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10 March 2009
University research helping to remove the barriers people face when returning to
work has been shared with policy makers at a leading conference in Stockholm.
Professor Mansel Aylward CB, Director of the Centre for Psychosocial and
Disability Research in the School of Psychology, headed a British team of
academics to the first conference of the new Social Council of Sweden at the
Ministry of Health and Social Affairs in Stockholm.
Professor Aylward, Dr Debbie Cohen and Professor Gordon Waddell outlined key
pieces of University research helping to explain and address the obstacles people
face in the UK when returning to work.
Related links
Centre for Psychosocial and Disability Research
Department for Work and Pensions
Peter White
Agenda
Symptom defined illnesses (SDIs)
The example of chronic fatigue
syndrome
Biopsychosocial management is best
Prevention is even better
10
8
Symptoms
Organic Cause
3-Year 6
Incidence
4
(%)
2
ss
ain tigue iness ache dema Pain hagia mnia in
e
p
n
t
b
k sp nso l Pa
E
es Fa Dizz Head
c
m
a
h
u
I
y
B
C
N
D
ina
m
o
Abd
Kroenke, et. al., AJM, 1989
Prevalence of unexplained
symptoms in hospital clinics
Clinic
Prevalence %
Chest
Cardiology
Gastroenterology
Rheumatology
Neurology
Dental
Gynaecology
59
56
60
58
55
49
57
Total
56
7.2
Fibromyalgia
3.4
Peptic ulcers
COPD
Migraine
Back pain
Cancer
MS
2.8
2.7
2.6
2.3
2.3
2.3
UK costs of CFS
118,000 on incapacity benefit
19,000 on disability living allowance
+ Cost of medical and social care
+ Loss of employment
Management is biopsychosocial
Biological
e.g. medication, physical rehabilitation
Psychological
e.g. CBT
Social
Remove the barriers to recovery Relationships .. at work or home
Iatrogenic .. bad healthcare advice
Benefit gap .. financial incentives
40
30
20
10
0
UK
UK
UK
NZ
Austral
40
30
20
10
0
UK
UK
NL
NL
UK
Predictions of non-response to
GET
High psychological distress
Membership of a self-help group
Sickness benefit
R Bentall et al, 2002
Social risks
If you have to prove you are ill, you cant get
well. (N Hadler, 1996)
ME is an incurable disease.
(UK doctor, 2008)
CFS
Low back pain
IBS
Depressive illness
(Cardiac disease)
(DM)
Preventing SDIs
Patients with infectious mononucleosis
Brief rehabilitation, with graded return to
activities
Compared to leaflet
Peter White
Barts and the London
Agenda
What is CFS?
ICD-10
Research criteria
Clinical criteria
One functional somatic syndrome versus heterogeneity
What is ME?
Original epidemic ME
Diagnostic labels affect prognosis
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
G93.3 in Neurology chapter of ICD-10
Postviral fatigue syndrome,
Includes:
benign myalgic encephalomyelitis
Chronic fatigue syndrome, postviral
Neurasthenia
F48 in ICD-10 mental disorders chapter
Neurasthenia
Excludes postviral fatigue syndrome
Includes fatigue syndrome
7 research criteria
CDC 1988
Australian 1990
Oxford 1991
London ME 1993
CDC revised 1994
CDC revised 2003
Brighton (post-vaccine) Collaboration, 2007
CDC CFS
4 associated symptoms:
sore throat
tender lymph glands
myalgia
arthralgia
new headaches
unrefreshing sleep
post-exertion malaise
poor memory or concentration
No empirical support
Population study of Swedish twins (31,000):
CFS-like illness; no CDC specificity
Sullivan et al, 2005, Kato et al
3 clinical criteria
Canadian 2003
RCPCH 2004
NICE 2007
Fatigue
Post-exertional fatigue/malaise
Sleep dysfunction
Pain
Any 2 of:
confusion, impairment of concentration and short-term
memory consolidation, disorientation, difficulty with
information processing, categorizing and word retrieval,
and perceptual and sensory disturbances e.g. spatial
instability and disorientation and inability to focus
vision. Ataxia, muscle weakness and fasciculations are
common. There may be overload phenomena: cognitive,
sensory e.g. photophobia and hypersensitivity to noise
- and/or emotional overload, which may lead to crash
periods and/or anxiety.
