recommendations have caused.
If NICE do not take this eminently logical and fair
decision immediately then there is no reason to give
that trust.
We really do hope that NICE now act in a logical and fair
way with the patients in mind - uninfluenced by the evil
of the BPS network that has been allowed to flourish
over the last decades.
Add the addendum to remove CBT and GET – or Tear It
Up!
Now!
Finally, look at a communication below, from a patient,
that has come to Invest in ME Research in the last
month - a letter which neatly describes the appalling
consequences of recommending CBT and GET -
something for which Professor Baker and NICE cannot
pass on responsibility to others.
This is the result of NICE's recommendations in their
existing guidelines - and this just underlines everything
we have been trying to make Professor Baker, and NICE,
understand.
This letter alone is a testament to the failure of NICE to
help people with ME and their families - and a decade
on from the creation of the existing guidelines there is
enough of an indication that no lessons have been
learnt - or any real intent is underway to correct the
failings.
Throughout our correspondence it seems clear that
Professor Baker is oblivious to the elephant in the NICE
room - no matter how much damage it is doing to
patients.
NICE must serve the needs of patients.
Page 16 of 56
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Unfortunately, we fear that NICE will not do as we
suggest and will not act for the interests of patients.
We can only surmise that more influential forces are still
present, continuing to force more CBT and GET on to
patients.
If that were so it would be shameful.
NICE, and those deciding on the future for people with
ME, must be held accountable if more people are
harmed by retaining the existing damaging
recommendations for using CBT and GET for another
two or more years.
Further Reading
1/
2/
NICE Campaigning
Notes on BPS Model
From a Patient: To Invest in ME Research
I have been closely following your continuing
correspondence in relation to the call for revision of the
NICE guidelines.
In particular the removal of CBT/GET.
I have had M.E. for almost four years and am quite
severely affected.
I am housebound most of the time and often bedbound.
I was previously a 'high flyer' (my neurologists' words)
and a civil servant with a social work background.
Due to my illness I am no longer able to work, and have
just been through the very painful process of applying
for ill health retirement.
My pension provider (through the (name provided)
pension scheme) has a two tier system for pension
awards in the circumstance of ill health retirement.
I have undergone five medical assessments during the
process and have been assessed as permanently
incapacitated in terms of employment.
However, as I have not completed the treatment, as
recommended in the NICE guidelines, I cannot obtain
the higher rate pension. The treatment namely being
CBT and GET.
I have engaged with the specialist M.E. service in
(location provided) but was unable to continue as
attending sessions made me more unwell.
I tried CBT through my local mental health service,
attending three out of six sessions, this made me more
unwell and put me back into bed for weeks. I am in
receipt of the highest rate of both ESA and PIPS.
These were both awarded following the first medical
assessment, which I understand is not the position for
far too many M.E. sufferers.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://feQQlYgOpeQK5FFCrrjVrMBobqIvvvZbrJzt0do_6PI"Z`̵ [>)C]׉EI have taken my ill health retirement case to appeal
within my pension service.
The position of the original decision not to award me
the higher rate pension has been
upheld on the grounds that I have
not completed CBT and GET.
which takes around three hours to get me ready for,
with lots and lots of assistance from my wife, who is also
my carer and carer to our 18 year old disabled son.
My pension provider will now
escalate my appeal to stage two of
the process.
However, the decision makes it clear
that, in order to succeed, I need to
prove that I have completed CBT and
GET.
I am faced with a position that is unfair and takes away
any right I have not to undergo treatment that
exacerbates my illness.
I have had support from my union (name provided),
however they aren't familiar with the fight that M.E.
suffers like myself face.
Please please continue
the fight for those of us
struggling to do it for
ourselves
I often find it difficult to construct
challenges around my illness as i
simply can't find the words due to my
diminished cognitive functioning.
This is one of the hardest symptoms
to deal with. The loss of intellect. It's
in there somewhere, I'm in there
somewhere, but I just can't get the
words to make sense.
It is imperative that someone listens to our voices and I
am so thankful for your determination in challenging the
medical profession around our treatment options.
It will probably be too late to make any difference to my
case.
I have previously had a life where i travelled up and
down the country for my career, helping to make a
difference in the lives of vulnerable children.
I had authority and was very much a professional.
I have always worked within the public sector, both local
and central government.
I had a lively social life, always on the go with my
partner and family.
Now my life revolves around my bedroom. I rely on
pillows, blackout curtains and strong medication to try
and control my pain. If I journey out, it is to visit my G.P.
I hope that in the future no one will be penalised for not
undergoing treatment that is harmful to their health as
a result of your campaigning; that CBT and GET will be
removed from the guidelines with immediate effect,
rather than waiting for years while the guidelines are
revised.
Please please continue the fight for those of us
struggling to do it for ourselves
Little more needs to be said.
IiMER Conference DVDs
The Invest in ME Research conference DVDs are
professionally filmed and authored DVD sets
consisting of four discs in Dolby stereo and available
in PAL (European) or NTSC (N. America) format. They
contain all of the presentations from IiMER
International ME/CFS Conferences (2006 – 2013).
Also included in the DVD sets are interviews with ME
presenters, news stories and round-table discussions.
The Invest in ME Research conference DVDs have
been distributed to more than 20 countries and are
available as an educational tool – useful for
healthcare staff, researchers, scientists, educational
specialists, media, ME support groups and people
with ME and their carers/parents. Full details can be
found at http://www.investinme.eu/IIMEC13pastconferences.shtml
or via emailing Invest in ME
Research at info@investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 17 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://7pTymK9wDUoeLCj4Hx5FpViFqYOJqlDWcOlQz26Jd-E#`̵ [>)C]ށ[>)C]݁{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://q_oYLACYRU2Da7HmSnAH5kfIb8KyioiYe_o91H11jFk M.`׉	 7cassandra://q7XpkG10C0pP7NwzxH3b9EqvJ-TTNdqs-6b0fkbDK3U͈M`S׉	 7cassandra://jrT97O-X2ybdRgAi-Est1a5hhby5doWSKuF4uUdrMZA'`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://K2wcimVG4FEjkIwRVGEDzl0csKsIqk1Gk1ja9hq51Vk ̸͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://7zaw49jEyDs43RtOTN0Gin8x-zcP3rcTLPkZjPCzsGs `׉	 7cassandra://ReNifgliK6YJwUNbK5zNtTwxZQg_6HWk5GUlxIALFuwn`S׉	 7cassandra://FB_fn1P2C27xtCHyZhhDyS8ZSK2Yv-QjR6SQTwXMf9o"R`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://1ro4LnsVaYOYLcZEg4_U4BknxuFqs15SFaurtaY-VlE͠[>)C]נ[>)C^c T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^b ׁ
9ׁH #https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/66615/ׁׁЈ׉EResearch News from
Katharine Seton
“Defining autoimmune aspects of
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS)”
I would like to introduce myself to you all.
I am Katharine Seton, a 22-year-old PhD
student and I have just began the second year
of my PhD.
I originally came from Cumbria and studied
Biomedical Sciences at Newcastle University before
starting my PhD funded by Invest in ME Research.
I have always had a strong interest in the immune
system and ME research.
I have a personal investment and interest in ME
research, because in January 2009 I was diagnosed with
ME, when I was just 13 years old.
It was both physically and emotionally challenging to
make the transition from a very active and musical child,
regularly competing in basketball, swimming,
orienteering, hockey, netball and athletic events, to a
child too ill to attend school more then 9 hours a week.
Up until my ME diagnosis, I had always dreamt of being
a stunt woman and having a very active career.
When I developed ME, I had to cut out sport, music and
socialising, which meant I became focussed on my
education.
I realised after I managed to achieve 11 GCSE’s grades
A* to A whilst attending school on a part time basis that
I am academically able, something I did not realise prior
to my ME diagnosis because I was always so focussed on
sport.
It was only once I was at University, studying my
undergraduate degree, that I came to the realisation
that I could contribute to the ME research field.
In the summer of my second year, I had a Wellcome
Trust funded Vacation Studentship, researching the
heritability of ME with Professor Julia Newton at
Newcastle University.
I loved every minute of this placement, although it was
computer based, and after this valuable work
experience I realised that I would love to contribute to
laboratory research into the cause of ME.
I aspire to help find a cure for ME … so watch this space!
The research that I am focussing on in my PhD is the
immune system and its interaction with gut microbes,
specifically, whether there is an inappropriate immune
response triggered by bacteria that has leaked across
the gut wall.
There is current evidence of an inappropriate immune
response and gastrointestinal involvement in ME
Page 18 of 56
www.investinme.org
patients and I endeavour to find out whether there is a
link between the two, and if this link is blocked, would it
lead to symptom improvement.
As ME patients experience a wide range of symptoms,
and have different onset patterns, it is a scientifically
challenging area of research to study, often yielding
different results between different research groups.
The first year of my PhD was focussed on creating a plan
for recruitment, sample collection and sample analysis.
This study has received ethical approval from the Health
Research Authority, and participant recruitment is
underway.
It has been agreed that this study will focus on the
recruitment of severe ME patients and their household
controls, recruited through East Coast Community
Healthcare Centre and through Dr Bansal at Epsom and
St Helier CFS Clinic.
As this is a longitudinal study, blood and stool samples
will be collected on up to six occasions.
Now that we have received ethical approval for this
study, the second year of my PhD will be focussed on
participant recruitment, sample collection and
processing, and sample analysis, hopefully leading to
the generation of some interesting, valuable, results.
Katharine Seton
- Quadram Institute, Norwich
A Study Update
Posted by: Katharine Seton Post Date: 8 February 2018
With regards to the human study being undertaken at
the Quadram Institute, “Defining autoimmune aspects
of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome” progress has been made, despite hold ups.
50% of the target number of patients have volunteered
to participate in the study.
The main study obstacle was identifying a trained
person for blood sample collection.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://jrT97O-X2ybdRgAi-Est1a5hhby5doWSKuF4uUdrMZA'`̵ [>)C]׉EA trained person has been identified at the Quadram
Institute to take blood.
An amendment application and approval from the
Health Research Authority has been obtained, and a
contract delegating study responsibilities between the
University of East Anglia and the Quadram Institute is
underway.
Once this is in place, home visits and sample collection
can commence.
Despite not being able to collect samples yet, major
progress in method development and optimisation has
been made.
This was done using banked samples from Daniel
Vipond’s PhD.
Between (fellow PhD students) Fiona Newberry, ShenYuan
Hsieh and myself we have optimised the following:
isolation of virus particles from stool samples, viral
identification based on unique sequences, and a
method to screen for antibody responses to gut
microbes.
I have recently had a review with my PhD supervisors,
the purpose of which is to identify how much progress
has been made.
I received positive comments that have given me some
added motivation: “The quality of the work undertaken
to date is also very good with considerable careful and
detailed effort being put into evaluating multiple
experimental variables to optimise the assay”.
Looking forward, the next couple of months entail home
visits, sample collection and sample processing, all of
which take a considerable amount of time.
While this is occurring, method development will be
continued and progressed.
In addition, we have also been very kindly invited to
give a presentation at the Shropshire ME Group
Conference in May.
This is a great opportunity to communicate our research
to the public, and to engage with the public to hear
their thoughts.
The move in date to the new Quadram Institute building
is now August 2018.
This provides us with plenty of time to do the first round
of sample collection.
On a finishing note, I would really appreciate those who
received a study invitation, and are interested in
participating in the study to please contact myself soon
to register your interest.
Bye for now –
Katharine
Katharine Seton - Quadram Institute, Norwich
A New Paper from Fiona Newberry et al
IiMER-funded PhD student Fiona Newberry has recently
had a paper published - “Does the microbiome and
virome contribute to myalgic
encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome?” – with
an interesting observation
“..as the number of microbiome studies increases, the
need for greater consistency in study design and
analysis also increases.
Comparisons between
different ME/CFS
microbiome studies
are difficult because of
differences in patient
selection and
diagnosis criteria,
sample processing,
genome sequencing
and downstream
bioinformatics
analysis. It is therefore
important that
microbiome studies
adopt robust,
reproducible and
consistent study
design to enable more
reliable and valid comparisons and conclusions to be
made between studies. "
https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/66615/
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 19 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://FB_fn1P2C27xtCHyZhhDyS8ZSK2Yv-QjR6SQTwXMf9o"R`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://1Au9DPg_wbEGwgKybTFYiAT7rwmTt3smG29KN5gyL2w >`׉	 7cassandra://9ZZ0GW12TANk_XV03DJCfzDaLrSXKiLN1qgcnLsQTyIt|`S׉	 7cassandra://3TAFEyjrmTQh8klS_Q4iMoSvm64C73cqj8BswTc0gBQ!`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://0PWCm3Dv6UoV7s1SEunWDmPjB1rc_qkKDP81SbpRZmǧ͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://P4tS1BKSEVBkCWXU89GSaW8w2YQVRHRsyy9q9LtOR9Q >E`׉	 7cassandra://KBHk-Tt1EjZE9kYcB0zEEmkXxEhcakqMOI8VnNOYPd0ͅ`S׉	 7cassandra://Lsd0IRr3vbEZd9YohC7lgealp50do_qgSmgfnBWPLvM&Y`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://VZtKBhfkcVRBfiiE1E637357agvz9RjKmko6FzeONloť͠[>)C]נ[>)C^| T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EfThinking the Future - Young/Early Career
Researchers for ME Research into Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis
Prior to the conference Invest in ME Research organised
the inaugural meeting of a new international network to
encourage young and early career researchers to this
field.
Despite the seriousness of this disease still very little
biomedical research is funded or performed on ME.
An international family of researchers working together
has been facilitated by the Invest in ME Research
Biomedical Research into ME Colloquiums.
However, the charity felt that we needed to do more to
attract and encourage new, younger researchers or
those at the early stages of their careers.
To ensure that a foundation of biomedical research into
ME can be sustained and to encourage new ideas from
new areas then we cannot rely just on the family of
researchers that has been built up from all parts of the
world. We need to draw in knowledge and expertise
from other areas – as we have been doing for many
years with our Colloquiums and international
conferences. Importantly, we also need to encourage
new researchers – and young researchers.
Now in its eighth year we wish to introduce another
level to the Biomedical Research into ME Colloquium to
address these points.
As part of the European ME Research Group (EMERG)
concept - which is building a network of close European
biomedical research collaboration to make rapid
advances in research and funding for ME - we
introduced a new idea. Thinking the Future.
An Early Careers Researcher is defined an individual
who is within a few years of the award of their PhD or
equivalent professional training, or their first academic
appointment.
IiMER has created this additional event to encapsulate
the need to bring in new faces and new ideas to the
field of ME research - and initiate a network for new
research talent.
The charity made this event free for young/ecr
researchers in order to facilitate the establishment of
these links and it is open to postgraduate students and
postdocs involved in biomedical research, and also
medical students with an interest in biomedical
research into ME.
Page 20 of 56
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We will establish this international forum where
research into ME can be discussed, ideas can be
generated and a network built to allow opportunities
for those young or early career researchers who are
already involved in research into ME, or involved in
another research area which may be of relevance to
understanding ME. Importantly, it will provide more
awareness of the exciting possibilities of researching
this disease – for the betterment of patients and carers.
To make this an international group with events being
held elsewhere, and in other countries, we have
contacted research groups and our friends in other likeminded
charities and organisations who have the same
objectives as us.
We welcome all support for this and hope that more
early career researchers and research departments will
begin to appreciate the interesting and challenging
opportunities that exist for biomedical research in this
field.
Help us Think the Future - for ME
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://3TAFEyjrmTQh8klS_Q4iMoSvm64C73cqj8BswTc0gBQ!`̵ [>)C]׉EQuadram Institute
Bioscience News
Opening fully in mid-2018, the Quadram Institute will
be at the forefront of a new era of food and health
research, working at the interface between food
science, gut biology and health.
It will develop solutions to worldwide challenges in
food-related disease and human health, with a lifelong
focus from establishing optimum health at birth through
to ensuring we age healthily. The Quadram Institute is
assembling interdisciplinary teams and working with
appropriate international organisations to address these
major issues. Scientists and clinicians working together
under one roof will deliver innovative new healthcare
solutions.
Based on the Norwich Research Park, it is a partnership
between Quadram Institute Bioscience, the University
of East Anglia (UEA) and the Norfolk and Norwich
University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. This brings
together excellent
research, teaching and
patient care,
synergising
collaborations between
the 3,000 scientists and
clinicians working in six
world class
organisations clustered
on the Norwich
Research Park.
This concentration of
interdisciplinary
expertise is needed if
we are to solve
complex health
problems facing
society. The Quadram Institute, supported by the
charity Invest in ME Research, has established a
programme of biomedical research addressing the
complex causes of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME).
