Release Date: March 22, 2005
CHRONIC FATIGUE
PATIENTS SHOW LOWER RESPONSE TO PLACEBOS
By Laura Kennedy, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Contrary to conventional wisdom, patients with chronic fatigue syndrome respond
to placebos at a lower rate than people with many other illnesses, according
to the first systematic review of the topic.
According to the new analysis by
Dr. Hyong Jin Cho of King’s College
London and colleagues, 19.6 percent of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome
improved after receiving inactive treatments, compared with a widely accepted
figure of about 30 percent for other conditions.
Because the placebo effect seems to be strongest in diseases with highly subjective
symptoms, some medical professionals believed it could be as high as 50 percent
among CFS patients.
The review, reported in the current issue of Psychosomatic Medicine, pooled
data from 29 studies in which 1,016 people with CFS received various placebos.
CFS is a complex illness that has no known cause or cure. Myriad symptoms
include severe malaise, muscle and joint pain, sleep and mood disturbances
and headache. The symptoms continue for at least six months and cannot be explained
by any other medical conditions. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
estimate that as many as 500,000 Americans may have CFS or related conditions.
With so many mysteries surrounding CFS, a great deal of controversy exists
among both doctors and patients as to whether its origins are primarily psychological
or physiological. Current evidence suggests that emotional or social stresses
such as bereavement or problems at work, combined with other triggers such
as common viral infections, contribute to the disorder. Additional factors,
such as avoidance of physical activity, may cause the symptoms to become chronic,
says Cho.
The authors propose several possible
explanations for the surprisingly low placebo response revealed in the analysis.
Perhaps patients have low expectations
due to the reality that CFS is very difficult to treat and often persists for
many years. Alternatively, disconnects between how patients and doctors view
the illness “may impede development of a collaborative therapeutic relationship,” reviewers
suggest.
The study also showed that the placebo
response is 24 percent for medical interventions but only 14 percent for
psychiatric/psychological treatments.
The authors say the reason may be that many CFS sufferers seen in specialist
settings or self-help groups “have a firm conviction that their illness
is of physical origin” and thus would have little faith in psychiatric/psychological
treatments. This finding supports the idea that the placebo response is greatly
influenced by patients’ expectations of improvement.
According to the review, behavioral
therapy and graded exercise therapy have benefits, and if patients were more
aware of them, says Cho, they might be “more
open, more optimistic, and more collaborative with the professionals, and the
overall outcome of the treatments could be enhanced.”
Dr. Lucinda Bateman, an internist who specializes in CFS and fibromyalgia
and serves on the board of the American Association for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,
has worked with about 500 CFS patients over the past 15 years.
“In my clinical experience, I have found that CFS is among the most
difficult conditions to improve at all, with either physical or psychological
interventions.” This is true in part, she says, because there is a great
deal of variation among patients diagnosed with CFS, and Bateman believes that
ultimately CFS may be found to involve more than one disease.
In the absence of a cure, Bateman has found that the most effective treatment
for CFS combines improving symptoms with medication, helping patients retain
physical conditioning when possible and using psychological and psychiatric
interventions to help patients adapt to living with chronic illness.
She doesn’t discount the placebo effect, however. “When you say
to people, ‘I believe you, I will help you manage your symptoms, I will
advocate for you,’ that hope and feeling of control over their disease
could be considered placebo effect, but it’s an important part of delivering
medical care.”
FOR
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Center for
the Advancement of Health
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202.387.2829
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