NICE
4 months of fatigue with:
new or specific onset (not life long)
persistent and/or recurrent
unexplained
substantial reduction in activity
- characterised by post-exertional
malaise/fatigue
NICE 2
One of:
- The 8 CDC symptoms plus:
- general malaise or flu-like symptoms
- dizziness and/or nausea
- palpitations in the absence of identified
cardiac pathology
- Normal exclusions
RCPCH
..generalised fatigue causing significant
impairment for 6/12 months for which no
alternative explanation has been found...
..the fatigue is likely to be associated with
other classical symptoms (..) such as
difficulty in concentrating and disturbed sleep
patterns and is classically exacerbated by effort
(both mental and physical).
Analysis
Latent Class Analysis (LCA)
121 chronically fatigued women
38 healthy matched controls
To lump or split?
Population study of Swedish twins (31,000):
Two latent comorbid traits
1 dominated by mood disorders
2 all other disorders (FM, CFS, IBS, headaches)
neither lumpers nor splitters are correct
Kato et al (in press)
GPRD study
4,388 patients with CFS/ME/PVFS
IBS and healthy matched controls
Both ill groups - more premorbid mood and
other functional disorders
But triggering infections differentiated
them.
Gallagher et al, submitted
What is ME?
Myalgic encephalomyelitis
First described in a 1956 Lancet editorial
describing epidemics of fatigue with
neurological symptoms and signs the
author later regretted doing this.
ME
April 1978 conference - at the RSM!
Organic incurable neurological disease
What message does this give our patients?
Conclusions
CFS/ME exists, but is hard to define
Broad based definitions are best
Both heterogeneity and comorbidity should
be addressed
Beware what you mean when you give a
diagnosis
Kendell again
..if we do continue to refer to mental and
physical illnesses we should preface both
with so-called, to remind ourselves and
our audience that these are archaic and
deeply misleading terms.
BJ Psych 2001
Peter White
Bergen, October 20th 2009
Agenda
What is CFS?
What is ME?
Define your phenotype
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
G93.3 in Neurology chapter of ICD-10
Postviral fatigue syndrome,
Includes:
benign myalgic encephalomyelitis
Chronic fatigue syndrome, postviral
Neurasthenia
F48 in ICD-10 mental disorders chapter
Neurasthenia
Excludes postviral fatigue syndrome
Includes fatigue syndrome
7 research criteria
CDC 1988
Australian 1990
Oxford 1991
London ME 1993
CDC revised 1994
CDC revised 2003
Brighton (post-vaccine) Collaboration, 2007
CDC CFS
4 associated symptoms:
sore throat
tender lymph glands
myalgia
arthralgia
new headaches
unrefreshing sleep
post-exertion malaise
poor memory or concentration
7.2
3.4
2.8
2.7
2.6
2.3
2.3
2.3
3 clinical criteria
Canadian 2003
RCPCH 2004
NICE 2007
Fatigue
Post-exertional fatigue/malaise
Sleep dysfunction
Pain
Any 2 of:
confusion, impairment of concentration and short-term
memory consolidation, disorientation, difficulty with
information processing, categorizing and word retrieval,
and perceptual and sensory disturbances e.g. spatial
instability and disorientation and inability to focus
vision. Ataxia, muscle weakness and fasciculations are
common. There may be overload phenomena: cognitive,
sensory e.g. photophobia and hypersensitivity to noise
- and/or emotional overload, which may lead to crash
periods and/or anxiety.
NICE
4 months of fatigue with:
new or specific onset (not life long)
persistent and/or recurrent
unexplained
substantial reduction in activity
- characterised by post-exertional
malaise/fatigue
NICE 2
One of:
- The 8 CDC symptoms plus:
- general malaise or flu-like symptoms
- dizziness and/or nausea
- palpitations in the absence of identified
cardiac pathology
- Normal exclusions
Symptoms
Disability
IQ
Psychiatric exam
Analysis
Five endophenotypes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
External validation of
endophenotypes
UK GPRD study
4,388 patients with CFS/ME/PVFS
IBS and healthy matched controls
Both ill groups - more premorbid mood and
other functional disorders
But triggering infections differentiated
them.