Our ME studies are led by Professor Simon Carding, who
leads QI’s Gut Microbes and Health research
programme, and is also Professor of Mucosal
Immunology at the Norwich Medical School at the
University of East Anglia. The research builds on recent
evidence that ME/CFS has a basis in the immune
system. Our focus is on the interactions between the
immune system and the microbiota in the gut. Many ME
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
sufferers also have gut-related conditions and several
studies have recorded altered microbiota communities.
The gut is a major focal point of the body’s immune
system. It must deal with a constant barrage of
potentially harmful microbes taken into the body with
our food, whilst also supporting a large community of
microbes that benefit health – the microbiota. Part of
the Quadram Institute’s mission is to understand how
this balance is maintained, and how changes in this
balance lead to diseased states. One aspect of this
includes the study of what happens when the lining of
the gut, the intestinal epithelium, fails to act as a barrier
and members of the microbiota are able to cross. This is
known as leaky gut syndrome and may be important in
a number of conditions, including ME/CFS, as it
abnormally presents microbes to the immune system
and potentially triggering an autoimmune response.
With partners at University College London, we are
looking at the nature of autoimmune reaction in
patients with ME.
An important aspect of our research into links between
the microbiota and ME/CFS is to understand better the
role played by viruses in the microbiota. Much research
has focused on the
bacterial populations,
but the microbiota
contains many other
organisms, including
fungi and viruses, as
well as bacteriophages
(viruses that infect
bacteria). Viruses in
particular are of
interest in the study of
ME/CFS as there has
been evidence
suggesting a viral role
in triggering ME/CFS
without being able to
identify specific causes.
Working with
colleagues at UEA, we are looking to fully study the viral
component of the microbiome, the virome, and its
relevance to ME/CFS.
Much of our work to date has been supported by the
charity, Invest in ME Research, who, as well as raising
funds for biomedical research are working to raise
awareness of the condition and supporting collaborative
efforts across the EU to tackle ME. One target is to
establish a Centre for ME Research, building on
excellent biomedical research, to act as a hub for
European research and treatment of ME.
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://Lsd0IRr3vbEZd9YohC7lgealp50do_qgSmgfnBWPLvM&Y`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://kT6eSVXJ4vU1Xe54NvtbIzXjM6h3borUk8XPo9dqJRg ;` ׉	 7cassandra://Kn7mAd90DN0DBVZWdVGvmCITjNbhaGpKbiCFPTF67QU͓`S׉	 7cassandra://xK6saBonNzeznahzYxZpnlLwqRbrIgr5CPKnxjfPxDA&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://OeK9A_dsv12fHU-_MjLubs0ie4lCLo8V5VIm2I7ODMk+̴͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://N6lPe8LIHqx_i52t3YtM70OLWqOVApaYaIFTeUjmZlI ` ׉	 7cassandra://80p4mQrDnL6wyukJBKtgWL2Q9Ffj2jvN6eygJBd7Z4U`S׉	 7cassandra://Gn1CWxIgsou_A8mXWE-Oodt_AFkGYbESvgJwj2Q8Lzs#h`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://q8VYyrQy6iYc71yUP5xDY9XKfGCCnsPXYEhLeHptXL4 "̤͠[>)C]נ[>)C^{ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EUK Biobank: An Open Access Resource for Identifying the Causes of
a Wide Range of Complex Diseases of Middle and Old Age
Cathie Sudlow1,2, John Gallacher3, Naomi Allen2,4,
Valerie Beral4, Paul Burton5,
John Danesh6, Paul Downey7, Paul Elliott7, Jane
Green4, Martin Landray4, Bette Liu8,
Paul Matthews7, Giok Ong9, Jill Pell10, Alan Silman11,
Alan Young4, Tim Sprosen4,
Tim Peakman2, Rory Collins2,4*
1 University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom,
2 UK Biobank, Stockport, United Kingdom,
3 University of Cardiff, Cardiff, United Kingdom, 4
University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom,
5 University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom, 6
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom,
7 Imperial College, London, United Kingdom, 8
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia,
9 University of Warwick, Warwick, United Kingdom, 10
University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom,
11 University of Manchester, Manchester, United
Kingdom
* enquiries@ukbiobank.ac.uk
Copyright: © 2015 Sudlow et al.
The challenge of understanding the determinants of
common life-threatening and disabling conditions is
substantial. These conditions are typically caused by a
combination of lifestyle, environmental, and genomic
factors, with individually modest effects and complex
interactions, the detection and quantification of which
require studies with large numbers of disease cases.
While retrospective case-control studies of particular
diseases [1] or existing prospective studies of particular
risk factors can help to address this challenge [2,3], a
complementary approach is to establish large
prospective cohorts designed to study a much wider
range of known and novel risk factors for a wide range
of diseases [4]. Prospective studies can assess
exposures before the onset and treatment of disease,
diseases that are not readily investigated by
retrospective studies, and both the adverse and
beneficial effects of a specific exposure on the
lifetime risks of different diseases.
UK (United Kingdom) Biobank is a very large,
population-based prospective study, established
to allow detailed investigations of the genetic and
nongenetic determinants of the diseases of middle and
old age [5,6]. It aims to combine extensive and precise
assessment of exposures with comprehensive follow-up
and characterisation of many different health-related
outcomes, as well as to promote innovative science by
maximising access to the resource. Recruitment of
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Summary Points
• UK Biobank is a very large and detailed
prospective study with over 500,000 participants
aged 40–69 years when recruited in 2006–2010.
• The study has collected and continues to collect
extensive phenotypic and genotypic detail about
its participants, including data from
questionnaires, physical measures, sample assays,
accelerometry, multimodal imaging, genome-wide
genotyping and longitudinal follow-up for a wide
range of health-related outcomes.
• Wide consultation; input from scientific,
management, legal, and ethical partners; and
industrial-scale, centralised processes have been
essential to the development of this resource.
• UK Biobank is available for open access, without
the need for collaboration, to any bona fide
researcher who wishes to use it to conduct healthrelated
research for the benefit of the public.
500,000 participants and the collection of an
unprecedented wealth of baseline data and samples
were completed in 2010. Activity is now focused on
further phenotyping of participants and their health
outcomes and on providing access to researchers from
around the world.
Cohort Size
The large size of the cohort was based on statistical
power calculations for nested case-control
studies [7], showing that 5,000–10,000 cases of any
particular condition would be required for
the reliable detection of odds ratios (ORs) for the main
effects of different exposures of 1.3–1.5
(the upper end of the range reported from genomewide
association studies of various conditions
[8]), and around 20,000 cases for detection of
interactions with ORs of at least 2.0. To observe
such large numbers of cases of particular diseases
within a reasonable follow-up period, prospective
cohorts need very large numbers of participants.
Projected numbers of cases of a range of common
conditions expected to occur among 500,000 UK
Biobank participants during 20 years of follow-up (Table
1) suggest that reliable assessment of the main
determinants of most of these conditions (and others
that are similarly common) should be possible during
the current decade [6,9]. The age range for inclusion of
40–69 years represented a pragmatic compromise
between participants being old enough for there to be
sufficient incident health outcomes during the early
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://xK6saBonNzeznahzYxZpnlLwqRbrIgr5CPKnxjfPxDA&`̵ [>)C]׉Eyears of follow-up and young enough for the initial
assessment to occur before incipient disease had a
material impact on exposures.
Data Availability
Data from the Baseline Assessment
The 500,000 participants were assessed between 2006
and 2010 in 22 assessment centres throughout the UK,
covering a variety of different settings to provide
socioeconomic and ethnic heterogeneity and urban–
rural mix. This ensured a broad distribution across all
exposures to allow the reliable detection of
generalisable associations between baseline
characteristics and health outcomes. The assessment
visit comprised electronic signed consent; a selfcompleted
touch-screen questionnaire; brief computerassisted
interview; physical and functional measures;
and collection of blood, urine, and saliva (Table
2).Multiple aliquots of different sample fractions
are stored in UK Biobank’s automated laboratory,
allowing for a wide range of future assays [10].
Data from Additional Assessments to
Enhance Phenotyping
UK Biobank is conducting a range of additional
phenotyping assessments in all (or large subsets)
of the participants. Data are already available both from
a detailed dietary web questionnaire [11], completed
up to four times by over 200,000 participants, and from
the first repeat of the entire baseline assessment in
around 20,000 participants [12]. Over the
comingmonths and years, further data will become
available from: a range of biochemical assays and
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
genome-wide genotyping of baseline samples from all
participants;Web-based questionnaires to assess
specific characteristics in more detail (e.g., cognitive
function, occupational history); and, in subsets of
100,000 participants, collection of data from physical
activity monitors and multi-modal imaging (Table 3).
Data from Longitudinal Follow-Up for
Health-Related Outcomes
Follow-up is conducted chiefly through linkages to
routinely available national datasets. Data are already
available on over 8,500 deaths, over 75,000 prevalent
and incident cancers, and over 600,000 hospital
admissions, while linkages are planned to a range of
other datasets, including primary care, cancer screening
data, and disease-specific registers. In addition, to
reduce misclassification and increase biological
specificity of health outcomes, UK Biobank is developing
methods for accurate identification and detailed
phenotyping of outcomes in a range of disease areas.
Initial ascertainment of outcomes with electronic and
semi-automated sources will be supplemented by more
intensive methods (e.g., retrieval of case records,
imaging data, or banked tissue samples) for validation
and subclassification (Table 3).
Online Open Access to Researchers
Many cohort studies have mechanisms for sharing data
with external researchers on a collaborative basis, but
relatively few have arrangements for open access to the
data without any need for collaboration, and even
fewer have been established from the outset with the
intention of making the entire resource available to the
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://Gn1CWxIgsou_A8mXWE-Oodt_AFkGYbESvgJwj2Q8Lzs#h`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://M-CM-u_5HqRGipAfgKZq5ikQZ5q-le2omDfQak0ImKU ` ׉	 7cassandra://QIGfUE2bjRuuQjxW5pYD7mXxD2HjN2bAuHIEdRuvq2cv`S׉	 7cassandra://n82pm3py8om5bsd9pXzolTst0l1PqMhn-Y_0qzqL-3g `̵ ׉	 7cassandra://OSBZJwI4CKbSZDmjAKpLhFA-j83Lm1WRTfnYZvlpqY0 ̌͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://XAfl6unr4AdfZEMnWlsMiRDb-zBN_820j63gGzJ7Tqw ւ`׉	 7cassandra://4HlzawyttdTB8hbd_Nctoo81FTOc9k-IuL0Hk650CP0tY`S׉	 7cassandra://BAPDUUqn3CDiOHlb0uvXelyK8ckrRPqSNo1ZoDII5mM#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://jGC1vJOrnGavkfUcPWzBBL1MBtNRSrHxd1u9Glb9quQ &̜͠[>)C]נ[>)C^~ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^} &89ׁH #http://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/approvedׁׁЈ׉E
2global research community. The development of open
access arrangements for data from cohort studies is an
important step in maximising their impact with respect
to scientific publications, policy making, and
understanding of health and disease. Examples of
resources whose impact has been enhanced in this way
include the UK 1958 birth cohort study [13] and the
Australian 45 and Up cohort study [14].
UK Biobank aims to encourage and provide as wide
access as possible to its data and samples for healthrelated
research in the public interest by all bona fide
researchers from the academic, charity, public, and
commercial sectors, both in the UK and internationally,
without preferential or exclusive access for any user. UK
Biobank’s publicly available Data Showcase
(http://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/) presents the univariate
distributions and methods used for collection of all the
contact are subject to a more rigorous process of
scrutiny and scientific review. Following initial
assessment by the executive team, all applications are
assessed and either approved or rejected (with right of
appeal) by an independent Access Subcommittee.
Advice is sought on any applications raising potential
ethical issues from both the University of Oxford’s
Ethox Centre and the Ethics and Governance Council.
Only de-identified data are provided to researchers,
who must sign a material transfer agreement,
undertaking not to attempt to identify any participant,
to keep the data secure, and to use it only for the
purposes of the approved research. Researchers must
also undertake to publish their results and to return
details of their methods, derived data, and/or sample
assay results for incorporation into the UK Biobank
dataset so that they can be made available to other
approved researchers (see
variables available for health-related research, enabling
potential research users to explore what data are
available and plan research applications.
An online access process, launched in April 2012, aims
to be fair, transparent, and streamlined. Applications
for data only are approved so long as the proposed
research is in the public interest and the data required
are, or will become, available. Applications involving the
use of depletable samples or requiring participant rePage
24 of 56
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www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/scientists/ for details). UK
Biobank encourages, but does not mandate, publication
of results of research based on the resource in open
access journals. Ensuring that the resource and its
access arrangements are widely communicated is
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://n82pm3py8om5bsd9pXzolTst0l1PqMhn-Y_0qzqL-3g `̵ [>)C]׉Ean important task, requiring a dedicated
communications team to manage UK Biobank’s website,
scientific meetings, and other methods for
communication with the scientific community, including
emails, newsletters, and other social media. In the first
two years after the launch of open access to UK
Biobank, over 1,000 researchers successfully registered,
and over 200 applications were submitted (see
www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/approved-research/ for a
summary of research that is currently underway). Over
80% of registered researchers were from the UK
and over 95% from academic rather than commercial
institutions. Approximately 85% of applications
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
were for data only, with few as yet requesting use of
samples or participant recontact.
UK Biobank has now started to receive notifications of
submitted abstracts and manuscripts based on the first
few completed research projects. UK Biobank reviews
its access procedures regularly, revising them in the
light of experience and user feedback to make the
process as streamlined as possible while remaining
consistent with participant consent.
Running UK Biobank
Success so far in developing and enhancing the resource
has relied on public willingness to participate
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://BAPDUUqn3CDiOHlb0uvXelyK8ckrRPqSNo1ZoDII5mM#`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://ho4Ne8YD2Qf8DCeyIVuY-RHYv81g26sQE-8mFpXk5pA '` ׉	 7cassandra://-oVReYl4zH5v47XOI09XjDXbkamV1WwzWQu2mIjmbDY͖`S׉	 7cassandra://1BHf2bZ72vD7ZYpSK2Bo-N3huRL2mWlEWX-46m9vUWA&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Tv38V9IytBzu3kxpwCyKIGqVxfDrXngdw5Tpecx9NYU͸̔͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://g7_CJk4OHv3HMYzZgqgBpOR4lqy6xGMJcGovMvBYsyA $` ׉	 7cassandra://pxgljceeZU-g9RuICirqv8nit6pPbm1FygJ-fao5zlQ͑`S׉	 7cassandra://rz02wPC770aF-5FGCMQGGwpoYY9jsit9pap9YoNIQTA%I`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://kprAtgV14OOzYmoDqESCuTrpCU-zGQUe3jE_Uonko40ʹY̐͠[>)C]נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^ 29ׁHhttp://journal.pmׁׁЈנ[>)C^ o'9ׁH (http://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/governance/).ׁׁЈ׉EMin prospective research studies; close engagement with
funders, government health departments, and the UK
National Health Service; extensive consultation with the
public, scientists, and a wide range of regulatory, legal,
and ethics bodies; and the development of costeffective
and efficient methodological approaches. The
most significant challenges to be overcome are the
implementation of scientifically rigorous processes on a
very large scale, sustaining the funding required to
ensure the benefits of the resource are fully realised,
obtaining approvals from multiple regulatory bodies in
a frequently changing political and healthcare
environment, and ensuring as wide as possible
communication of the non-preferential, open access
nature of the resource.
Interactions with Participants
Participant recruitment, retention, and engagement
with enhancement projects has benefited from the
willingness of very large numbers of British people to
take part in observational research without the
prospect of direct personal gain [15]. Participants spent
an average of about two and a half hours at the
recruitment visit. All gave broad consent to use of their
anonymised data and samples for any health-related
research, to be re-contacted for further substudies, and
for UK Biobank to access their health-related records.
Large subsets have subsequently completed Web-based
questionnaires, agreed to wear a physical activity
monitor, and repeated the entire baseline assessment.
Of those who attended the first repeat assessment visit
and provided feedback, 92% reported that they would
be willing to travel for up to two hours for an imaging
assessment visit lasting half a day. UK Biobank keeps its
participants involved through providing progress
updates via its website, with annual newsletters, and
through its dedicated Participant Resource Centre
(PRC), enabling them to continue to support the project
and participate in research over the years ahead.
Interactions with Funding Bodies
Having established UK Biobank as a charitable company
over a decade ago, the UK Medical Research Council
and Wellcome Trust have provided the vast majority of
its funding so far.
