EMEC Comment:
5. Benefit assessments – Page 98
Nutzenbewertungen
Non-blinded studies with subjective outcomes
The evidence for GET and CBT was extracted from 3 trials: PACE, GETSET, and the Dutch study by Janse et al. All 3 trials used subjective measurements as their main outcomes while patients and therapists could not be blinded to treatment allocation. Consequently, these studies are at high risk of response bias and have limited validity. Patients who know they are receiving an active intervention rather than a passive control might be more optimistic about its effect on their health or report symptoms according to what they think will please the investigators. Patients in the GET or CBT group might thus have rated their health as better than patients in the control group even if the treatment did not actually improve their health.
The General Methods handbook by IQWiG version 6.1 offers several options to evaluate evidence of trials where blinding of patients and therapists was not possible. On page 171, section 9.1.4 it states that “If a blinded collection of outcomes is not possible, an objective endpoint should be chosen that can be influenced as little as possible in terms of its characteristics and the stringency of the recording by the person who collects the endpoint.”
[Original quote in German: “Falls eine verblindete Zielgrößenerhebung nicht möglich ist, sollte ein möglichst objektiver Endpunkt gewählt werden, der in seiner Ausprägung und in der Stringenz der Erfassung so wenig wie möglich durch diejenige Person, die den Endpunkt (unverblindet) erhebt, beeinflusst werden kann.”]
Objective outcomes such as the 6-minute walking test or actigraphy, however, did not indicate a clinical effect for GET or CBT. Other reviews have demonstrated that, in contrast to subjective measurements, objective outcomes of GET and CBT trials do not indicate improvements. [1-2]
The General Methods handbook by IQWiG also states in section 3.2.4 on Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), page 61: “Since information on PROs is subjective by its very nature, open-label, ie unblinded, studies in this area are of limited validity. The size of the observed effect is an important decision criterion for the question of whether an indication of a benefit of an intervention with regard to PROs can be derived from open studies.”
[Original quote in German: “Da Angaben zu PROs aufgrund ihrer Natur subjektiv sind, sind offene, d. h. nicht verblindete Studien in diesem Bereich nur von eingeschränkter Validität. Für die Frage, ob sich aus offenen Studien ein Hinweis auf einen Nutzen einer Intervention bezüglich PROs ableiten lässt, ist die Größe des beobachteten Effekts ein wichtiges Entscheidungskriterium.”]
A 2014 review by Hróbjartsson et al. on randomized trials that compared blinded and non-blinded groups found that the average difference in effect size for PROs was 0.56. [3] In other words, in groups where patients were not blinded, the reported effect sizes were inflated by approximately half a standard deviation. This is similar to the effect size found in trials on GET and CBT. [3]
It is therefore doubtful if the differences found in such trials constitute a true treatment effect. For fatigue, for example, the SMD reported by IQWiQ was −0,48 [−0,71; −0,25] for the comparison CBT versus SMC at the 52-week follow-up and −0,37 [−0,54; −0,19] for GET versus SMC at the 12-weeks assessment. For the other primary outcome, physical function, the SMD was 0,32 [0,09; 0,55] for the comparison CBT versus SMC at the 52-week follow-up and 0.19 [0.02; 0.37] for GET versus SMC at the 12-weeks assessment. These effects could have fully been the result of bias due to a lack of blinding.
There are several reasons to think that response bias was particularly strong in trials of GET and CBT. First, as part of the treatment, patients were encouraged to interpret their ME/CFS symptoms as the reversible result of deconditioning, stress, anxiety, or disrupted sleep patterns rather than an unknown disease that cannot yet be treated. Such instructions might have led them to view their symptoms as more benign than patients in the control group who were not primed in this way.