Gallagher A et al, 2009
What is ME?
Myalgic encephalomyelitis
First described in a 1956 Lancet editorial
describing epidemics of fatigue with
neurological symptoms and signs.
Conclusions
Peter White
Bergen, October 20th 2009
Agenda
What causes it?
Predisposing
Triggers
Stress as antecedents
3 8 times risk of childhood trauma
C Heim et al, 2006 & 2008 (retrospective)
1.6 risk of feeling stressed, measured 25 years
previously (case control)
6 x risk of feeling stressed compared to co-twin
K Kato et al, 2006 (prospective)
Genes
Gene expression highly variable and not
replicated.
Glucocorticoid receptor SNP x 3 risk
Rajeevan M et al, 2007
Sub-groups associated with MA and GR
SNPs
Smith A et al, 2006
Predisposing activity
Childhood inactivity?
Childhood and adult overactivity?
Retrospective perception of
overactivity/super fit and
healthy?
Yes and no
Treatment of CFS
Cognitive behaviour therapy
Graded exercise therapy
Initial
infection
Beliefs
Rest or
boom & bust
Fatigue
Bodily
adaptation
Sleep
problems
Conclusion
CFS is multifactorial
Biological, psychological and social
Heterogeneous and homogeneous
Rehabilitation works, but not as we know it.
Peter White
Bergen, 2009
Agenda
40
30
20
10
0
UK
UK
UK
NZ
Austral
Explanation/education
Assess physical capacity
Establish baseline activity
Individualised home exercise
Duration then intensity
Target heart rates
Feedback and explanation
Trials of CBT
10 randomised trials
Excluding 2 not aimed to help recovery
Excluding 2 not using CB therapists
Excluding Lenny Jasons trial
40
30
20
10
0
UK
UK
NL
NL
UK
Do effects last?
Yes
2 years after GET
5 years after CBT
Those who stop self-management relapse?
Aims
Moderators
Stratify by comorbid major depression
Inclusion criteria
Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire score is 6
or more
SF-36 physical function sub-scale score
is 65 or less
> 17 years old
Exclusion criteria
Medical exclusions
Risk of self harm and other exclusionary
psychiatric diagnoses, assessed by SCID
Those unable to do therapies e.g. language
problems
Treatments
Manualised
Each based on different model
1st session 90 minutes and subsequent sessions up to 50
mins
14 + 1 booster follow up session at 36 weeks
Some by telephone if necessary
Integrity of therapy
Primary Outcomes
Summary stats on fatigue and disability
Clinically significant?
Fatigue (50% reduction in fatigue or a score of 3
or less)
SF-36 (a score of 75 or 50% increase from
baseline)
Secondary outcomes
Adverse Events
Recruitment problems
New centre
Extending trial
Publicity
Prime Ministers support!
Treatment issues
Ownership
Non-specific therapist effects
Ensuring equipoise
Doctors!
641 patients
3% drop out from follow up
6% drop out from treatment
Follow up ends in December
Results autumn 2010?
Conclusions
Individually delivered CBT and GET are
the best evidence based treatments
We should offer them to all our patients
Which treatment for which patient?
Can we do them more quickly?
Can we do better?
PeterWhite,CFS:neurological,psychologicalorboth?
THEBRITISHNEUROPSYCHIATRYASSOCIATION
www.bnpa.org.uk
NeurologyandPsychiatrySpRsTeachingWeekend
12to14December2008
StAnnesCollegeOxford
WoodstockRoad,OX26HS
THEESSENTIALSOFNEUROPSYCHIATRY
TheBritishNeuropsychiatryAssociation
NeurologyandPsychiatrySpRsTeachingWeekend
12to14December2008
StAnnesCollege,Oxford
NeurologyandPsychiatrySpRsTeachingWeekend.Handbook.