These major funders have had the long-term vision to
continue to invest substantially in its ongoing
development as a global research resource,
coordinating both the scientific review of major
proposals for developments to the resource and
contributions from other funding bodies, including the
Department of Health, Scottish and Welsh
Governments, North West Development Agency, British
Heart Foundation, and Diabetes UK. Long-term funding
is not guaranteed, but depends on UK Biobank working
Page 26 of 56
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in close partnership with its funders towards the
common goal of facilitating high-quality, cost-effective
research that will improve the public’s health. Crucial to
this partnership is provision and joint discussion of
regular updates on progress against challenging
milestones, new strategic goals, scientific opportunities,
financial plans, and use of the resource to generate new
scientific knowledge.
Interactions with the UK’s Publicly Funded
National Health Service
Participant recruitment relied on invitations being
mailed to 9 million people whose contact details were
obtained from National Health Service (NHS) central
registers. Large-scale epidemiological studies in the UK
benefit from the fact that 98% of the population is
registered with the NHS, which keeps detailed records
on all of them from birth to death. Linkages to NHS
datasets provide the principal means of follow-up for
health-related outcomes.
Industrial Scale, Centralised Processes
A key step i n achieving the cost-effective recruitment,
characterisation, and follow-up of 500,000 participants
was the creation of an executive and advisory team
with complementary scientific and management skills
and a coordinating centre dedicated to the generation
of a resource for the scientific community. This
facilitated the development of a centralised
infrastructure, bespoke information technology (IT)
systems, and industrial approaches to collection and
processing of data and samples. For example, inviting
potential participants via individual general-practice
groupings (an approach used by smaller UK populationbased
studies) would have been impractical for a study
of UK Biobank’s scale, so appropriate approvals
were obtained to allow direct mailing of invitations
using contact details held centrally by the NHS. The
recruitment process itself was coordinated centrally,
with up to six assessment centres being active at any
one time during the recruitment phase. Staffing and
equipment needs were carefully configured to ensure
the smooth flow of around 100 participants per day
through each assessment centre for six days per week.
Biological samples were also processed and handled
centrally, requiring the development of bespoke
laboratory information management and automated
robotic systems to facilitate rapid, error-free sample
storage in, and extraction from, the freezers (at rates of
up to 1,500 samples per day) according to particular
sample and participant characteristics [16]. Each step of
the recruitment, assessment, and sample handling
process was first piloted, modified as necessary and
monitored centrally, using statistical methods to
identify potential performance issues. Similar industrialInvest
in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://1BHf2bZ72vD7ZYpSK2Bo-N3huRL2mWlEWX-46m9vUWA&`̵ [>)C]׉Eyscale, centralised processes have been or are being
developed for the repeat assessment and imaging visits.
Governance Structure
UK Biobank’s Board of Directors has overall
responsibility for its direction and management.
An Executive Management Team, with epidemiology,
clinical, management, laboratory, legal, and
communications expertise, oversees the development
and day-to-day management of the resource and is
responsible for the staff working on the study, most of
them based at its coordinating centre near Manchester,
with others at the Universities of Oxford, Edinburgh,
Cardiff, and London. The executive team receives
guidance from a Steering Committee of leading UK
scientists, supported by specialist working groups
advising on baseline data collection, enhanced
phenotyping, follow-up and outcomes adjudication, and
an international perspective is provided by an
International Scientific Advisory Board (see S1 Consent
Form and www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/governance/). This
governance structure has facilitated effective working
between scientific and management disciplines,
allowing UK Biobank to respond to advice from
a wide network of scientists on the most scientifically
valuable design and development of the PLOS Medicine
| DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001779 March 31, 2015 7
/ 10 resource, with project management and
implementation being the responsibility of UK Biobank’s
Executive Management Team and dedicated staff.
Robust Ethics and Governance Framework
UK Biobank has consulted widely not only with the
scientific community but also with the
public, its participants, and other interested parties
[17,18]. This has informed the development
of its Ethics and Governance Framework, which lays out
its principles and policies [19], as well
as its access procedures [20]. UK Biobank’s research
ethics committee and Human Tissue Authority
research tissue bank approvals mean that researchers
wishing to use the resource do not need separate ethics
approval (unless re-contact with participants is
required). An independent Ethics and Governance
Council oversees adherence to the Ethics and
Governance Framework and provides advice on the
interests of research participants and the general public
in relation to UK Biobank.
In keeping with the informed consent given by its
participants, UK Biobank does not generally provide
feedback to individual participants about information
derived from analyses of data or samples made
following their assessment visits. Participants receive
limited individual feedback in two areas. First, they
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
receive a summary of standard measures (e.g., blood
pressure, body mass index) at the end of each
assessment visit and are encouraged to seek medical
advice for results outside the normal range. Second,
potentially serious incidental findings (i.e., those
likely to threaten life span or have a major impact on
quality of life) observed by study staff during these
assessments (e.g., possible melanoma on exposed areas
of skin) are brought to the attention of participants with
encouragement to contact a relevant health
professional. Similar feedback is occurring in the
imaging substudy, with participants and their general
practitioners informed of potentially serious incidental
findings noticed by radiographers and confirmed by
formal radiologist review. In addition, the overall
findings and implications of results that derive from
research using the UK Biobank resource are made
available to researchers, participants, and the wider
community so that they can influence public health
strategies.
Interactions with Regulatory Bodies
The wide consultation, rigorous Ethics and Governance
Framework, and Ethics and Governance Council
oversight role have been essential in paving the way for
UK Biobank to accomplish obtaining the multiple ethical
and regulatory approvals required for participant
recruitment, sample and data storage, linkages to
routine health care data, enhancement studies,
and the provision of access to data and samples for
approved researchers. Substantial amounts of time,
resources, patience, tenacity, and evidence of feasibility
and/or acceptability from smaller scale pilot studies
have also been required to provide regulatory bodies
with the reassurance that they need of UK Biobank’s
rigorous approach and commitment to protecting
the interests of its participants within an acceptable
legal and ethical framework.
Conclusions
The key lessons learned from establishing UK Biobank
are that such large-scale studies require not only a clear
scientific focus but also streamlined governance;
effective working between academic and management
disciplines; centralised infrastructure with industrial
approaches to collection and processing of data and
samples; close partnership with major funders; a wide
network of scientific advisors; high-quality, pragmatic
legal and ethical advice; and widespread public support
[21]. The resource is now facilitating research by
scientists from around the world who wish to
investigate how different diseases are caused by the
combination of lifestyle, environment, and genes,
leading to improvements in prevention, diagnosis, and
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mainly, but not exclusively, by UK-based scientists.
A major aim for the immediate future is to encourage
applications from outside the UK. To facilitate
this, UK Biobank is further developing its
communications strategy to increase awareness of the
resource and its access procedures worldwide.
Supporting Information
S1 Consent Form.
(PDF)
S1 Text. UK Biobank Committees and Working Groups.
(PDF)
Author Contributions
Wrote the first draft of the manuscript: CS JG NA GO RC.
Contributed to the writing of the
manuscript: CS JG NA VB PB JD PD PE JG ML BL PM GO
JP AS AY TS TP RC. ICMJE criteria for authorship read
and met: CS JG NA VB PB JD PD PE JG ML BL PM GO JP
AS AY TS TP RC. Agree with manuscript results and
conclusions: CS JG NA VB PB JD PD PE JG ML BL
PM GO JP AS AY TS TP RC.
References
1. Clayton D, McKeigue PM (2001). Epidemiological
methods for studying genes and environmental factors
in complex diseases. Lancet 358: 1356–1360. PMID:
11684236
2. Willett WC, Blot WJ, Colditz GA, Folsom AR,
Henderson BE, Stampfer MJ (2007). Merging and
emerging cohorts: not worth the wait. Nature 445: 257–
258. PMID: 17230171
3. Collins FS, Manolio TA (2007). Merging and emerging
cohorts: necessary but not sufficient. Nature 445: 259.
PMID: 17230172
4. Doll R, Peto R (1981). The causes of cancer:
quantitative estimates of avoidable risks of cancer in
the United States today. Journal of the National Cancer
Institute 66: 1191–1308. PMID: 7017215
5. Ollier W, Sprosen T, Peakman T (2005). UK Biobank:
from concept to reality. Pharmacogenomics 6:
639–646. PMID: 16143003
6. UK Biobank (2006). Protocol for a large-scale
prospective epidemiological resource. www.ukbiobank.
ac.uk/resources/.
7. Burton PR, Hansell AL, Fortier I, Manolio TA, Khoury
MJ, et al (2009). Size matters: just how big is
BIG?: Quantifying realistic sample size requirements for
human genome epidemiology. Int J Epidemiol
38: 263–273. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyn147 PMID: 18676414
8. Hattersley AT, McCarthy MI (2005). What makes a
good genetic association study? Lancet 366:
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1315–1323. PMID: 16214603
9. Collins R (2012). What makes UK Biobank special?
Lancet 379:1173–1174. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736
(12)60404-8 PMID: 22463865
10. Elliott P, Peakman TC (2008). The UK Biobank
sample handling and storage protocol for the collection,
processing and archiving of human blood and urine. Int
J Epidemiol 37: 234–244. doi: 10.1093/ije/dym276
PMID: 18381398
11. Liu B, Young H, Crowe FL, Benson VS, Spencer EA, et
al (2011). Development and evaluation of the
Oxford WebQ: a low cost web-based method for
assessment of previous 24 hour dietary intake in large
prospective studies. Public Health Nutrition June: 1–8.
12. Clarke R, Shipley M, Lewington S, Youngman L,
Collins R, et al (1999). Underestimation of risk
associations due to regression dilution in long-term
follow-up of prospective studies. Am J Epidemiol 150:
341–353. PMID: 10453810
13. University of Leicester. About the 1958 Birth Cohort
Study. http://www2.le.ac.uk/projects/birthcohort/
1958bc/about. Accessed 12 October 2014
14. Sax Institute. 45 and up study.
https://www.saxinstitute.org.au/our-work/45-upstudy/.
Accessed 12 October 2014 PLOS Medicine |
DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001779 March 31, 2015 9 /
10
15. Pell J, Valentine J, Inskip H (2014). One in 30 people
in the UK take part in cohort studies. Lancet 383:
1015–1016. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60412-8
PMID: 24656186
16. Downey P, Peakman TC (2008). Design and
implementation of a high-throughput biological sample
processing facility using modern manufacturing
principles. Int J Epidemiol 37 (Suppl 1): i46–i50. doi:
10.1093/ije/dyn031 PMID: 18381393
17. Manolio TA (2008). Biorepositories—at the bleeding
edge. Int J Epidemiol 37: 231–233. doi:
10.1093/ije/dym282 PMID: 18381397
18. Barbour V (2003). UK Biobank: a project in search of
a protocol? Lancet 361: 1734–1738.
19. UK Biobank (2007). Ethics and Governance
Framework. www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/resources/.
Accessed 12 October 2014.
20. UK Biobank (2011). Access Procedures: Application
and review procedures for access to the UK Biobank
Resource. www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/resources/. Accessed
12 October 2014.
21. Manolio TA, Collins R (2010). Enhancing the
feasibility of large cohort studies. JAMA 304: 2290–
2291. doi: 10.1001/jama.2010.1686 PMID: 21098774
PLOS Medicine | DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001779
March 31, 2015 10 / 10
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://dm5Vyprmfj7DzhZ5Ih_e1Fdc5xy-gm1iQb816rNXXJs%F`̵ [>)C]׉EIn February we received the very sad news
that Anne Örtegren from Sweden had passed away.
We considered Anne a dear friend - although we had
never met Anne in person, one of the sad things we
carry with us.
Yet we instinctively trusted and liked Anne from the
very first time we communicated and counted her as a
true friend.
When we look at the correspondence with Anne we can
see it had started in 2007 - a year after we were formed
as a charity.
In all the correspondence that we had with Anne one
always admired the resilience, the articulate nature of
her commenting, her strength of character, her
dedication and her determination to continue to battle
this disease, and her kindness in helping others and
being there to make progress.
She was a rock – somebody whose opinion we valued
and whose help and support we greatly appreciated -
and she was generous with her support.
Anne’s determination to help us and to encourage
Swedish researchers to participate was a shining light
for us.
Her help behind the scenes led to real collaborations
between researchers who met at our Colloquiums.
All of this despite the huge suffering that she endured
for years.
Yet she rarely referred to this.
Anne was never one to promote herself or seek the
limelight for the sake of it – a refreshing example in this
age.
She was irreplaceable.
Her spirit was just an inspiration.
Though we knew Anne was suffering, and had been for
such a long time, we were still communicating with her
until very recently and had no knowledge of what was
to transpire.
It is very difficult to read Anne’s last post (below).
Not just because of the suffering and pain and
hopelessness that she describes – but because Anne
was so articulate in describing her situation – never with
self-pity, always displaying the same courage that she
showed in her life.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 29 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://cbFbukHTgWp4qo-3WtY8lXuv-C6u7qy0590zeEfqiow `̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://q-hWc0SgTL-WttsombTf4F6aBTpqAMRxSxP1tKdxjek j` ׉	 7cassandra://0_gSxgPY7HuJGIoBaJOZ-8G4UDIzwNK6rjUeJm8QISU͈n`S׉	 7cassandra://EaMcwJSTQa_w_yF3QLzk_yTtYVoGreG3xXmcywZf6_k%o`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://VXkPsb2nvHKMzM15HySvZQghsmrW1ikI5IZlvBjoApcͶ̌͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://A-TMQVYu_-HvhN7a6Oh41Tdb_nudya1Am-png9QcEmE `׉	 7cassandra://lKO_uraEdT8NNrmhElFfxz2lWXhUa84AB68QL-rjOpM͌:`S׉	 7cassandra://t1vKEAPxC1pRkFBgz9Uetn-p4PUosp_R6_nOpL08jK0'`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://vxs-vEKe9mF_OKJPbIcW3p01tyFRATUwCTDOXmhDfzc R[̀͠[>)C]נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EHer story and her life should be seen as an inspiration
and she shames those who pretend to be interested in
getting change for ME but who do nothing of
consequence.
One loses a friend, one loses a part of oneself.
Yet there are those who leave footprints in one's
memory whom one will always remember.
Anne Örtegren is such a person.
Anne's facebook page is here
https://www.facebook.com/anne.ortegren
Extract from “Farewell – A Last Post from
Anne Örtegren”
Nobody can say that I didn’t put up enough of a fight.
For 16 years I have battled increasingly severe ME/CFS.
My condition has steadily deteriorated and new
additional medical problems have regularly appeared,
making it ever more difficult to endure and make it
through the day (and night).
Throughout this time, I have invested almost every bit
of my tiny energy in the fight for treatment for us
ME/CFS patients. Severely ill, I have advocated from my
bedroom for research and establishment of biomedical
ME/CFS clinics to get us proper health care. All the
while, I have worked hard to find something which
would improve my own health. I have researched all
possible treatment options, got in contact with
international experts and methodically tried out every
medication, supplement and regimen suggested.
Sadly, for all the work done, we still don’t have
adequately sized specialized biomedical care for ME/CFS
patients here in Stockholm, Sweden – or hardly
anywhere on the planet.
We still don’t have in-patient hospital units adapted to
the needs of the severely ill ME/CFS patients. Funding
levels for biomedical ME/CFS research remain
ridiculously low in all countries and the erroneous
psychosocial model which has caused me and others so
much harm is still making headway.
And sadly, for me personally things have gone from bad
to worse to unbearable.
I am now mostly bedbound and constantly tortured by
ME/CFS symptoms. I also suffer greatly from a number
of additional medical problems, the most severe being a
systematic hyper-reactivity in the form of burning skin
combined with an immunological/allergic reaction. This
is triggered by so many things that it has become
Page 30 of 56
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impossible to create an adapted environment. Some of
you have followed my struggle to find clothes and bed
linen I can tolerate.
Lately, I am simply running out. I no longer have clothes
I can wear without my skin “burning up” and my body
going into an allergic state.
This means I no longer see a way out from this solitary
ME/CFS prison and its constant torture. I can no longer
even do damage control, and my body is at the end of
its rope. Therefore, I have gone through a long and
thorough process involving several medical assessments
to be able to choose a peaceful way out: I have received
a preliminary green light for accompanied suicide
through a clinic in Switzerland.
When you read this I am at rest, free from suffering at
last. I have written this post to explain why I had to take
this drastic step. Many ME/CFS patients have found it
necessary to make the same decision, and I want to
speak up for us, as I think my reasons may be similar to
those of many others with the same sad destiny.
These reasons can be summed up in three headers:
unbearable suffering; no realistic way out of the
suffering; and the lack of a safety net, meaning potential
colossal increase in suffering when the next setback or
medical incident occurs.