According to therapist manuals used in the PACE trial “participants are encouraged to see symptoms as temporary and reversible, as a result of their current physical weakness, and not as signs of progressive pathology.” [4] The CBT used in the trial by Janse et al. was based on similar principles as it focused on correcting patients' unhelpful beliefs about their illness. Therapists were encouraged to suggest that recovery is possible to raise patients’ expectations which in turn would lead to a change in the perception of symptoms as well as disability. [5]
Second, therapists were explicitly instructed to encourage optimism and instill the belief that patients could get better through GET or CBT if they committed themselves to the treatment. The therapist manual on GET for example stated: “it is important that you encourage optimism about the progress that they may make with this approach. You can explain the previous positive research findings of GET and show in the way you discuss goals and use language that you believe they can get better.” [4] Similarly, the PACE trial manual for participants in the CBT arm stated that: “Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is a powerful and safe treatment which has been shown to be effective in a variety of illnesses” and that “many people have successfully overcome CFS/ME using cognitive behaviour therapy”. [6] Such statements might have persuaded patients that GET and CBT were effective, even before treatment started.
Third, because patients were made to think that they were in large part responsible for the treatment effects of GET and CBT, they might have been reluctant to report no improvement on symptom questionnaires. It might have indicated that they, rather than the treatments, failed.
As one PACE trial participant testified: “After repeatedly being asked how severe my symptoms were […] I started to feel like I had to put a positive spin on my answers. I could not be honest about just how bad it was, as that would tell the doctors I wasn’t trying and I wasn’t being positive enough. When I was completing questionnaires, I remember second guessing myself and thinking for every answer: ‘Is it really that bad? Am I just not looking at things positively enough?’” [7]
The therapist manual used in the GETSET trial stated: “It is essential that you demonstrate positive reinforcement when you work with patients. Often, patients may be more inclined to focus on what they have not achieved rather than what they have. It is therefore important that you emphasise and are very positive about what they have achieved. Every session you should positively reinforce all of their achievements.” [8] Such instructions can severely distort how patients rate their improvement or complete symptom questionnaires.
We recommend focusing on objective outcomes in trials where patients nor therapists could be blinded. Small to moderate effect sizes on subjective measurements such as symptom questionnaires are not reliable indicators of treatment effects in unblinded trials. The IQWiG report on ME/CFS, however, seems, to have based its recommendations for GET and CBT mostly on such questionable outcomes.
References
[1] Vink M, Vink-Niese A. Graded exercise therapy for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome is not effective and unsafe. Re-analysis of a Cochrane review. Health Psychol Open. 2018;5; 2055102918805187.
[2] Wiborg JF, Knoop H, Stulemeijer M, Prins JB, Bleijenberg G. How does cognitive behaviour therapy reduce fatigue in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome? The role of physical activity. Psychological medicine. 2010 Aug;40(8):1281-7.
[3] Tack M, Tuller DM, Struthers C. Bias caused by reliance on patient-reported outcome measures in non-blinded randomized trials: an in-depth look at exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome. Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior. 2020 Oct 1;8(4):181-92.
[4] Bavinton J, Darbishire L, White PD. PACE manual for therapists. Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) for CFS/ME. Final trial version: version 7 (MREC Version 2). PACE Trial Management Group; 2004. Available at:
https://me-pedia.org/images/8/89/PACE-get-therapist-manual.pdf
[5] Knoop H, Bleijenberg G, Gielissen MF, van der Meer JW, White PD. Is a full recovery possible after cognitive behavioural therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome?. Psychotherapy and psychosomatics. 2007;76(3):171-6. Available at:
https://www.researchgate.net/public...avioural_Therapy_for_Chronic_Fatigue_Syndrome
[6] Burgess M, Chalder T. PACE manual for participants. Cognitive Behavior Therapy for CFS/ME. MREC version 2 – November 2004 Available at:
https://me-pedia.org/images/7/7a/PACE-cbt-participant-manual.pdf
[7] UK Parliament. PACE Trial: People with ME Volume 636: debated on Tuesday 20 February 2018. Transcript available at:
https://hansard.parliament.uk/commo...-4566-940d-249f5026ff73/pacetrialpeoplewithme
[8] Clark LV, Tims E, White PD On behalf of the GETSET Trial Management Group. GETSET Study. Guided graded exercise self-help (GES) for CFS/ME. Therapist Manual. Available at:
https://www.qmul.ac.uk/wiph/media/w.../GETSET-therapists-manual-with-appendices.pdf