www.bnpa.org.uk
Welcome
Introduction
Neurologistsandpsychiatristsbothcareforpatientswithdisordersofthebrain
and its functions, yet there is remarkably little common training in the two
disciplines.Thereisoftenbothaculturalandphysicaldividebetweenthecare
ofthebrainandthecareofthemind.Theaimofthisweekend,thefirstofits
kind, is to bring together roughly equal numbers of neurology and psychiatry
trainees, for a course that will cover the more basic aspects of assessment
history taking and examination in the two specialties, review the use of the
commonapproachestoinvestigation,andthencoveraseriesofmajortopicsin
neuropsychiatry, particularly in areas that tend to be neglected, such as
functionalorsomatoformdisordersanddisordersofsleep.Weaimtoinspireas
well as instruct, so we have leavened the mix with some talks that will give
glimpses of exciting current research on mind and brain. We hope that the
meetingasawholewillbeinformalandhighlyinteractive.
This a new venture for the British Neuropsychiatry Association which exists to
foster education in the middle ground between these disciplines. Our main
activity is to hold an annual twoday meeting, in February, which, uniquely,
attractspsychiatrists,psychologistsandneurologists.Ifyouenjoythisweekend,
why not join the BNPA, and come to our 2009 meeting (56th February at the
InstituteofChildhealth)?
We are very grateful to UCB and Biogen for substantial support from
unrestrictededucationalgrantswhichhavekeptdownthecostofthemeeting.
AdamZeman
BNPAChairman
TheBritishNeuropsychiatryAssociation
NeurologyandPsychiatrySpRsTeachingWeekend
12to14December2008
StAnnesCollege,Oxford
NeurologyandPsychiatrySpRsTeachingWeekend.Handbook.
www.bnpa.org.uk
Chronicfatiguesyndrome:neurological,psychologicalorboth?
PeterWhite,ProfessorofPsychologicalMedicine,
BartsandtheLondonMedicalSchool
p.d.white@qmul.ac.uk
EpidemiologyoffatigueandCFS
Fatigueisacommonsymptominboththecommunityandprimarycare.When
asked,between10and20percentofpeopleinthecommunitywillreportfeeling
abnormally tired at any one time. At the same time, fatigue is continuously
distributedwithinthecommunity,withnopointofrarity.Thereforeanycutoff
is arbitrary and the prevalence will vary by how the question is asked, the
symptom volunteered, and its context. Between 1.5 % and 6.5 % of European
patients will consult their general practitioner with a primary complaint of
fatigueeveryyear,theincidencevaryingbyageandpopulation.Fatigueismore
commonly reported and presented to general practitioners by women and the
middleaged, and is most closely associated with mood disorders and reported
stress.ItdoesnotseemtovarybyethnicityintheUK,butthereisanintriguing
paradoxinthatitisreportedmorecommonlybythoseinhighincomecountries,
yetispresentedtomedicalcaremoreofteninlowincomecountries.
mood disorders that are not thought to be the primary diagnoses). It is most
commoninwomen,themiddleaged,andethnicminorities(unlikefatigue)at
leastinEnglishspeakingcountries.
ThediagnosisandclassificationofCFS
The clinical taxonomy for CFS is a mess. The ICD10 classification defines CFS
within both the neurology chapter and mental health chapters. Myalgic
encephalomyelitis, the alternative name for CFS, is classified as a neurological
disease (G93.3)(a.k.a. postviral CFS), whereas neurasthenia (a.k.a. CFS not
otherwise specified) is classified within mental health (F48). (Incidentally, this
mess is not specific to CFS, since there are several conditions within the
neurology chapter of ICD10 that are also classified in the mental and
behavioural disorders chapter. For instance, Alzheimers disease is classified
within neurology, whereas dementia due to Alzheimers disease is classified
under mental health. My personal view is that it is high time that all mental
health disorders and neurological diseases affecting the brain were classified
within the same chapter, simply called diseases/disorders of the brain and
nervous system.) There is also a current debate between lumpers and
splitters about the nosology of functional somatic syndromes (symptom
defined conditions), such as CFS, IBS and fibromyalgia. Some argue that the
closeassociationsbetweenthesyndromes(thosewithCFSarealsomorelikely
to have fibromyalgia and/or IBS) argues in favour of their being different
manifestations of one overarching functional somatic syndrome (the
lumpers).Othersarguethatthesesyndromesarebestunderstoodbyexploring
their heterogeneity (the splitters). There is evidence to support both
arguments,buttwolargeandrecentepidemiologicalstudiessuggestthatchronic
unexplained fatigue, for one, is both associated with and separate from other
functional somatic syndromes. In particular, predisposing risk factors are
sharedwhereastriggeringfactorsaredifferent.
