Misleading errors in a Journal of Translational Medicine article
Dear Professor Marincola,
I am writing to you in your capacity as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Translational Medicine with regards to the article on oxaloacetate supplementation for ME/CFS and long Covid that was recently published in your journal (Cash and Kaufman 2022; references listed at the end of this mail).
Cash and Kaufman claim that their study was a non-randomized controlled trial. However, there was no control group, as they acknowledge in the Discussion section:
As there was no placebo group (only historical placebo), there was no randomization into a separate group.
Kaufman reiterated that there was no control group in the trial when he presented the results at the International Association for CFS/ME’s conference on 29 July 2022 (
https://twitter.com/s4me_info/status/1553409008832331779).
For this reason alone, the trial simply cannot be said to be controlled and this makes the title of the article misleading. It is unclear why this was not flagged by the peer reviewers.
Further, the authors extrapolated the “historical placebo” data from one of four arms of a 26 week RCT of fluoxetine and graded exercise (Wearden et al 1998 — note that this reference is missing in the paper). This arm, which was assigned “exercise control and drug placebo”, had a mean baseline Chalder fatigue scale score of 34.0 points (95% CI 32.3 to 35.7) and achieved a mean improvement at 26 weeks of -2.7 points (95% CI -5.4 to 0.01 ; see Table 2). This represents an improvement of 7.9% over baseline, but Cash and Kaufman mistakenly reported that this arm achieved a 5.9% improvement, which artificially increases the reported effectiveness of oxaloacetate in their trial.
Note that this error may benefit the first author, Alan Cash, because of his significant financial conflict of interest. He is the founder and CSO of the company that markets the oxaloacetate supplement (Terra Biological LLC, as disclosed in the article) at a price of $500 for 6 weeks of treatment at the recommended dose for ME/CFS and long Covid (
https://benagene.com/products/oxaloacetate-cfs).
Consequently, could you please ask the authors to:
1) remove all claims that their trial was controlled, including in the title, and instead mention that the historical placebo data was used solely as a comparator;
2) correct / recalculate their results in light of the error on the historical placebo improvement in Wearden et al 1998 (7.9% instead of their reported 5.9%);
3) add a reference to Wearden et al 1998 for the historical placebo data?
Yours sincerely,
References
Cash A, Kaufman DL. Oxaloacetate Treatment For Mental And Physical Fatigue In Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) and Long-COVID fatigue patients: a non-randomized controlled clinical trial. J Transl Med. 2022;20(1):295. Published 2022 Jun 28.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-022-03488-3
Wearden AJ, Morriss RK, Mullis R, et al. Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled treatment trial of fluoxetine and graded exercise for chronic fatigue syndrome [published correction appears in Br J Psychiatry 1998 Jul;173:89]. Br J Psychiatry. 1998;172:485-490.
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.172.6.485 (Full text accessible at
https://www.researchgate.net/profil...ded-exercise-for-chronic-fatigue-syndrome.pdf)