Here's an extract but it's all pretty daming.
“
Although we originally planned to use actigraphy as an outcome measure, as well as a baseline measure, we decided that a test that required participants to wear an actometer around their ankle for a week was too great a burden at the end of the trial. We will however test baseline actigraphy as a moderator of outcome.“
From the original FAQs:
However, looking at the trial management committee minutes, the decision to drop actigraphy as an outcome measure seems to have been made because they knew it wouldn’t confirm that participants had increased their activity, and not because it was “too great a burden” for participants. If anything, it seems that it was too great a burden for the analysis team, as there seemed to be problems extracting the baseline data and getting it into an analysable format. Five pages of data needed to be completed by the centre staff for each participant, so I suspect there were loads of issues with missing or incomplete data that hampered any chance of getting any useful measurements even at baseline. There were also issues with the availability of the actiwatches themselves (too few per centre had been ordered). It very much seems that use of actigraphy was not properly field tested before the trial started. For such an important trial, this seems to be a massive oversight.
From TMG minutes (5 Nov 2004):"
Umh ---- your contacted to do a study, paid for out of public money [who - which Government Department "oversaw" the contract?], and which would become the basis of Government policy, and you and a charity [Action for ME doubtless] decide to scrap objective monitoring. Sorry why did they get paid? You don't do what your contracted to do and you get paid --- OK I've done that in a private capacity but this was public money.
Was the change to the project signed off by the management group i.e. Government side? I wonder if the public accounts committee looked at this - seems that the contract wasn't properly completed but it was paid for!
Finally emailed my MP i.e. to try to raise the change in the methodology (outcome indicators - objective to subjective) in the PACE protocol. If there's revised NICE guidance, which (at least in part) undoes the mistake, then this may be an opportune time to remind Government of the need to learn lessons.
Probably a lot of flaws in this*!
*"My MP,
there's a Government funded study on the use of Graded Exercise Therapy [GET] and Cognitive Behavioural Thereapy (CBT) in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)
- the study is called PACE. PACE was used for the current NICE guidance for ME.
The original protocol for the PACE study used objective monitoring of activity levels - actmetry - think of a Fitbit type device. However, the study protocol was revised to use subjective outcome measures (questionnaires). The reasons given for the change to the study protocol differed and were not convincing. Subjective measurement of activity consistently overestimates activity levels [
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0022399921000623]. In this case the use of subjective outcomes led to a policy [NICE guidance] which caused harm to people with ME/CFS.
The NICE guidance is currently being revised, and the review panel have downgraded studies, like PACE, which used subjective outcome measures.
I think the change to the study protocol,
i.e.to replace objective outcome measures with (biased) subjective outcome measures, should be raised through the relevant oversight committee in Westminster - the public accounts committee?
I would be grateful if you would advise how to raise the issue of the change to the PACE study protocol to subjective (biased) outcome measurements.
Thank you for your assistance & happy to discuss
Francis