CFSisnotaneasydiagnosistomake,sincemisdiagnosisiscommoninpatients
diagnosedashavingCFS.ArecentauditofmyCFSclinicrevealedthat4outof10
newpatients(n=250)assesseddidnothaveCFS,andthatwasafterathirdof
referrals had already been rejected as not being CFS. The most common
misdiagnoses were mood disorders, especially depressive disorders, and
primarysleepdisorders,particularlysleepapnoea.Othermisdiagnosesincluded
coeliac disease and autoimmune conditions. Alternative neurological diagnoses
weremadein2%.
Aetiologyandpathophysiology
The aetiology of CFS is unknown, but there is evidence that different risk
markers are associated with predisposition, triggering, and maintenance of the
illness. Predisposing risk markers include female sex, middle age, mood
disorders(especiallydepressivedisorders),othersymptomdefinedsyndromes,
such as irritable bowel syndrome, and possibly either sedentary behaviour or
excessive activity. As might be expected CFS patients are more likely to have
attended their GP, than healthy matched controls, even up to 15 years before
onset, but recent work shows that those with IBS (and no CFS) have the same
tendency.
Triggeringriskmarkersarelesswellestablished,butthereissufficientevidence
tosupportcertaininfectionsasaetiologicalfactorsnotonlyforfatiguebutalso
CFS, with the best replicated evidence supporting a role for EpsteinBarr virus
infection, which triggers CFS in 10% of those infected. Maintaining or
perpetuating risk markers are most important in determining treatment
programmes, since reversing maintaining factors should lead to improvement.
Reasonablywellestablishedfactorsincludemooddisorders,suchasdysthymia,
illness beliefs such as believing the whole condition is physical, pervasive
inactivity,avoidantcoping,membershipofapatientsupportgroup,andbeingin
receiptofordisputeaboutfinancialbenefits.
Prognosis
Treatment
IsCFSneurologicalorpsychological?
Fatiguesecondarytoneurologicaldiseases
Fatigueiscommonlyassociatedwithchronicmedicaldisorders,butitshouldbe
differentiatedfromfatiguability.Fatiguabilityistheonsetofaphysicalsensation
of fatigue and weakness after exertion and is commonly reported with
neurologicaldiseasessuchasmultiplesclerosisandmyopathies.
Apartfrommeasuresofdiseaseactivity,otherassociationsofsecondaryfatigue
in general that have been repeatedly found include sleep disturbance, mood
disorders, inactivity and physical deconditioning. Studies of fatigue associated
with multiple sclerosis are instructive and exemplary. As in all studies of
secondary fatigue, measures of the severity or pathophysiology of the disease
itselfareassociatedwithfatigue.Somecytokinesareassociated,butothersare
not. Associations vary depending on the fatigue measure, confirming the
multidimensional nature of fatigue, but all measures are associated with
depression. Objectively confirmed sleep disturbance is also associated with
fatigue. Fatigue associated with MS therefore requires biopsychosocial
management.
Bibliography
AttarianHP,BrownKM,DuntleySP,etal.Therelationshipofsleepdisturbances
andfatigueinmultiplesclerosis.Arch.Neurol.61(2004),5258.
syndrome/myalgicencephalomyelitis:anupdatedsystematicreview.JRSocMed
2006;99:50620.
CleareAJ.Theneuroendocrinologyofchronicfatiguesyndrome.Endocr.Rev.24
(2003),23652.
FulcherKY,WhitePD.Strengthandphysiologicalresponsetoexerciseinpatients
with the chronic fatigue syndrome. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 69 (2000),
3027.
JoyceJ,HotopfM,WesselyS.Theprognosisofchronicfatigueandchronicfatigue
syndrome:asystematicreview.Q.J.Med.90(1997),22333.
KroenckeDC,LynchSG,DenneyDR.Fatigueinmultiplesclerosis:relationshipto
depression,disability,anddiseasepattern.Mult.Scler.6(2000),1316.