Important note
Before I write more about these reasons, I want to
stress something important. As for most other ME/CFS
patients who have chosen suicide, depression is not the
cause of my choice. Though I have been suffering
massively for many years, I am not depressed. I still
have all my will and my motivation. I still laugh and see
the funny side of things, I still enjoy doing whatever
small activities I can manage. I am still hugely interested
in the world around me – my loved ones and all that
goes on in their lives, the society, the world (what is
happening in human rights issues? how can we solve
the climate change crisis?) During these 16 years, I have
never felt anylack of motivation. On the contrary, I have
consistently fought for solutions with the goal to get
myself better and help all ME/CFS patients get better.
There are so many things I want to do, I have a lot to
live for. If I could only regain some functioning, quieten
down the torture a bit and be able to tolerate clothes
and a normal environment, I have such a long list of
things I would love to do with my life!
Three main reasons
So depression is not the reason for my decision to
terminate my life. The reasons are the following:
1. Unbearable suffering
Many of us severely ill ME/CFS patients are hovering at
the border of unbearable suffering. We are constantly
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://EaMcwJSTQa_w_yF3QLzk_yTtYVoGreG3xXmcywZf6_k%o`̵ [>)C]׉Eplagued by intense symptoms, we endure high-impact
every-minute physical suffering 24 hours a day, year
after year. I see it as a prison sentence with torture. I am
homebound and mostly bedbound – there is the prison.
I constantly suffer from excruciating symptoms: The
worst flu you ever had. Sore throat, bronchi hurting
with every breath. Complete exhaustion, almost zero
energy, a body that weighs a tonne and sometimes
won’t even move. Muscle weakness, dizziness, great
difficulties standing up. Sensory overload causing severe
suffering from the brain and nervous system. Massive
pain in muscles, painful inflammations in muscle
attachments. Intensely burning skin. A feeling of having
been run over by a bus, twice, with every cell
screaming. This has got to be called torture.
It would be easier to handle if there
were breaks, breathing spaces.
But with severe ME/CFS there
is no minute during the day
when one is comfortable.
My body is a war zone
with constant firing
attacks. There is no rest,
no respite. Every move
of every day is a
mountain-climb. Every
night is a challenge,
since there is no easy
sleep to rescue me from
the torture. I always just
have to try to get through
the night. And then get
through the next day.
It would also be easier if there
were distractions. Like many
patients with severe ME/CFS I am
unable to listen to music, radio,
podcasts or audio books, or to watch TV. I
can only read for short bouts of time, and use the
computer for even shorter moments. I am too ill to
manage more than rare visits or phone calls from my
family and friends, and sadly unable to live with
someone.
This solitary confinement aspect of ME/CFS is
devastating and it is understandable that ME/CFS has
been described as the “living death disease”.
For me personally, the situation has turned into an
emergency not least due to my horrific symptom of
burning skin linked to immunological/allergic reactions.
This appeared six years into my ME/CFS, when I was
struck by what seemed like a complete collapse of the
bodily systems controlling immune system, allergic
pathways, temperature control, skin and peripheral
nerves. I had long had trouble with urticaria,
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
hyperreactive skin and allergies, but at this point a
violent reaction occurred and my skin completely lost
tolerance. I started having massively burning skin,
severe urticaria and constant cold sweats and shivers
(these reactions reminded me of the first stages of the
anaphylactic shock I once had, then due to heat allergy).
Since then, for ten long years, my skin has been burning.
It is an intense pain. I have been unable to tolerate
almost all kinds of clothes and bed linen as well as heat,
sun, chemicals and other everyday things. These all
trigger the burning skin and the freezing/shivering
reaction into a state of extreme pain and suffering.
Imagine being badly sunburnt and then being forced to
live under a constant scalding sun – no relief in sight.
At first I managed to find a certain textile
fabric which I could tolerate, but then
this went out of production, and in
spite of years of negotiations
with the textile industry it has,
strangely, proven impossible
to recreate that specific
weave. This has meant
that as my clothes have
been wearing out, I have
been approaching the
point where I will no
longer have clothes and
bed linen that are
tolerable to my skin. It
has also become
increasingly difficult to
adapt the rest of my living
environment so as to not
trigger the reaction and
worsen the symptoms.
Now that I am running out of
clothes and sheets, ahead of me
has lain a situation with constant
burning skin and an allergic state of
shivering/cold sweats and massive suffering. This
would have been absolutely unbearable.
For 16 years I have had to manage an ever-increasing
load of suffering and problems. They now add up to a
situation which is simply no longer sustainable.
2. No realistic way out of the suffering
A very important factor is the lack of realistic hope for
relief in the future. It is possible for a person to bear a
lot of suffering, as long as it is time-limited. But the
combination of massive suffering and a lack of rational
hope for remission or recovery is devastating.
Think about the temporary agony of a violent case of
gastric flu. Picture how you are feeling those horrible
days when you are lying on the bathroom floor between
attacks of diarrhoea and vomiting. This is something we
www.investinme.org
Page 31 of 56
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to live
hrough at
mes, but
know it
be over in
days. If
one told
hat point:
have to
his for the
r life”, I am
would agree
n’t feel
o cope with
the body
in that insufferable state every day, year after year. The
level of unbearableness in severe ME/CFS is the same.
If we knew there were relief on the horizon, it would be
possible to endure severe ME/CFS and all the additional
medical problems, even for a long time, I think. The
point is that there has to be a limit, the suffering must
not feel endless.
One vital aspect here is of course that patients need to
feel that the ME/CFS field is being taken forward. Sadly,
we haven’t been granted this feeling – see my previous
blogs relating to this here and here.
Another imperative issue is the drug intolerance that I
and many others with ME/CFS suffer from. I have tried
every possible treatment, but most of them have just
given me side-effects, many of which have been
irreversible. My stomach has become increasingly
dysfunctional, so for the past few years any new drugs
have caused immediate diarrhoea. One supplement
triggered massive inflammation in my entire urinary
tract, which has since persisted. The list of such
occurrences of major deterioration caused by different
drugs/treatments is long, and with time my reactions
have become increasingly violent. I now have to
conclude that my sensitivity to medication is so severe
that realistically it is very hard for me to tolerate drugs
or supplements.
This has two crucial meanings for many of us severely ill
ME/CFS patients: There is no way of relieving our
symptoms. And even if treatments appear in the future,
with our sensitivity of medication any drug will carry a
great risk of irreversible side-effects producing even
more suffering. This means that even in the case of a
real effort finally being made to bring biomedical
research into ME/CFS up to levels on par with that of
other diseases, and possible treatments being made
accessible, for some of us it is unlikely that we would be
able to benefit. Considering our extreme sensitivity to
medication, one could say it’s hard to have realistic
hope of recovery or relief for us.
In the past couple of years I, being desperate, have
challenged the massive side-effect risk and tried one of
the treatments being researched in regards to ME/CFS.
But I received it late in the disease process, and it was a
gamble. I needed it to have an almost miraculous effect:
a quick positive response which eliminated many
symptoms – most of all I needed it to stop my skin from
burning and reacting, so I could tolerate the clothes and
bed linen produced today. I have been quickly running
out of clothes and sheets, so I was gambling with high
odds for a quick and extensive response. Sadly, I wasn’t
a responder. I have also tried medication for Mast Cell
Activation Disorder and a low-histamine diet, but my
burning skin hasn’t abated. Since I am now running out
of clothes and sheets, all that was before me was
constant burning hell.
3. The lack of a safety net, meaning potential colossal
increase in suffering when the next setback or medical
incident occurs
The third factor is the insight that the risk for further
deterioration and increased suffering is high.
Many of us severely ill ME/CFS patients are already in a
situation which is unbearable. On top of this, it is very
likely that in the future things will get even worse. If we
look at some of our symptoms in isolation, examples in
my case could be my back and neck pain, we would
need to strengthen muscles to prevent them from
getting worse. But for all ME/CFS patients, the
characteristic symptom of Post-Exertional Malaise
(PEM) with flare-ups of our disease when we attempt
even small activities, is hugely problematic. Whenever
we try to ignore the PEM issue and push through, we
immediately crash and become much sicker. We might
go from being able to at least get up and eat, to being
completely bedbound, until the PEM has subsided.
Sometimes, it doesn’t subside, and we find ourselves
irreversibly deteriorated, at a new, even lower baseline
level, with no way of improving.
PEM is not something that you can work around.
For me, new medical complications also continue to
arise, and I have no way of amending them. I already
need surgery for one existing problem, and it is likely
that it will be needed for other issues in the future, but
surgery or hospital care is not feasible for several
reasons:
One is that my body seems to lack repairing
mechanisms. Previous biopsies have not healed
properly, so my doctor is doubtful about my ability to
recover after surgery.
Another, more general and hugely critical, is that with
severe ME/CFS it is impossible to tolerate normal
hospital care. For ME/CFS patients the sensory overload
Page 32 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://gaRIhxaxirQ1Zi2cm53cqQIcfD2b71rQfMVr5u-9HG4&`̵ [>)C]׉Ewproblem and the extremely low energy levels mean that
a normal hospital environment causes major
deterioration. The sensory input that comes with shared
rooms, people coming and going, bright lights, noise, tc,
escalates our disease. We are already in such fragile
states that a push in the wrong direction is catastrophic.
For me, with my burning skin issue, there is also the
issue of not tolerati ng the mattresses, pillows, textile
fabrics, etc used in a hospital.
Just imagine the effects of a hospital stay for me: It
would trigger my already severe ME/CFS into new
depths – likely I would become completely bedbound
and unable to tolerate any light or noise. The skin
hyperreactivity would, within a few hours, trigger my
body into an insufferable state of burning skin and
agonizing immuneallergic reactions, which would then
be impossible to reverse. My family, my doctor and I
agree: I must never be admitted to a hospital, since
there is no end to how much worse that would make
me.
Many ME/CFS patients have experienced irreversible
deterioration due to hospitalization. We also know that
the understanding of ME/CFS is extremely low or nonexistent
in most hospitals, and we hear about ME/CFS
patients being forced into environments or activities
which make them much worse. I am aware of only two
places in the world with specially adjusted hospital units
for severe ME/CFS, Oslo, Norway, and Gold Coast,
Australia. We would need such units in every city
around the globe.
It is extreme to be this severely ill, have so many
medical complications arise continually and know this:
There is no feasible access to hospital care for me.
There are no tolerable medications to use when things
get worse or other medical problems set in. As a
severely ill ME/CFS patient I have no safety net at all.
There is simply no end to how bad things can get with
severe ME/CFS.
Coping skills – important but not enough
I realize that when people hear about my decision to
terminate my life, they will wonder about my coping
skills. I have written about this before and I want to
mention the issue here too:
While it was extremely hard at the beginning to accept
chronic illness, I have over the years developed a large
degree of acceptance and pretty good coping skills. I
have learnt to accept tight limits and appreciate small
qualities of life. I have learnt to cope with massive
amounts of pain and suffering and still find bright spots.
With the level of acceptance I have come to now, I
would have been content even with relatively small
improvements and a very limited life. If, hypothetically,
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
the physical suffering could be taken out of the
equation, I would have been able to live contentedly
even though my life continued to be restricted to my
small apartment and include very little activity. Unlike
most people I could find such a tiny life bearable and
even happy. But I am not able to cope with these high
levels of constant physical suffering.
In short, to sum up my level of acceptance as well as my
limit: I can take the prison and the extreme limitations –
but I can no longer take the torture. And I cannot live
with clothes that constantly trigger my burning skin.
Not alone – and not a rash decision
In spite of being unable to see friends or family for more
than rare and brief visits, and in spite of having limited
capacity for phone conversations, I still have a circle of
loved ones. My friends and family all understand my
current situation and they accept and support my
choice. While they do not want me to leave, they also
do not want me to suffer anymore.
This is not a rash decision. It has been processed for
many years, in my head, in conversations with family
and friends, in discussion with one of my doctors, and a
few years ago in the long procedure of requesting
accompanied suicide. The clinic in Switzerland requires
an extensive process to ensure that the patient is
chronically ill, lives with unendurable pain or suffering,
and has no realistic hope of relief. They require a
number of medical records as well as consultations with
specialized doctors.
For me, and I believe for many other ME/CFS patients,
this end is obviously not what we wanted, but it was the
best solution to an extremely difficult situation and
preferable to even more suffering. It was not hasty
choice, but one that matured over a long period of time.
A plea to decision makers – Give ME/CFS patients a
future!
As you understand, this blog post has taken me many
months to put together. It is a long text to read too, I
know. But I felt it was important to write it and have it
published to explain why I personally had to take this
step, and hopefully illuminate why so many ME/CFS
patients consider or commit suicide.
And most importantly: to elucidate that this
circumstance can be changed! But that will take
devoted, resolute, real action from all of those
responsible for the state of ME/CFS care, ME/CFS
research and dissemination of information about the
disease. Sadly, this responsibility has been mishandled
for decades. To allow ME/CFS patients some hope on
the horizon, key people in all countries must step up
and act.
www.investinme.org
Page 33 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://Zz4SF9rRi5vaIy9z86dXnju-nmj5dAqBatKpYrGvx4M&`̵ [>)C][>)C]{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://SDUJduWXRaY3pdeQ2-GLRK-ZU441LoO7qFQGZTD7V0I `׉	 7cassandra://0p7cxe1QODnHEkDw06mFR-dQubjtkgDEqTr4ILmD2C0r)`S׉	 7cassandra://-GNQcJhyQOLNanAZZN6HNYuMzKIgrrIGGxc4wFgKIJ8$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://RkrYAfd3indRCUjoPhET1vwvU8G8xnFvRdBGK17pE8A i̴͠[>)C]ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://nyf0um01KEgvVIHpcjg0Tc6Iur6XqFvdp5gKiqr8Mh0 :` ׉	 7cassandra://WmeRSLNZf41uiG36twycYoBgV34StbSVrkUDh01mOOo̓`S׉	 7cassandra://Fbvi-W9pTjzid0oO4Af6bHR5eI73JJEWOdpY73TjxR4%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Vx9Jx6LMxrhPrH7TPaKkJm9PRYAsEFAfi_45UnA1mfs̄͠[>)C^ נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E(If you are a decision maker, here is what you urgently
need to do:
You need to bring funding for biomedical ME/CFS
research up so it’s on par with comparable diseases (as
an example, in the US that would mean $188 million per
year).
You need to make sure there are dedicated hospital care
units for ME/CFS inpatients in every city around the
world.
You need to establish specialist biomedical care
available to all ME/CFS patients; it should be as natural
as RA patients having access to a rheumatologist or
cancer patients to an oncologist.
You need to give ME/CFS patients a future.
Anne ended her letter with –
Take care of each other.
Love, Anne
Anne’s Swedish ME/CFS newsletters, distributed via email
to 2700 physicians, researchers, CMOs, politicians
and medical journalists
https://mecfsnyheter.se/
To Prime Minister Erna Solberg
and any other relevant recipients
An Apeal for help to a seriously ill child
My name is Nicoline and I will soon be 14 years old.
The last half year I have been too ill to go to school. For
2 years before this I was often sick with many infections.
I really like school and I am what one would probably
call a concientious pupil. For me it has been awful not to
be able to go to school. This is my first year in secondary
school and I had really looked forward to beginning to
get marks.
My plan is to study law in the future.
Luckily I have had extremely good help from PPT
(Norwegian educational psychology service) and the
school. I have received a robot that makes it possible for
me to take part in lessons at school when I am able to. I
also have home tuition up to two hours a week. This has
meant that I have managed to keep up with the most
important subjects and this means a lot to me.
The reason I am writing is that, unfortunately, I have
met with a part of the system designed to help which
does not function at all. I suffer from exhaustion and
many other awful symptoms which mean that I am bed
bound and isolated at home. I am mostly too ill to meet
Page 34 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://-GNQcJhyQOLNanAZZN6HNYuMzKIgrrIGGxc4wFgKIJ8$`̵ [>)C^׉Eany friends and rarely manage to talk on the phone. My
mother and many close family members have ME and
we are afraid that I have inherited the disease.
A little over a week ago I met my doctor at the
paediatric clinic. It was an ugly experience for me.
The doctor we met would not allow me or my parents
to explain my situation and my symptoms.
They only talked about psychiatry and how I should be
«forced back to life». It was clear that they did not
believe in me being physically ill. They did not want to
hear about my symptoms because they did not want to
«encourage me to be sick».
They were totally against the school robot and home
tuition because there are local children sick with cancer
who do not receive such help.
