Indigophoton
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
A new blog post by @Lucibee,
https://lucibee.wordpress.com/2018/05/09/pace-trial-whatever-happened-to-actigraphy/
In my first blog about the PACE trial, I discussed the lack of objective measures, and the bothersome issue of not knowing how much participants actually managed to increase their activity, because this wasn’t recorded.
The one thing that bothers me about the GET results is that we have absolutely no idea by how much patients in this group actually managed to increase their activity. The therapists’ manual encourages patients to do up to 30 minutes of exercise a day, which seems quite a lot for patients with ME/CFS. But how many achieved this? Did anyone get anywhere near this? The only thing we have to go on is the results of the 6-min walking test, at which the GET group did slightly better (an average 67m improvement vs 21m for CBT, 22m for SMC, and 20m for APT). However, even by the end of the trial, the mean distance achieved by those in the GET group (379m) was still below the lower limit for healthy individuals (mean 570m [range 380-780m]). All the participants were given pedometers and heart-rate monitors to assess their baseline activity, but regrettably results from them weren’t published, so we have no objective measure of daily activity or whether it improved over the course of the trial.
https://lucibee.wordpress.com/2018/05/09/pace-trial-whatever-happened-to-actigraphy/