LyallM,PeakmanM,WesselyS.Asystematicreviewandcriticalevaluationofthe
immunologyofchronicfatiguesyndrome.J.Psychosom.Res.55(2003),7990.
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence. Clinical guideline CG53.
Chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (or encephalopathy):
diagnosisandmanagement.London,NICE,2007.
http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG53.
M.C.Tartaglia,S.Narayanan,S.J.Francis,etal.,Therelationshipbetweendiffuse
axonaldamageandfatigueinmultiplesclerosis.Arch.Neurol.61(2004),2017.
Wessely SC, Hotopf M, Sharpe M. Chronic Fatigue and its Syndromes (Oxford:
OxfordUniversityPress,1998).
WesselyS,NimnuanC,SharpeM.Functionalsomaticsyndromes:oneormany?
Lancet354(1999),9369.
WesselyS,WhitePD.Indebate:thereisonlyonefunctionalsomaticsyndrome.
Br.J.Psychiatry185(2004),956.
WhitePD,ThomasJM,KangroHO,etal.,Predictionsandassociationsoffatigue
syndromes and mood disorders that occur after infectious mononucleosis.
Lancet358(2001),194654.
WhitePD,SharpeMC,ChalderT,DeCesareJC,WalwynR;onbehalfofthePACE
trialgroup.ProtocolforthePACEtrial:arandomisedcontrolledtrialofadaptive
pacing, cognitive behaviour therapy, and graded exercise, as supplements to
standardisedspecialistmedicalcareversusstandardisedspecialistmedicalcare
aloneforpatientswiththechronicfatiguesyndrome/myalgicencephalomyelitis
orencephalopathy.BMCNeurol2007;7:6.
Agenda
- Unexpectedness
- low education, female
Pain, symptoms, ROM, passivity,
psychol. Distress
SJ Kamper et al, 2007
Fatigue
Bodily
adaptation
Sleep
problems
0.40
0.36
0.46
0.60
????
0.36
0.39
????
0.47
0.42
????
0.31
0.40
????
Follow up phase
50
40
30
60
70
Physical function
Time
SMC
APT
GET
CBT
Remission in PACE
%age
25
20
15
%age
10
5
0
APT
CBT
GET
SMC
Healthcare cost-effectiveness
1
0.9
0.8
CBT
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
GET
0.2
0.1
APT
SMC
0
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
QALY threshold ()
40000
45000
50000
55000
60000
CBT
GET
SMC
11.0
8.0
7.7
11.4
6196
4008
4073
6507
86
84
86
89
Lost employment %
Lost employment cost (s)
14,865
Societal cost-effectiveness
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
CBT
0.6
0.5
0.4
GET
0.3
0.2
0.1
SMC
0
APT
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
QALY threshold ()
40000
45000
50000
55000
60000
CFS/ME
14
Depression
18
22
3. Dr X mitochondrial disease
Prof Y Fibro is incurable and [X] will never
return to work
Social risks
If you have to prove you are ill, you cant get
well. (N Hadler, 1996)
ME is an incurable disease.
Treatment dose
Increased perceived pain control
Reduction in serious pain beliefs
Reduced catastrophising
Increased self-efficacy
Conclusion
Biopsychosocial model best fit for FSS
Rehabilitation based treatments are
moderately helpful, but are not aimed to
help RTW
Their effect on occupation is mild to
moderate
Targets for more effective rehab include
attitudes & beliefs of doctors, employers,
and patients, as much as developing more
vocationally targeted treatments.
Peter White
Barts and the London
RCPsych Liaison Psychiatry Conference
29/02/12 - 02/03/12
Co-morbid depression
Co-morbid anxiety
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Fibromyalgia/Chronic
Widespread Pain
Migraine
Chronic Regional Pain Disorder
32%
32%
29%
28%
21%
3%
Sleep disturbance
Mood (both depression and anxiety)
Aerobic fitness and strength
Somatic focusing
Introversion
Emotionality
Physical illness
Viral illness
Exercise is dangerous or damaging
Family and partners beliefs
*
White et al. 2004
Fatigue
Bodily
adaptation
Sleep
problems