I think that is very wrong because I think it
is equally bad for me to be too sick to go
to school as it is for other sick children
independent of the diagnosis. I am
very confident in that I do not have a
psychological problem. The PPT
have also tested me quite
thouroughly since last October and
they confirm that there is nothing
pointing to school refusal or my
having something psychologically
wrong. Despite this the doctor had
decided even before seeing me that I
was mentally sick.
So I think that it is very hurtful and bad when a
doctor «makes it sound like» I am missing shool for the
rest of my life because I myself want to, and things will
sort themselves out if only I push myself a bit.
If the doctors had listened to me they would have
known that I had pushed myself for two years until I
collapsed. Just a month ago I was so sick that I just slept
for many weeks. My mother had to wake me up
regularly to get me to eat and drink. Luckily my mother
has a lot of knowledge about exhaustion and I am a
little bit better now even though I am still bed bound.
I am fearful of going back to see this doctor. My next
appointment is in a month’s time. My mother has
explored possibilities of getting a referral elsewhere but
it looks like children with exhaustion are treated in the
same manner in most hospitals in the country.
I think this is dreadful.
When one gets sick as I did then it should be obvious to
be met in a positive manner whilst in hospital. At least it
should clearly be so that one is not disbelieved the
moment one meets the doctor.
I choose to give the doctor the benefit of the doubt and
I think they would have treated me in a different
manner had they had more knowledge. There is after all
no doubt any longer that ME is a physical illness.
Nevertheless, children with exhaustion, when there is a
reason to suspect ME, are being treated as mentally ill.
It is like rubbing salt in the wounds of children and their
families who have it bad enough as it is.
In my case the doctor has already, after the first
appointment, gone as far as phoning my case officer at
PPT and asked them to force me back to school. That
will most probably make me even sicker. To become
sicker does not only mean that I will be more exhausted.
It also makes all of the other symptoms worse,
such as extreme pain all over the body, nose
bleeds, nausea, head ache, flu like feeling,
sore throat, dizziness and much more. If
it turns out that the symptoms were
due to ME, as we suspect, then the
chances of getting better will be
reduced. It means that if I get
pushed into using too much energy
now then it may lead to my chances
of never getting better or healthy -
this is frightening when one is only
13 years old and has numerous plans
for one’s life.
I therefore think it is strange that the
doctor will do this, long before I have a
diagnosis – as the doctor is taking a huge risk on
my behalf.
I have been frightened ever since I came home from the
hospital. I am worried that I shall miss all lessons at
school now as I am not allowed to receive home tuition
or use the school robot.
I am also terribly scared of getting sicker than I am
already, especially now that I have finally had some
improvement.
I know that you have previously engaged with ME
patients. I think that is wonderful. Unfortunately, the
situation for us children being investigated for ME and
children who already have the diagnosis is critical –
there is no expertise and no help available. It is urgent
to improve our situation.
I therefore ask you to address this so that we can get
help soon. I am happy to contribute if there are any
questions.
With kind regards,
Nicoline
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 35 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://Fbvi-W9pTjzid0oO4Af6bHR5eI73JJEWOdpY73TjxR4%`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://TrOet396Z9UcQymGBR9buS6IfpFEzDpAG60sa3wcG0Y 7`׉	 7cassandra://JBs6hTuNtMlO8PG3xd-tZp4VE7nl-BbfRkZr6i9osxEg`S׉	 7cassandra://hjub3dgHi5ZGZLzsIMSPcFOtkDl7FQtakIfnaw6LhHM#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://k80gnUEyhENVJZGJb1eOFhY2YUai5CuzruZ2wHYlDVA B]\͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://jrmj6Zwhw9JjY_DbCktXJ9xahDykC7J_O5y9EYAkdl8 `׉	 7cassandra://pv6FnYhtahO_rhD8d-jxDT6w2FGr4yGy4FH-FDRXZyMs`S׉	 7cassandra://HWRODb1yhRCZN-HDtsZKqBggl4ubmcE8X4wJq3o_m78%k`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://qKawbva3WKkDzmM4D2uNn5jC071b3aINHz3dLIcb9dc l4͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EOla Didrik
Saugstad
A harsh debate
about ME in Norway
– A personal view
from one of the
participants
orwegian debate on
S has for many years been
ed between those who
E is a psychosomatic
claiming Cognitive
al therapy (CBT) and
Process (LP) are therapies
on this condition.
ice supporting this view
ller, a paediatrican who
concluding ME is a stress
herefore performed a
E patients clonidine, a soenergic
agonist which is a
to treat high blood
g theoretically could
esponse and Wyller was
e would cure ME patients.
did not show any positive
s.
g his hypothesis might be
o preach ME could be
ol and he was a firm
udy.
Welfare workers believed in
oung ME patients were
d other activities, and the
ases requested court orders
ad to appear as a witness
on several occasions.
sease caused by stress and
ress control, has therefore
orwegian community, in
E organisations and a few
rt was published in 2015
nd and its defenders have
argue against results
esearch.
Page 36 of 56
www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://hjub3dgHi5ZGZLzsIMSPcFOtkDl7FQtakIfnaw6LhHM#`̵ [>)C^׉E
In September 2017 a new public ME debate was kicked
off in Norway’s largest newspaper, Aftenposten.
During the years there have been many discussions and
articles about ME in Norwegian media. However, this
time it was different. The debate became intense, lasted
for several weeks and was flavoured with the most
hatred personal attacks on those who referred to recent
biomedical research and were advocating the view that
ME is a somatic disease.
It all started when a new group of 71 persons called
“Recovery Norway” wrote an article with the message:
“we know how to be cured of ME. Listen to our
message”. The network consisted of previous patients
or relatives, and some health personnel who
recommend CBT and LP to cure ME. By mind control ME
patients are able to control their disease the Norwegian
public was told by this group. Not only ME could be
cured by such mental exercise, a number of other
diffuse conditions as fatigue, pain and tinnitus should
be treated with these alternative methods. Why doesn’t
anyone listen to us and why do so many doubt we
previously have had ME and are now cured? the group
asked rhetorically.
Four days later September 22nd I wrote as a response
with the title: Listen to the ME patients:
“In Aftenposten September 18th there is an
interesting article by a group of former ME patients
who are now recovered. Why not take advantage
of their experience using untraditional and
alternative therapies such as LP and CBT? It is
unfortunate that the group feel they are
disbelieved both regarding their previous ME
diagnosis and that they today are cured. We are
grateful for every patient who have been healed
and obliged to try to learn from their experience
and what made their improvement.”
I continued:
“When we discuss ME it is, however, important to
know that ME follows phases. Persons who
previously were very active and healthy may quickly
deteriorate. I have myself the last 10 years or so
visited many of the sickest ME patients in Norway in
their homes and probably seen more than most.
Many have a condition compatible with encephalitis,
and this is exactly what modern research seems to
reveal.
ME is an inflammatory condition affecting several
organs, also the brain. The immune system is
activated. Some patients improve spontaneously
while others are bedridden through years with great
pain. This is where those who claim to have
improved from ME may contribute with valuable
information.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 37 of 56
H
s
n
cu
si
wi
b
I
P
׉	 7cassandra://HWRODb1yhRCZN-HDtsZKqBggl4ubmcE8X4wJq3o_m78%k`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://PIXRMWLYo63kxOGFJCxF5Eyn1IkQA1xBnRYJefImtK8 |` ׉	 7cassandra://DmVaIzEMWmIkMMPamjB8cv2qHu3BKrFhcPfs8JC1zbc͋`S׉	 7cassandra://hz1Lc-P2yUCDevkkatLao_bulOn_jrZG8Xh_OoRDn9Q%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://nwFUYZhKQdelOSiy25zy1mQydmPK-GFknBpwC1sxbkcͱ ͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://dm_h-EbBjkJKF4P8r009W3dd9NG9LF-NqNweeiFwuC4 k` ׉	 7cassandra://qtLZww13X3kK8y2d_iG786eD1Iz_plr-YSXm9toD958͉`S׉	 7cassandra://G1SMW_im7LqeMbwC8dThFlGCckkk-DWlPfp-i5VDd7Y%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://vVVyyiAYxV4bgjjffM2dcBAmzVKPQO-eeq5lbpy4s_gͩF͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E:techniques to master challenging life conditions and
diseases without curing these.
The authors (Recovery Norway) are wrong and not
up to date when they write: ”The debate regarding
these problems is often about whether the disease is
physical or psychosomatic. Lack of knowledge
dominates this field.”
After the report about ME from Institute of Medicine
(IOM) in USA was published in 2015, there has been a
paradigmatic change in the view regarding ME. It was
concluded that ME is a serious physical, chronic and
complex multisystem disease which is strongly
debilitating and the misconception that the disease is
psychogenic or a form of somatization must stop.”
I then referred to a recent study (2016) from the USA
with Maureen Hanson as senior author:
“In one study from the Cornell University in the USA
the researchers were able to identify biochemical
and biological deviations in ME patients, which
resulted in the following statement:
“Furthermore, our detection of a biological
abnormality provides further evidence against the
ridiculous concept that the disease is psychological in
origin." (quote by Maureen Hanson in Medical News
Today, Tuesday 28 June 2016).
I continued:
“It is the supporters of the concept that ME is
psychogenic who maintain to underline the lack of
knowledge regarding ME. I agree with the
Norwegian Research Council which supports
biomedical ME research in line with the US effort to
find treatment for the disease. Psychosomatic
research has not brought us closer to understanding
of ME and may have contributed to a prevention of
development through years.”
I did not, however want to disregard the Recovery
Norway group and therefore added:
“I belong to those who welcome the initiative of the
group. It is useful to obtain information on why some
were cured and others not. At the same time the
group’s credibility is weakened by lumping together
several poorly explained conditions such as fatigue,
pain and tinnitus. One problem for ME patients has
been that the health care system has not listened to
the sickest, nor even cared to examine them. We
must listen to the advice both from those who have
improved and from those who still have not”.
This article from me resulted in an outcry from those
who supported the concept of ME as a psychogenic
disease. Two neurologists from the University Hospital
Page 38 of 56
www.investinme.org
in Bergen, one even a professor, wrote that I was
misusing my professor title.” Saugstad is exploiting his
medical authority to oppress patients who have been
cured and want to share their experience.” These two
neurologists told us they had treated ME patients for
years and never or at least only very rarely, seen any
trace of inflammation in the central nervous system.
I replied by referring to Mady Hornig and co-worker’s
recent article (2017) showing ME patients have an
immune signature in Cerebrospinal fluid reflecting the
central nervous system and the study of Nakatomi Y et
al (2014) indicating ME patients have activated immunecells
in the brain. I also quoted Harvard Professor
Komaroff who commented that if these findings were
reproduced it indicates that ME patients have a low
graded inflammation in the brain. A Norwegian
professor of immunology confirmed that my comments
were relevant. The two neurologists never replied.
Wyller wrote a commentary: “Saugstad’s claims are
misleading. That the immune-system is activated in ME
does not mean ME is an inflammatory process. The
immune-system is also activated in depressions, social
stress and loneliness. Does Saugstad mean these are
inflammatory conditions as well?”.
Wyller is a firm supporter of the PACE study and wrote:
“The PACE study showed that CBT has positive effect on
ME. The study has been criticized but the main
conclusion has not been disproven. Another recent
study shows equivalent good effect of LP. That mental
conditions may contribute to ME is documented well for
instance by MRI pictures of the brain. This does not
mean that the disease is psychogenic, but that the
mechanisms are complex and both mental and somatic
factors may play a role.”
And Wyller continued: “Professor Saugstad introduces
himself as an ME expert but has never carried out ME
research himself. He is stuck in an old fashioned
distinction between “body and mind” and is followed by
a small but vocal group of ME patients who are fighting
frantically against the concept that “the mind” has
anything to do with this matter.” Wyller concluded his
article: “I beg new patients, relatives, health workers –
don’t listen to this pessimistic outdated message!
Instead listen to the majority of patients - many have
been completely cured – who make use of modern and
documented therapies.”
At this stage of the debate a number of doctors, ME
patients and relatives had contributed to the debate
with their own opinions and experiences. Wyller did not
receive much support.
In my reply I underlined I have never pretended to be an
ME expert. But I wondered why some people became so
emotional because I mentioned recent publications in
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://hz1Lc-P2yUCDevkkatLao_bulOn_jrZG8Xh_OoRDn9Q%`̵ [>)C^	׉Ehthe field. Nobody dared to attack the IOM report,
instead they attacked me, a “messenger” informing the
public about this ground breaking report. I was worried
of the fact that those who went against me seemed to
be frightened of new data and not willing to discuss
recent international research results. I argued that the
PACE study had not shown significant improvement for
CBT and the recent Smile study concerning LP had
profound weaknesses, only 30% of the eligible patients
were enrolled in the study and the sickest ME patients
had not been included.
I also wrote I was surprised that Wyller characterized
ME patients as a small and vocal group. After all, the
Norwegian ME association has 4000 members and few
of these support Wyller.
“Fortunately it is rare for such disrespect from a
doctor for the patients he is supposed to care for is
uttered so clearly”, I wrote.
Further, I wondered how Wyller could characterize
international research in the field as old-fashioned and
outdated.
“Perhaps these new findings are threatening to his
psychosomatic position Wyller is basing his academic
career, a paradigm which is quickly losing ground?
However, for the ME patients this development gives
hope for the future” was my conclusion.
Wyller’s next move came a few days later:
“False information about ME may scare patients
from documented treatment”.
His article illustrated his views. I therefore refer
extensively to parts of it:
“Saugstad is a highly recognized researcher in neonatal
medicine. It is therefore surprising that he, in the ME
debate, breaks several rules for scientific reasoning and
dissemination. That inflammation detected in the
central nervous system of ME patients does not prove
that inflammation is the cause of fatigue. To illustrate
this point from another area: That patients with lung
cancer often have yellow fingers does not implicate that
yellow fingers are causing cancer (both yellow fingers
and cancer may be caused by smoking).
Saugstad has not published his research findings.
Saugstad writes that he has in the last years built up a
strong research group on ME. Why have the findings not
yet been published? Wyller then continued to inform
that he had published 25 research articles in the field
with a holistic approach to the complex disease that ME
is. He then indicated I am biased due to having a close
relative with ME. Two Norwegian professors of
medicine gave me their support against his emotional
attack. In his next reply he continued to attack these
two.
As mentioned Wyller is a firm defender of the PACE
study and when the results from the SMILE study came
he embraced these results – he had for years supported
LP and CBT for ME. Why not try them - they do not have
any adverse effects, he suggested. I replied this is
wrong. “Several ME patients report adverse effects of
these two regimes. The major distinction in the
understanding of ME is perhaps between those who
understand this and those who do not”. Recovery
Norway also attacked me claiming that I told ME
patients they have an inflammation in the brain. This is
definitely wrong I replied, I never diagnose ME patients I
only refer to the scientific literature when I am asked. In
my final statement I informed that unfortunately
Recovery Norway had “forgotten” to disclose that
several of their members were heavily involved
financially in LP as LP instructors.
This debate probably represents a watershed in the
Norwegian ME debate and understanding. The
psychosomatic ME wing had previously given the
impression that they often are harassed by aggressive
patients and relatives. They have also spread the
information that those who support biomedical findings
are afraid of new results. The debate demonstrated that
the opposite is the case. The psychosomatic lobby’s
reaction to new biomedical information was by
resorting to personal and emotional attacks on us who
had a different view. Their disrespect for the patients
they are supposed to serve shocked many of the neutral
bystanders.
The debate was probably initiated due to the
psychosomatic wing rapidly losing ground after the
publication of the IOM report, the new emphasis on
biomedical ME research by NIH and also the Norwegian
Research Council, the CDC’s change in attitude to CBT,
and the reanalysis of the PACE study showing minimal if
any effect of CBT. Several of the psychosomatic
supporters had invested their prestige and based their
whole career on findings that supported their view. I
understand it must be painful to see how the basis of
their theory quickly eroded. This also explains their
uncritical embrace of the Smile study.
During the debate which lasted many weeks I received
overwhelming support from more than 1000 persons in
the newspaper and on social media.
