Barry
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Also yes please @Jonathan Edwards.
I think you should post. And you should ask whether they have read the trials and the critiques. The people commenting on this topic don't seem to have a good understanding of PACE and ME/CFS. I think they do not understand what they are defending.
It seems that a lot of peoples' views are shaped by their social connections and personal loyalties. Asking Garner's well respected friends to weigh in on PACE at this point sounds unlikely to be useful to me.
Some say for example that the Wallman trial was more like pacing than GET
That sounds greatly more sensible because it is event driven not time driven. Sensitive closed loop feedback control based on symptoms, not insensitive non-control based on misguided optimism. My wife seems to have good pacing instincts (she is mild these days), and she has always pushed herself to a degree, but learned to not over-push herself. It is one of the reasons I realised, back in 2016 once I got to understand about PACE, how daft the deconditioning theory is, because if that had been my wife's problem she would have incrementally worked her way out of it long time previous.I met Wallman in Perth. This is definitely a misnomer to classify her study as GET, in my view. It's combined GET and pacing, I guess, but the ceiling is when people have symptoms, they drop back, not push through. It's trying to find if there was a marginal amount more that patients could do within their energy reserves than they thought and get more fit if they could do a bit more than they had realized. It was not designed as a way to recover from the illness.
ETA: In fact I'd say it sounds far closer to pacing than to GET.
Who exactly conducted the NICE evidence review? I mean, the committee members received the review that was done by others contracted for that project, right? Did the committee have input into which assessments were given?
Just looking at that Wallman trial ...Yeah, I discussed this with her. I said I considered it a modified pacing study. She seemed to consider it a GET study modified by pacing. At that point in time, perhaps the debate and the meanings of the terms might not have been viewed the same way, especially in Australia.
[my italics/underlining]Graded exercise program
Initial exercise duration was between 5 and 15 minutes, and intensity was based on the mean HR value achieved midpoint during the submaximal exercise tests. Graded exercise consisted of an aerobic activity that used the major large muscles of the body. Subjects could choose walking, cycling or swimming. Subjects were instructed to exercise every second day, unless they had a relapse. If this occurred, or if symptoms became worse, the next exercise session was shortened or cancelled. Subsequent exercise sessions were reduced to a length that the subject felt was manageable. This form of exercise, which allows for flexibility in exercise routines, is known as pacing.26
So far as I can see the main similarity between this Graded exercise program and GET are the words "graded exercise". It's not exactly pacing, but it's a lot closer to it than GET. The notion of graded exercise encompasses a whole spectrum of possibilities.
Exactly.Yeah, it's more like within your current energy levels, can you engage in modest increases in activity? I didn't view it as GET--the core element of which is that you stick to the plan no matter what.
Exactly.
As I understand it the evidence review was conducted by the full time professional staff at NICE who make use of a standard in house procedure.
She came to a talk I gave about PACE--a small group of maybe a dozen. When she introduced herself she tried to defend "GET" as not all the same. I didn't really understand what she meant until I looked at her study and saw how she was using the term GET, which was definitely not a la PACE.
Therefore I have adjusted my commentary to focus more on the fact that the NICE committee does follow GRADE appropriately. Here's what I got:
Is mesmerism effective after all?
As an example of an “appropriate” application of GRADE, Busse and colleagues refer to a contested Cochrane review on GET for ME/CFS. This review, however, also rated the quality of evidence in support of GET as low to very low with the sole exception of post-treatment fatigue where the quality of evidence was rated as moderate. At follow-up, however, the Cochrane review also rated the evidence that GET reduces fatigue as very low quality. This suggests that the difference between both assessments was rather small.
The recommendation by Busse and colleagues that lack of blinding should not result in downgrading quality of evidence, even if subjective outcomes are used, is at odds with current understanding
The first and foremost principle of rating quality of evidence should be to understand the specifics of what is being assessed. One has to understand the intervention and the way it impacts patients.
By providing a standardized checklist and algorithm to assess quality of evidence, the GRADE methodology discourages researchers from studying the details of what happens in randomized trials. The rapid response by Busse and colleagues is an example of how this approach might result in questionable treatment recommendations.
Thanks will do so.I think it would be good to add here that this refers to the use of primary outcomes.
Would this work: "The first and foremost principle of rating quality of evidence should be to understand the specifics of what is being assessed. One has to understand the nature of the intervention and how it is supposed to impact patients.I still think it could be misleading to say the premise is to "understand“ the intervention – I didn't explain my previous suggestion – along the lines: it's necessary to understand how the intervention is supposed to work and to impact the patients in diverse ways.