Ola Didrik Saugstad, MD, PhD, FRCPE
Proferssor (em) of Pediatrics
University of Oslo
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 39 of 56
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[>)C^	{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://OiECjEi-A4SVzA8nAwL0MAR3ZDMAjJXNGuuy2eufLgw m`׉	 7cassandra://9VFNx8x5asT_A3BU7rXadHFmsv_vSkbbSRtXqs59Mpsv``S׉	 7cassandra://K2yJYs2Ud30MGuJamB90R4ElrvWJOIgkQ9r341V5K24#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://htBei2ZkkcbYHQzwxRT56roKF4mHDSQx8OXeab_VgdM >͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://SYbJp-Q0YNqjxFNlH8PZZ4Bg7ECr_QEXzCiFhOILuCM ` ׉	 7cassandra://uM9tMnNp9re4LfZvakCscbS4mBLRUY09CJCwQyOpLK4}b`S׉	 7cassandra://mYdO-xLMHJp3tBtNgtU_e23XBpfxb1IpddISxbdkQ4k"p`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://UD4mez0PwZ-_1WR8LvpA6bs6rqJFwR9XLDB1KxOFMeAͶn͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉ETrial By Error: A Q-and-A with Leonard
Jason, on Case Definition
http://www.virology.ws/2018/05/02/trial-by-error-a-qand-a-with-leonard-jason-on-case-definition/
MAY
2018
By David Tuller, DrPH
A Brief Update: Berkeley’s crowdfunding period closed
on April 30th–Monday night. I ended the campaign with
$87,580. After Berkeley’s 7.5% in fees, the funds will
cover my salary/benefit from July 1, 2018 to June 30,
2019, and some travel costs. I really, really appreciate
the fantastic support. Thanks to everyone! I’ve taken a
few days to regroup from my Australia trip and catch up
on my time zones.
**********
Leonard Jason is a professor of psychology at DePaul
University in Chicago. He has served as vice president of
the International American Association of CFS/ME and
as chairperson of the Research
Subcommittee of the U.S. Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome Advisory
Committee. Professor Jason began
investigating chronic fatigue
syndrome almost 30 years ago.
Much of his work has focused on
the epidemiology and prevalence
of the illness and on the impact of
using various case definitions. He
has long been concerned that the
lack of a uniform set of criteria for
identifying study participants has
hindered progress in the science.
Dr. Jason recently shared his thoughts about these
issues. (This Q-and-A has been edited for clarity and
length.)
How common is fatigue?
If you were to ask people right now if they are
“fatigued,” which means feeling weak, tired, or lacking
energy, about 25% of the population would say yes, so
this symptom is very common. In contrast, “chronic
fatigue” means that a person has had fatigue for 6 or
more months. Only about 4-5% of the population has
chronic fatigue.
There are multiple reasons for people to be fatigued–for
example depression, anxiety, over-exertion, people
working three jobs, medications, sleep deprivation,
weight problems, poor diet, inactivity, and
deconditioning. These are just a few of the many causes
of fatigue and chronic fatigue.
Physicians see lots of people coming into their practices,
where the patients are seeking help for their fatigue,
and in fact it is one of the most common reasons for
seeing a doctor. But it’s very hard for many physicians to
differentiate complaints of general or chronic fatigue
versus the illness known as ME [myalgic
encephalomyelitis]. Yet it is of critical importance to
make a differential diagnosis between those with purely
chronic fatigue versus those who have ME. In fact, it is
this failure to differentiate these two conditions that has
caused so many problems, and the
culprit is a flawed and imprecise
case definitions as well as failures
to gain an international consensus
for one research case definition.
So what is a case definition, and
why are there different research
and clinical definitions?
A case definition is a set of rules
that helps a researcher or a
clinician make a decision about
whether someone has a particular illness or does not
have the illness. It’s that simple. A good case definition
is critical for the assessment process, to identify those
people who actually have an illness or disease. It is the
cornerstone of medicine.
A research case definition tries to identify a
homogeneous group of people who have the illness and
can be recruited for research purposes. In contrast, a
clinical case definition is used to identify or diagnose a
broader group of patients for treatment purposes, and
many of these wouldn’t qualify for research studies. For
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Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://K2yJYs2Ud30MGuJamB90R4ElrvWJOIgkQ9r341V5K24#`̵ [>)C^׉Eexample, if someone is very obese, a research case
definition might exclude that person because the weight
issue could be causing the person’s problems. In other
words, for research purposes, we want to select only
patients who do not have other psychological or
medical conditions that could be causing the illness we
are studying.
For science to progress, the research case definition is
critical, as it can standardize the selection of patient
samples so that research groups around the world are
all studying the patients with the same disease. So
gaining consensus among international scientists for a
research case definition is a most critical task, and one
that unfortunately has still not been accomplished for
our field.
One of the parameters that’s important for a research
case definition for this illness, in your view, is that
psychiatric co-morbidities should be excluded. Can you
explain the reason for that?
Yes, and let me give an example that illustrates this
issue. A patient with a major depressive disorder with
melancholic features would probably have fatigue,
aches and pains, as well as sleep and cognitive
problems. Yet these are also symptoms of ME, so some
clinicians and researchers could easily confuse these
two conditions. But they are very different illnesses, as
people with a major depressive disorder feel selfreproach,
whereas those with ME do not. If you ask
people with a major depressive disorder what they
would do tomorrow if they were well, they would not
be sure. In contrast, if you asked people with ME what
they would do if they were well, they’d give you a long
list of all the things they have wanted to do but been
unable due to their illness.
If you are studying ME, you need to exclude people who
have a primary psychiatric disorder from your study. If
researchers misclassify people with a major depressive
disorder as having ME, this will have serious negative
consequences for identifying biomarkers, estimating
prevalence rates, and determining outcomes of
treatment trials. The issue of selecting patients who
really have ME is the most important issue facing our
field. In a sense, the lack of a consensus on a ME
research case definition is like building a pyramid of
playing cards with a very shaky bottom, and then
everything built on top of this foundation is vulnerable
to collapsing.
Let’s start with what is the broadest case definition
that has been used, the so-called Oxford criteria for
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
CFS. Can you describe that and explain why it presents
a problem?
If you have six or more months of fatigue, then you
meet this case definition, so it’s a very broad category.
Clearly, as I mentioned earlier, a lot of people who meet
this criteria have medical or lifestyle reasons causing
their fatigue. One of my students, Madison Sunnquist,
just published her master’s thesis that indicated how
the CBT theoretical model only works if you identify
people with a very wide case definition, but when you
have a better and more restricted case definition that
requires core symptoms of ME, then the CBT model no
longer works. In contrast to the CBT approach, my
research group for the past 20 years has been doing
research on what we call the energy envelope. But this
pacing approach is not a cure, just a strategy to help
better cope with ME. Our approach involves helping
patients to better monitor their energy levels, learn how
to stay within their energy envelope, and sustain
lifestyle changes that involve reprioritizing activities.
So how did the CDC come up with the Holmes and
then the Fukuda case definitions?
The Holmes case definition came out in 1988. The CDC
investigators had gone to Incline Village and ultimately
named this illness CFS. Their first case definition
included too many symptoms. In fact, to meet their case
definition, a patient would have needed to have eight or
more symptoms out of a list of 11. But here is the
problem that soon emerged–if you develop a case
definition that requires so many unexplained somatic
symptoms, you have a very high probability of
unwittingly selecting people who have a somatoform
disorder. And you don’t want to select people who have
a purely psychiatric condition.
So in 1994, the Fukuda case definition was developed to
replace the Holmes definition. For the 1994 case
definition, the authors selected eight of the symptoms
that had been listed in the Holmes criteria, and a
patient needed to have any four of those eight
symptoms to meet the new Fukuda case definition.
But here is the problem with the Fukuda CFS case
definition–patients are not required to have postexertional
malaise, cognitive problems and unrefreshing
sleep, and as we know, these are core symptoms of ME.
So, a person could have four of the eight Fukuda
symptoms and be diagnosed with CFS, and not have any
of the three critical symptoms. In that case, you would
be including in your sample a person who does not have
the core elements of the illness.
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://mYdO-xLMHJp3tBtNgtU_e23XBpfxb1IpddISxbdkQ4k"p`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://KDgEC3V1-rLeY9qfnFbp3gC5mRaQv1EhJIhetBKwPhI ` ׉	 7cassandra://dqBz-DO8vTo0G_vWQEn5_FiNUYonLDonEDHHkeKGhK4i`S׉	 7cassandra://RQu3xhBHFABYLJsb9Mw3SzwdCoOSpY3JqpI0emSAPYk">`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://GszlpDM_g6k5ildBvzF3m_BIafPqgxHLQPP2i3EFpe0Κ͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://w3Z4xtJpxBziy7aMlBl0I8jpJ4epqnqs943L48D2Kvc ߂`׉	 7cassandra://E9MM-WL55eUm7vchEZLV7B2mGIqqpA9M2d6fUxBfSysi`S׉	 7cassandra://WPwM2th5XpkJ2YuamrDzLZMFvBGu3vKYrbyz7MazhFs `̵ ׉	 7cassandra://FmpngWuLl_44re3fHIZpTKO1VHRE67h5esSc1VBhWO0 I͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EFrom 1994 and on, I have been doing research that
shows some of the diagnostic problems with the Fukuda
case definition. And remember, the Fukuda case
definition is the research case definition that has been
used throughout the world for the past 25 years. But
this Fukuda case definition identifies a heterogenous
group of patients, because core symptoms are not
required of all patients. So, as a consequence, samples
of patients with CFS based on Fukuda case definition
vary widely in different research groups and labs.
What is the impact of the case definitions on
prevalence rates?
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the CDC conducted a
prevalence study where they started by asking
physicians in four cities to identify patients they thought
had CFS. At that time, a lot of physicians didn’t believe
CFS existed, so putting physicians as gatekeepers in the
selection of patients for this study resulted in a
prevalence rate that was very low. Also, many people in
the US do not have the financial resources to have a
physician, so relying on primary care doctors to identify
patients was another reason for low prevalence rates.
The study suggested that CFS was a rare disease that
affected fewer than 20,000 people in the US.
At that point, a group of researchers in Chicago began
working on a study that involved finding patients from a
random community sample, rather than a sample
referred from physicians. In 1995, with NIH funding, our
Chicago research team conducted a community-based
prevalence study, which found that about a million
people in the US had CFS. We also found that CFS
affected all ethnic and socioeconomic groups, and thus
we helped shatter the myth that CFS was a “Yuppie Flu”
disease.
What did William Reeves [then-head of the CDC
division in charge of the illness] do with the so-called
“empiric” criteria? And why did this increase the CDC’s
estimate of disease prevalence by a factor of 10?
In the early 2000s, Bill Reeves felt there was a need to
operationalize the Fukuda case definition. For example,
he tried to standardize the way we measure a patient’s
disability or a substantial reduction in functioning. He
used one instrument that has been referred to as the
SF-36. According to Reeves, if a patient met criteria for
one of several sub-scales within the SF-36, the patient
would meet the disability criteria for having CFS.
But one of these domains was “role emotional”
functioning. It turns out that every person with a major
depressive disorder meets the criteria for “role
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emotional” functioning. So you can’t just specify
instruments such as the SF-36; you have to specify
which sub-scales of the instruments you are going to
use, and what are the cut-off points. And if any of these
choices are wrong, you will identify people who have
another illness. My team gathered data on this point,
and we conducted a study that assessed people with
major depressive disorder, and found that over onethird
of them could be inappropriately classified as
having CFS under the so-called Reeves empiric criteria.
So, I think in the attempt to operationalize the Fukuda
criteria, Reeves made mistakes, and I believe that is one
of the reasons the estimated CDC prevalence estimates
increased ten-fold, from .24% in a 2003 sample to 2.54%
in 2007. They operationalized the Fukuda criteria in a
way that classified many people as having CFS when
they really had other illnesses.
At that time, many thought this increase in prevalence
figures that Reeves proposed was constructive as it
suggested that far more people had the illness, and thus
these findings could be used to argue for more
attention and funding due to this illness being so
widespread. But if you use a very broad criteria, and
bring into the illness case definition people who don’t
have the disease, then the entire research effort is
seriously compromised. Fortunately, over the past
decade, few researchers have used the Reeves way of
operationalizing CFS.
What about the CCC and ICC criteria?
The CCC case definition for ME/CFS in 2003 was better
because it specified key symptoms such as PEM. It was
developed as a clinical case definition, and now it’s
being used by several teams as a research case
definition. With the 2011 ME-ICC, I have noticed
problems, and in part this is due to them once again
requiring too many symptoms that could, as with the
Holmes criteria of 1988, bring into the ME category
some individuals who have a primary psychiatric
disorder. In addition, the ME-ICC criteria is complicated
to use, and many clinicians and scientists will have a
difficult time reliably using it with patients.
What is the problem you see with the IOM case
definition, apart from the name?
Well, it is true that Systemic Exertion Intolerance
Disease (SEID) is a name most patients dislike. However,
the IOM report was correct in requiring several core
symptoms, such as PEM. But I believe these authors
made a mistake in indicating that a patient could have
either cognitive impairment or orthostatic intolerance—
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://RQu3xhBHFABYLJsb9Mw3SzwdCoOSpY3JqpI0emSAPYk">`̵ [>)C^׉Eone or the other. Cognitive impairment should have
been required for all patients to have. But a more
serious problem is that they inadvertently expanded the
case definition by having just about no exclusionary
illnesses, such as primary psychiatric disorders. My team
recently conducted a study where about half the people
with a variety of medical and psychiatric illnesses met
the IOM criteria.
Now the IOM criteria was developed as a clinical case
definition, but there was no federal effort to develop a
research criteria that selects a more homogenous group
of patients. The failure to develop an international
consensus on a research case definition means that
many researchers will continue to use the problematic
Fukuda case definition, or they might use the IOM
clinical criteria to select patients for research purposes,
and this process has already begun.
To summarize, for research purposes, if a person has the
core symptoms of the IOM definition, it would be
important to exclude those with a primary medical or
psychiatric condition, but this is not what the IOM
authors recommended. So, the clinical IOM case
definition once again over-identifies people as having
the illness. That means what occurred with the Reeves
criteria of a decade ago has once again occurred with
the IOM, as these criteria broaden the types of patients
identified as having the illness.
What is at stake in this debate?
The stakes are high, for if you have an inappropriately
wide case definition for research purposes, you will
bring into your studies many fatigued people with a
variety of conditions. In other words, if you identify the
wrong patients, then your study will make conclusions
about people who do not have ME, and you will have
significant barriers to engaging in critical scientific
activities such as estimating accurate prevalence rates
or identifying biological markers. Also, if you bring in
lots of people who don’t have this illness but lifestyle
issues and/or a solely depressive disorder, a good
percentage of them will respond favorably to
psychogenically oriented treatments. As I have been
writing about for many years, this will ultimately lead to
some researchers making conclusions about CBT and
GET that are not true for patients with ME.
My case is simple. You need to
have one research case definition
that is used by scientists
throughout the world. The
clinical case definition can be
broader, but the research case
definition has to be tightly
focused on those with the illness
so that results can be replicated
in different laboratories. This
scientific achievement has been
accomplished with every illness
or disease except for ME.
We can do better. After working
in this area for almost three
decades, I am confident that we
have the tools and methods to
use psychometrically sound
procedures to develop a
consensus on one research case
definition. I am optimistic that
one day this will occur, and for
me, there is literally nothing as
important for our scientific field.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://WPwM2th5XpkJ2YuamrDzLZMFvBGu3vKYrbyz7MazhFs `̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://RLRhADCmWIe6aLX6KjPOiWckCjI8SWm4_mvPYBtZgxg I0`׉	 7cassandra://K-Sgl4ShqwcmIzZxLEcUf4lk9ZkWatoNF9beFC8-Ry4g`S׉	 7cassandra://jHsEEY4poFJlrK0h8GfaqRrJjRHDwArIJffVXjj1p7Y"0`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://OXIDghLszGvn6BUB9YPDfvTpVfx305ZPES60vH-usVQ ͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://0IOmVnBjaXonUcwq_6v70dZ9HiQM6eHMbfkV_YVArpo ta`׉	 7cassandra://uRj2HKtrSDo7aIL1Pxgth3142pV_ZIN6lYrnl34D-nÉU`S׉	 7cassandra://IcwTU9KKEgxj_76By89N3-on1nKEPRrj_WyFvMP4-q4'b`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://c9S9kT5kwvptGab_1_WsQnRJBcpFIgwKrRycxBnByeQ ;̤͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉E	Some may not have noticed but Invest in ME Research has its very
own film star supporting the cause.
Jon Campling is an actor, known to many Harry Potter fans as
the 'Trainstopping Deatheater'.
He wrote the introduction to the book about ME - Science,
Politics …….and ME - written by Dr Ian Gibson and Elaine
Sherriffs.
Jon is married to Ali, also an actor – an actor-singer-dancer.
Ali was diagnosed with ME after 2 years of increasingly
debilitating symptoms. Like many, Ali was prescribed
18 months of CBT and advised to use PACING techniques
– but realised that there was little real understanding
of this illness and no ongoing care. So Jon and Ali have
found themselves dealing with the same problems as
all people with ME have to deal w ith.
Jon has been a staunch support of Invest in ME
Research and constantly uses his fame to raise
awareness and valuable funds for research.
Jon could have just hidden this away and not
raised the issue. He didn’t.
He uses immense time for fundraising for ME
earning the admiration and thanks from so
many families where ME has struck.
Jon’s fundraising page is here -
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Invest in ME Research (Charity Nr.
https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/walktall4me
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
׉	 7cassandra://jHsEEY4poFJlrK0h8GfaqRrJjRHDwArIJffVXjj1p7Y"0`̵ [>)C^׉E\Conference Abstracts
Conference Chair
Dr Ian Gibson
Former Dean of Biological Sciences, UEA
Dr Ian Gibson, former
Labour MP for
Norwich North,
worked at University of
East Anglia for 32 years,
ecame Dean of the
hool of biological
ences in 1991 and was
d 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 Elizabeth R. Unger
Chief of Chronic Viral Diseases Branch, National Center
for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Division
of High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Elizabeth (Beth) Unger,
PhD, MD, received an
undergraduate degree in
Chemistry at Lebanon Valley
College, Annville, PA. She
hen earned her PhD and MD
in the Division of Biologic
iences at the University of
icago where she also began a
dency in pathology. Her
residency and fellowship was completed at Pennsylvania
State University Medical Center. During this time, Dr.
Unger developed a practical method of colorimetic in
situ hybridization. This work led to interest in tissue
localization of HPV and ultimately to her initial
appointment to CDC in 1997 to pursue molecular
pathology of HPV and CFS.
Dr. Unger has served as the Acting Chief of CVDB since
January 2010 and has 13 years of experience in CVDB,
where she has participated in the design and
implementation of CFS research and HPV laboratory
diagnostics. During this time, she was co-author on 25
peer-reviewed manuscripts related to CFS, including the
often-cited descriptions of the Wichita and Georgia
population-based studies. In addition, Dr. Unger has
been instrumental in efforts by WHO to establish an
HPV LabNet and serves as lead of a WHO HPV Global
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
Reference Laboratory. She is co-author of 142 peerreviewed
publications and 24 book chapters and serves
on the editorial board of six scientific journals. In 2008,
for her HPV research accomplishments, she received the
Health and Human Services (HHS) Career Achievement
Award.
Dr Unger has been selected to serve as the Chief of the
Chronic Viral Diseases Branch (CVDB) in the Division of
High-Consequence Pathogens and Pathology (DHCPP),
National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious
Diseases (NCEZID), Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC).
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
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.
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://IcwTU9KKEgxj_76By89N3-on1nKEPRrj_WyFvMP4-q4'b`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://IJMx0Vaeyh-1V-_F9k8VlDaBz709Ni3RMfwPXUz_TMo 5` ׉	 7cassandra://xqeuo7Z9uFQ51nIjcOfKYD4f5TMnPKr9Rj8sWx2UlcḱA`S׉	 7cassandra://tppj1INS_FRfC9LGrk6v6YvDBwJD0cc2TiW06wMLikA$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://G2p9ytM6DuavPUhwaI69IyajfzGelv4qFfcd4Pktb9o̐͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://nDVoH6jsQ8qgnL-HwoPTF_RYOZqTCcRZ-AkXTzh7kD4 ` ׉	 7cassandra://bIfFuNR99jHa6ROULXVCcHJH58hNVlwiN8QXeRT8GA8̈́r`S׉	 7cassandra://eN8hwRrSgq0uGKrs3OBCqOSGGiMAryVlMYxf2d5W-Tc$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://gWc8RTJoZW9CRKI8DcPfjs7HbeI9y3pkfEVkSVtJ_6ox0͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈ׉EHShe 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.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
Dr Avindra Nath
NIH National Institute of Neurological Disorders,
Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Dr. Nath received his MD degree from Christian Medical
College in India in 1981 and completed a residency in
Neurology from University of Texas Health Science
Center in Houston, followed by a fellowship in Multiple
Sclerosis and Neurovirology at the same institution and
then a fellowship in
Neuro-AIDS at NINDS.
He held faculty
positions at the
University of Manitoba
(1990-97) and the
University of Kentucky
(1997-02).
In 2002, he joined
Johns Hopkins
University as Professor of Neurology and Director of the
Division of Neuroimmunology and Neurological
Infections.
He joined NIH in 2011 as the Clinical Director of NINDS,
the Director of the Translational Neuroscience Center
and Chief of the Section of Infections of the Nervous
System.
His research focuses on understanding the
pathophysiology of retroviral infections of the nervous
system and the development of new diagnostic and
therapeutic approaches for these diseases.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
Professor Simon Carding
Research Leader, Quadram Institute Bioscience
Upon completing postgraduate work at the Medical
Research Council’s Clinical Research Centre in Harrow,
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Simon Carding took up
a postdoctoral position
at New York University
School of Medicine,
USA,and then at Yale
University as a Howard
Hughes Fellow in the
Immunobiology Group
at Yale University with
Profs Kim Bottomly and
Charlie Janeway Jr.
While at Yale an interest in gamma-delta (γδ) T cells was
acquired working closely with Adrian Hayday on
molecular genetics and then with Prof. Peter Doherty to
establish their role in (viral) infectious disease. He left
Yale after five years to take up a faculty position at the
University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia where he
developed a research interest in mucosal and GI-tract
immunology, performing studies in germfree mice with
Prof John Cebra that helped establish the role of gut
microbes in the aetiology of inflammatory bowel
disease (IBD).
After 15 years in the USA, he returned to the UK to take
up the Chair in Molecular Immunology at the University
of Leeds where he established a new research
programme on commensal gut bacteria and Bacteroides
genetics leading to the development of a Bacteroides
drug delivery platform that is being used for developing
new interventions for IBD and for mucosal vaccination.
In 2008 he was recruited by UEA and IFR to develop a
gut research programme, taking up the Chair of
Mucosal Immunology at UEA-MED and the position of
head of the Gut Biology Research Programme at IFR,
which later became part of the Gut Health and Food
Safety (GHFS) Programme. GHFS research covers a
broad area of gut biology including epithelial cell
physiology, mucus and glycobiology, mucosal
immunology, commensal microbiology, foodborne
bacterial pathogens, and mathematical modelling and
bioinformatics. The success of this programme has led
to the establishment of the Gut Microbes and Health
research programme that is integral to the research
agenda of The Quadram Institute.
Within these programmes, much of the work
undertaken in his research group builds upon that
carried out in the USA and latterly in the UK with a
major focus on understanding the mechanisms of
intestinal microbial (bacterial and viral) tolerance. In
particular, identifying the pathways and mediators of
microbe-host cross talk and the role they play in
establishing and maintaining gut health and in diseases
that not only affect the gut but other organ systems.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://tppj1INS_FRfC9LGrk6v6YvDBwJD0cc2TiW06wMLikA$`̵ [>)C^׉EYThis has led to the development of new research
projects relating to the gut-microbiome-brain axis and
understanding how the intestinal microbiome impacts
on mental health and the development of
neurodegenerative diseases, and the intestinal virome
and the role that prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses play
in microbial homeostasis and dysbiosis.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
Dr Peter Johnsen
University Hospital of North Norway, Harstad, Norway
- Internal Medicine
Dr Johnsen works in the medical department at the
University of Northern Norway
in Harstad.
He is currently involved in the
clinical trial of FMT which is
being funded by the
Norwegian Health Council.
Five million Norwegian kroner
has been awarded for the trial.
Together, it will include 80
participants who either receive
treatment with FMT from a
healthy donor or placebo.
The study is double blinded, which means that neither
participants nor scientists will know who received the
treatment from donor or placebo before the study ends.
Startup with the inclusion of participants begins during
Summer 2018.
Abstract:
The Comeback study – a double blinded randomized
placebo-controlled trial testing the efficacy of faecal
microbiota transplantation (FMT) in CFS/ME
Earlier published data suggests that a dysbiotic gut flora
may be an important factor in the pathophysiology of
CFS/ME. Differences in host metabolism and immune
activation pointing to a leaky gut are found in the
context of at gut flora that is less diverse with an altered
composition when CFS/ME is compared to healthy
controls. In addition, an open label study has shown
persistent relief in CFS/ME after transplantation of
enteric bacteria.
To test the gut dysbiosis hypothesis in CFS/ME we will
launch a double blind randomized, placebo-controlled,
parallel-group, single-centre trial to test FMT as
treatment for CFS/ME. Eighty CFS/ME participants will
receive either donor transplant or placebo FMT, with 12
months follow up period. Primary endpoint is the
efficacy of FMT at three months. We will use a patient
reported outcome by the Chalder Fatigue Scale to
determine efficacy.
Recently we performed a trial with the same study
design testing the effect of FMT in irritable bowel
syndrome (IBS). In the primary endpoint three months
after treatment there was significant improvement on
gastrointestinal complaints. Preliminary results also
show a significant effect on fatigue, which is a common
complaint in irritable bowel syndrome. Conversely,
gastrointestinal complaints are common in CFS/ME.
Because of our previous experience with FMT for
functional disease, the symptom overlap between IBS
and CFS/ME, and the evidence for an involvement of
the gut microbiome in both, we are eager to lunch our
trial in August 2018. We expect to have the final results
ready by August 2020.
UK charity Invest in ME Research has provided us with a
network of great collaborators that may help us to
establish a true cause and effect relationship by
performing analysis of immunological markers and the
gut metagenome.
Biobanking of feces, blood and urine is an important
asset to this study and will allow for tandem
characterization of the immune response, metabolome
and metagenome in CFS/ME. In outlining the study
protocol we found the lack of consensus on symptom
severity assessment challenging. We are hoping for
input on how we can optimize the use of our biobank
for insights in CFS/ME pathophysiology and discussions
on what are the most relevant endpoints in efficacy
studies for CFS/ME. We are thankful for the possibility
the Invest in ME Research Foundation has given us to
meet and network with the world leading expertise on
CFS/ME.
There is great interest in and a commercialisation of
FMT treatment, including FMT for CFS/ME. However,
this enthusiasm needs to be balanced with a need for
caution with the use of FMT. The screening regime for
FMT donors is just as extensive as the regime for donors
of blood, cells and live tissue. Our main aim is to provide
physicians and other caregivers to CFS/ME patients’
evidence-based advice regarding the efficacy of FMT.
Thereby, this study will fulfil its intention regardless of
the conclusion. However, there is a greater potential in
this trial. Participants may serve as their own control
pinpointing which mechanisms change if they transcend
from sick to healthy or improved. In conjunction with
the intervention any hypothesis can be tested in silico
against the clinical outcomes to identify new
therapeutic targets and biomarkers for improving
diagnosis or personalizing FMT treatment.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
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׉	 7cassandra://eN8hwRrSgq0uGKrs3OBCqOSGGiMAryVlMYxf2d5W-Tc$`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://I_JDBgO9s5qYErz8dXIa_erLymASSUh4YD3Y4bTQRwA W`׉	 7cassandra://liACuO8dY-A61rWJqhu_3L_EsYpEQYvO2frAmOCOd_w͉`S׉	 7cassandra://gMEf4P_V2lsy0L2DVuuXeDHaSd_26ISvW29STWfGbSc'?`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://jYa3ORvcq5Gzb3P49qwryMrdpfy738hgoCk8IAeBy3k ̔͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://x0hoZAFgA59LIIvn1PuBfQkni1_alRQICW_WhLPA2Qs `׉	 7cassandra://-Z3jCFgw22kwXPSWT9zZ3bsYkMmpzUfuGBWBXb2RbzM͌`S׉	 7cassandra://a1HuU1mLj6DFhEahOBMI_ihCnOp9B6EreHCihAZM7XA&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://BHvq4_5GzbDf6WMKnI4OoM47j9syKnOxgrFJya6n4w4 ̌͠[>)C^נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^ m9ׁHhttp://Brain-Gain.orgׁׁЈ׉EProfessor Karl Johan Tronstad
Professor Institute for Biomedicine , Tronstad Lab,
Bergen, Norway
Prof. Tronstad completed his
graduate studies in
biochemistry at the
University of Bergen (UiB) in
2002. As postdoc at the
Haukeland University
Hospital, he studied bioactive
compounds with the
potential to modulate
mitochondrial functions in
cancer cells. In 2005 he was
recruited to the Department
of Biomedicine, UiB, where he started his research
group to investigate metabolism and mitochondrial
physiology. His laboratory seeks to better our
understanding of how defective mitochondrial
homeostasis may disturb cell physiology, and how this
may be involved in mechanisms of cancer and Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS).
Karl was involved with the recent paper to come from
Bergen - Journal of Clinical Investigation Insight. The
Tronstad Lab investigates cell metabolism and
mitochondrial biology and we are very fortunate that he
can spare time to participate in the Colloquium.
Abstract: Cellular energetics in ME/CFS
Irregularities in cellular energy metabolism have been
linked to many human diseases, including metabolic
disorders, mitochondrial diseases, cancer,
neurodegeneration and ME/CFS. The possible
consequences of cellular energy failure caused by a
metabolic defect are context-dependent, and may range
from mild cellular stress to cell death. An energydepleted
cellular state may theoretically be
counteracted by metabolic rewiring, but if this is not
sufficient to re-establish the energy level, additional
(patho)physiological responses are activated. The
consequences may include elements of cellular fatigue,
but the mechanisms involved under such conditions are
often poorly understood.
Recently we found changes in amino acid levels and
gene regulation consistent with altered regulation of
the central enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) in
patients with ME/CFS compared with healthy
individuals. Further, the presence of serum from
ME/CFS patients changed energy metabolism in healthy
human muscle cells in culture. These findings combined
with the anticipated role of dysimmunity in ME/CFS,
suggest the presence of an immuno-metabolic
Page 48 of 56
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Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
pathomechanism. We are now investigating potential
mechanisms involved, and characterizing contextual
consequences of cellular energy failure, with particular
focus on the mitochondrial oxidation machinery.
Defects in this machinery are likely to cause energy
deficiency and excessive lactate production, which are
hallmarks of fatigue and post-exertional malaise (PEM).
By using a translational research approach, we
investigate whether impaired energy metabolism may
be linked to ME/CFS symptoms, which could provide
support for the development of new biomarkers and
treatments. Our research strategy is to build on existing
knowledge that has recently emerged concerning
metabolic changes in ME/CFS, and to adopt new
methods and strategies for studying the mechanisms at
the cellular level. This presentation will discuss our
current approaches and recent data.
Professor Don Staines
The National Centre for Neuroimmunology and
Emerging Diseases (NCNED), Griffiths University,
Australia
Professor Staines has been
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. He is now Co-Director at The
National Centre for Neuroimmunology and Emerging
Diseases (NCNED), Griffiths University in Australia
Abstract not available at time of printing.
׉	 7cassandra://gMEf4P_V2lsy0L2DVuuXeDHaSd_26ISvW29STWfGbSc'?`̵ [>)C^׉EProfessor Theoharis Theoharides
Professor of Pharmacology and Internal Medicine,
Tufts University, Boston, USA
Theoharis Theoharides is
Professor of Pharmacology
and Internal Medicine, as
well as Director of
Molecular
Immunopharmacology and
Drug Discovery, in the
Department of
Immunology at Tufts
University School of
Medicine, Boston, MA.
He was born in
Thessaloniki, Greece, and
graduated with Honors
from Anatolia College. He received all his degrees with
Honors from Yale University, and was awarded the
Dean’s Research Award and the Winternitz Prize in
Pathology.
He trained in internal medicine at New England Medical
Center, which awarded him the Oliver Smith Award
“recognizing excellence, compassion and service.” He
also received a Certificate in Global Leadership from the
Tufts Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a
Fellowship at the Harvard Kennedy School of
Government. He has been serving as the Clinical
Pharmacologist of the Massachusetts Drug Formulary
Commission continuously since 1986. In Greece, he has
served on the Supreme Advisory Health Councils of the
Ministries of Health and of Social Welfare, as well as on
the Board of Directors of the Institute of Pharmaceutical
Research and Technology, and he is a member of the
International Advisory Committee for the University of
Cyprus School of Medicine. He first showed that mast
cells, known for causing allergic reactions, are critical for
inflammation, especially in the brain, and are involved
in a number of inflammatory conditions that worsen by
stress such as allergies, asthma, chronic fatigue
syndrome, eczema, fibromyalgia, migraines,
mastocytosis, multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, and most
recently autism spectrum disorder.
He has also shown that corticotropin-releasing hormone
(CRH), neurotensin and substance P, peptides secreted
under stress, act together, and with the cytokine IL-33,
to trigger mast cells and microglia to secrete
inflammatory molecules. These processes are inhibited
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
by the novel flavonoids, luteolin and
tetramethoxyluteolin that he has helped formulate in
unique dietary supplements and a skin lotion. He has
published over 400 scientific papers (JBC, JACI, JPET,
NEJM, Nature, PNAS, Science) and 3 textbooks with
29,887 citations (h-factor 84) and he is in the top 5% of
authors most cited in pharmacological and
immunological journals. He has received 37 patents and
trademarks, including three patents covering the use of
luteolin in brain inflammation and autism: US 8,268,365
(09/18/12); US 9,050,275 (06/09/15); US 9,176,146
(11/03/15).
Acting as Advisor, he was instrumental in the
development of ibuprofen (Upjohn), Cetirizine (UCB)
and Niaspan (Kos). He is also the Scientific Director of
Algonot, LLC, as well as President of Theta Biomedical
Consulting and Development Co., Inc., of BiomedAdvice,
LLC, and of the nonprofit Brain-Gain.org. He is a
member of 15 academies and scientific societies. He
was inducted into the Alpha Omega Alpha National
Medical Honor Society and the Rare Diseases Hall of
Fame. At Tufts, he served on the Curriculum, Students
Promotion, Grievance, Faculty Promotion and Tenure, as
well as Strategic Planning Committees. He received the
Tufts Excellence in Teaching ten times, the Tufts
Distinguished Faculty Recognition Award twice, the
Tufts Alumni Award for Faculty Excellence, Boston
Mayor’s Community Award, and the Dr. George
Papanicolau Award, as well as Honorary Doctor of
Medicine from Athens University and Honorary Doctor
of Sciences from Hellenic-American University. He is
“Archon” of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of
Constantinople.
Abstract: Brain mast cell involvement in Myalgic
Encephalopathy/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Myalgic
Encephalopathy/Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome
(ME/CFS) affects about 1-2% of the US population and is
characterized by debilitating fatigue of six months in the
absence of systemic diseases. Many ME/CFS patients
also have fibromyalgia and skin hypersensitivity, which
worsen with stress. We hypothesize that stimulation of
mast cells (MC) in the hypotahalamus activate microglia
leading to secretion of pro-inflammaotry mediators that
disrupt normal homeostasis and advesrsely affect
mitochondrial
function. Corticotropin-releasing
www.investinme.org
Page 49 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://a1HuU1mLj6DFhEahOBMI_ihCnOp9B6EreHCihAZM7XA&`̵ [>)C^[>)C^{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://zB7svhNrM4YHWmCNrnmHP1gViS5qOfqRj53RJg5cECc ` ׉	 7cassandra://-xRG2AIS_l3Sa5l2uZbUaQZbet6IpMdHKhBcGM1cXNs͐`S׉	 7cassandra://v04Ll8OWRLgp7JkwkWqWI-IClNxD4EdeRV_-ggOvGoY(`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://ETQX5qkWt3qbmPlXM4DAjkI6dFNHr9_DoPG_jRupGQ4̐͠[>)C^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://J-T-UKq_V58s2UojzQImMclblZtnamaMGTlu1uvm5HE ` ׉	 7cassandra://PMe-AH14QyQwUw1QBVruUPNI9wAfO35IuGBykplxqiw͉.`S׉	 7cassandra://4bwBu_ZBbYYV2EO8Q7NB0lAb2PxQDjUoNQi3xrs8_WE%!`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://i3HrVPY7dnIfFh7RBzBVkD-9C8VLuRMF_oi2rxirvOgR̈͠[>)C^ נ[>)C^ T̚9ׁHhttp://www.investinme.orgׁׁЈנ[>)C^ ̄!9ׁH $http://neuroimmune.cornell.edu/news/ׁׁЈ׉Ehormone (CRH), neurotensin (NT) and substance P (SP)
are secreted under stress and can stimulate MC,
necessary for allergic reactions, to release inflammatory
mediators that could contribute to ME/ CFS symptoms
directly or via activation of microglia. We showed that
CRH and NT act synergistically to stimulate MC to secrete
VEGF, which increases permeability of the blood-brainbarrier
(BBB) and would allow entry of toxins in the
brtain. We also showed that NT can activate microglia to
secrete IL-1beta. Moreover, we showed that
the
combined action of SP and the alarmin IL-33 lead to
impressive amounts of TNF secretion from human MC.
We further investigated the effect of combining ip
injection of polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid [poly(I:C)], to
mimic a viral infection, with 15 min forced cold swim
stress, to mimic exercise and stress, on female C57BL/6
mice locomotor activity, as well as brain gene expression
and serum levels of inflammatory mediators. Treated
mice showed decreased locomotor activity over 72 hrs,
while serum levels of TNF, IL-6 and KC (IL-8/CXCL8
murine homologue), as well as their gene expression in
the brain, were increased increased. When other mice
were provided with chow high in isoflavones for 2 weeks
prior
to treatment, this intervention reversed the
reduced locomotor activity and minimized the increased
serum levels and
gene expression
of the proinflammatory
mediators. Moreover, the unique natural
flavonoid, tetramethoxyluteolin potently inhibited both
human cultured MC and microglia activation. We are
presently seeking funding to
measure
these
neuropeptides and cytokines in the blood of ME/CFS
patients before and after exercise, as well as develop an
intranasal tetramethoxyluteolin formulation for direct
delivery to the hypotalamus through the cribriform
plexus (Funded by an Anonymus grant).
References from this article will be in the online version
of the journal.
Associate Professor Mady Hornig
Associate Professor, Center for Infection and Immunity
(CII), Columbia University Mailman School of Public
Health New York, USA
Mady Hornig, MA, MD is a
physician-scientist in the
Center for Infection and
Immunity (CII) at the
Columbia University
Mailman School of Public
Health where she serves as
Director of Translational
Research and is an associate
professor of epidemiology.
Her research focuses on the
role of microbial, immune,
Page 50 of 56
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and toxic stimuli in the development of neuropsychiatric
conditions, including autism, PANDAS (Pediatric
Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated
with Streptococcal infection), mood disorders and
myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome
(ME/CFS). She is widely known both for establishing
animal models that identify how genes and
maturational factors interact with environmental agents
to lead to brain disorders and for her work clarifying the
role of viruses, intestinal microflora and xenobiotics in
autism and other neuropsychiatric illnesses that may be
mediated by immune mechanisms. Under her direction,
proteomic analyses of umbilical cord samples are
identifying potential birth biomarkers for autism in a
prospective study in Norway, the Autism Birth Cohort
(ABC). She established that there was no association
between intestinal measles virus transcripts and autism,
and, with Brent Williams and W. Ian Lipkin at CII, has
found altered expression of genes relating to
carbohydrate metabolism and inflammatory pathways
and differences in the bacteria harboured in the
intestines of children with autism. She also leads
projects examining the influence of immune molecules
on brain development and function and their role in the
genesis of schizophrenia, major depression, and
cardiovascular disease comorbidity in adults, and directs
the Chronic Fatigue initiative Pathogen Discovery and
Pathogenesis Project at CII. In 2004, Dr. Hornig
presented to the Institute of Medicine Immunization
Safety Review Committee and testified twice before
congressional subcommittees regarding the role of
infections and toxins in autism pathogenesis. Her work
in ME/CFS is establishing immune profiles and helping
to identify pathogens that may be linked to disease.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
Professor Maureen Hanson
Director, Center for Enervating Neuroimmune Disease
Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor, Department of
Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University,
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.
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://v04Ll8OWRLgp7JkwkWqWI-IClNxD4EdeRV_-ggOvGoY(`̵ [>)C^!׉Ecdegree. 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.
Abstract:
Research at the Cornell Center for Enervating
Neuroimmune Disease
The Center for Enervating Neuroimmune Disease (ENID
Center) encompasses a number of projects, including
research carried out by the Cornell NIH ME/CFS
Collaborative Research Center (CRC). The CRC has
undertaken 3 projects, all unified by performance of an
exertion challenge by subjects, who will perform twoday
cardiopulmonary exercise tests (CPETs) using the
protocol developed by the Workwell Foundation and
Prof. Betsy Keller (Ithaca College). To ensure that all
subjects meet the criteria for ME/CFS or for healthy
sedentary controls, Drs. Susan Levine, Geoffrey Moore,
and John Chia will diagnose and screen volunteers. In a
project led by Professor Dikoma Shungu at Weill Cornell
Medicine in New York City, subjects will undergo
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) and Positron
Emission Tomography (PET) of their brains in order to
evaluate oxidative stress and neuroinflammation. The
neuroimaging will occur before performing an initial
CPET and before performing a second one the next day,
in order to determine the effect of exertion. Blood will
be collected before and after each CPET at Weill Cornell
Medicine, and before and after CPETs supervised by Dr.
Keller at Ithaca College and supervised by the Workwell
Foundation at Dr. John Chia’s clinic in Los Angeles.
Blood will be fractionated and sent to Cornell University
in Ithaca. There, my lab group will analyze extracellular
vesicle number, size, and content in plasma, and Dr.
Andrew Grimson’s lab will isolate individual white blood
cells to sequence and identify genes that are expressed.
The molecular data, neuroimaging, and subject survey
data will be examined by a Data Analysis Core headed
by Dr. Fabien Campagne (Weill Cornell Medicine) for
correlations to identify relationships specific to diseased
or healthy status, or pre- or post-exertion state. By
examining patients when at baseline and after postexertional
malaise has been induced, we hope to gain
insights into the factors that cause this disabling
symptom, which also should shed light on the biological
basis of the disease.
The Center also has an active outreach program,
facilitated by Executive Director Susi Varvayanis and our
Patient Advocate Committee. More information about
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
activities can be found here:
http://neuroimmune.cornell.edu/news/ or by following
us on twitter: @DrMaureenHanson or @CornellMECFS .
The Center also has several other ongoing studies,
including comparisons of gene expression, oxidative
phosphorylation, and glycolysis in B, T, and NK cells from
patients vs. controls. We have begun pilot studies to
examine plasma metabolites and extracellular vesicles
using an existing set of samples collected from patients
at baseline.
Information from these studies will be presented.
Professor Markku Partinen
University of Helsinki, Finland
Prof Markku Partinen is a neurologist and an
internationally wellknown
opinion leader
and expert in sleep
research and sleep
medicine.
Professor Partinen is
currently Director of the
Helsinki Sleep Clinic,
Vitalmed Research
Centre, and Principal
Investigator of Sleep
Research at Institute of
Clinical Medicine, Clinicum, University of Helsinki,
Finland.
He has been the coordinator of the NARPANord
Narcolepsy Consortium.
He became interested in sleep research while studying
medicine at the University of Montpellier, France.
He obtained his medical degree (DrMed) from
Montpellier in 1976 (Supervisor Prof Pierre Passouant).
He received his PhD in 1982 (epidemiology of sleep
disorders), and degree of a specialist in neurology in
1982, in Helsinki, Finland.
He has worked as a postdoc researcher at Stanford
University, USA in 1985-86 and in Bologna, Italy in 1987.
In addition, he has had several shorter visits as visiting
researcher or visiting Professor at different Universities
in Europe.
His main interests in sleep medicine have been
narcolepsy, excessive daytime sleepiness and fatigue
(including ME), sleep apnea, and parasomnias.
He has published more than 330 original articles in peer
reviewed Journals in addition to writing many book
Chapters and editing several books.
His Hirsch factor (H-factor) is 59 in ISI Web of Sciences
and 64 in Scopus.
www.investinme.org
Page 51 of 56
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Editor in Sleep, Journal of Sleep Research and Sleep
Medicine.
He has had many International positions in different
research societies including Member of the Scientific
Board and Vice-President of the European Sleep
Research Society (ESRS), President of the Scandinavian
Sleep Research Society, President Elect and President of
the World Association of Sleep Medicine (WASM),
Coordinating Secretary of the World Federation of Sleep
Research Societies (WFSRS) and President and Member
of the Board of the Scandinavian Sleep Research
Society.
He has been President of the ESRS congress in 1992
(Helsinki), the World Congress of Sleep Apnea in 2003
(Helsinki), and the WASM congress in 2007 (Bangkok).
In addition, he has organized several smaller meetings
and symposia in the field of narcolepsy, RBD and
different sleep disorders.
Currently he is a Member of the Board in the ESRS EUNarcolepsy
Network (EU-NN) and Chair of Scientific
Board of the EU-NN, President of the Finnish Parkinson
Association and President of the Finnish Sleep Research
Society.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
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
Page 52 of 56
www.investinme.org
returned to Washington, DC, and Georgetown
University, where he is currently Associate Professor
with Tenure in the Department of Medicine.
Abstract: Abstract not available at time of printing.
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.
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.
The genomic revolution has been spurred by
technological advances that made nucleotide
sequencing inexpensive, high-throughput, and
accessible. The next phase in this revolution to pave the
way for personalized health entails similar
breakthroughs in biosensor technologies for personal
molecular monitoring. Just as with DNA sequencing, the
key features to optimize are accuracy, sensitivity, cost,
and accessibility. Through close collaboration between
engineers, biochemists, geneticists, and clinicians, our
team has developed several such technologies and
devices. The technologies target the biophysical
properties of the cells and molecules, and therefore do
not rely on introducing labels or other complex sample
preparation techniques. We have successfully applied
these technologies to detecting drug resistance,
resolving cells and molecules in bodily fluids and
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://KikCd29vmm4FRmE5QrJ2-xhPrA05XqxiVufID1Izx6I%r`̵ [>)C^%׉Etissues, and engineering advanced, multiparametric,
wearable biosensors. We have begun applying these
methods to understand chronic fatigue syndrome, one
of the last major diseases about which almost nothing is
known. We anticipate that these technological
breakthroughs coupled with data integration of
personal molecular profiles will play an instrumental
role in the realization of personalized health regimens
and disease prevention strategies.
Abstract:
Revolutionizing biomedical research through
technology development
The genomic revolution has been spurred by
technological advances that made nucleotide
sequencing inexpensive, high-throughput, and
accessible. The next phase in this revolution to pave the
way for personalized health entails similar
breakthroughs in biosensor technologies for personal
molecular monitoring. Just as with DNA sequencing, the
key features to optimize are accuracy, sensitivity, cost,
and accessibility. Through close collaboration between
engineers, biochemists, geneticists, and clinicians, our
team has developed several such technologies and
devices. The technologies target the biophysical
properties of the cells and molecules, and therefore do
not rely on introducing labels or other complex sample
preparation techniques. We have successfully applied
these technologies to detecting drug resistance,
resolving cells and molecules in bodily fluids and
tissues, and engineering advanced, multiparametric,
wearable biosensors. We have begun applying these
methods to understand chronic fatigue syndrome, one
of the last major diseases about which almost nothing is
known. We anticipate that these technological
breakthroughs coupled with data integration of
personal molecular profiles will play an instrumental
role in the realization of personalized health regimens
and disease prevention strategies.
Patient groups and charities from
fourteen European countries working
together for ME
Campaigning in Europe for people with ME and
engaging with health agencies, governments,
professionals, the media, patients and public
Working closely with researchers and
organisations and researchers interested in
finding treatments and cures for ME
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 53 of 56
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www.investinme.org
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
׉	 7cassandra://581XNmwA5rAPm6jz6RPB6N4zXTfrU2tJv_XOX4-wLqQ.`̵ [>)C^)׉E	IiMER
Advocacy
Conferences
Colloquiums
Educational DVDs
Campaigning
Young/ECR Researchers
Research
European ME Research Group
www.investinme.org/research
Funding
www.investinme.org/donate
Invest in ME research (Charity Nr. 1153730)
www.investinme.org
Page 55 of 56
׉	 7cassandra://03WB1sSex8kDb2qH2bOF9N3Z_qaJGem9TfCoxDCqNLk+`̵ [>)C^*[>)C^){בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://cNySYTF-vh2SVKvPPWCaQl_fP5Bc8mJahE5I8XLmrwU g/`׉	 7cassandra://qeIOsv2H_su1cZUUh6BpKE6ubywvpyzQVbW7Ufj403cgg`S׉	 7cassandra://HYoa_5fHFEhc6ffStH0BB4fDF7ceHiUFcLFPaABiJqQ%X`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://G0N6XXfyCk_0lRjyM8oWWuVtGJU1dtEAGaC7Luuqo2s ͠[>)C^+׉E׉	 7cassandra://HYoa_5fHFEhc6ffStH0BB4fDF7ceHiUFcLFPaABiJqQ%X`̵ [>)C^,׈E[>)C^-[>)C^,{,Journal of IiMER Vol 12 Issue 1The Journal of IiMER Volume 12 Issue 1 is the IIMEC13 conference edition.
Apart from conference abstracts for the presentations there are articles from Professor Ola D. Saugstad from Norway, the UK national Biobank, David Tuller and Quadram Institute Biosceince.[>vj