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Trial By Error, Continued: The Real Data

22 September 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

by David Tuller, DrPH

David Tuller is academic coordinator of the concurrent masters degree program in public health and journalism at the University of California, Berkeley.

‘The PACE trial is a fraud.’ Ever since Virology Blog posted my 14,000-essord investigation of the PACE trial last October, I’ve wanted to write that sentence. (I should point out that Dr. Racaniello has already called the PACE trial a “sham,” and I’ve already referred to it as “doggie-poo.” I’m not sure that “fraud” is any worse. Whatever word you use, the trial stinks.)

Let me be clear: I don’t mean “fraud” in the legal sense—I’m not a lawyer–but in the sense that it’s a deceptive and morally bankrupt piece of research. The investigators made dramatic changes from the methodology they outlined in their protocol, which allowed them to report purported “results” that were much, much better than those they would have been able to claim under their originally planned methods. Then they reported only the better-looking “results,” with no sensitivity analyses to analyze the impact of the changes—the standard statistical approach in such circumstances.

This is simply not allowed in science. It means the reported benefits for cognitive behavior therapy and graded exercise therapy were largely illusory–an artifact of the huge shifts in outcome assessments the authors introduced mid-trial. (That’s putting aside all the other flaws, like juicing up responses with a mid-trial newsletter promoting the interventions under investigation, failing to obtain legitimate informed consent from the participants, etc.)

That PACE suffered from serious methodological deficiencies should have been obvious to anyone who read the studies. That includes the reviewers for The Lancet, which published the PACE results for “improvement” in 2011 after what editor Richard Horton has called “endless rounds of peer-review,” and the journal Psychological Medicine, which published results for “recovery” in 2013. Certainly the deficiencies should have been obvious to anyone who read the trenchant letters and commentaries that patients routinely published in response to the egregious errors committed by the PACE team. Even so, the entire U.K. medical, academic and public health establishments refused to acknowledge what was right before their eyes, finding it easier instead to brand patients as unstable, anti-science, and possibly dangerous.

Thanks to the efforts of the incredible Alem Matthees, a patient in Perth, Australia, the U.K.’s First-Tier Tribunal last month ordered the liberation of the PACE trial data he’d requested under a freedom-of-information request. (The brief he wrote for the April hearing, outlining the case against PACE in great detail, was a masterpiece.) Instead of appealing, Queen Mary University of London, the home institution of lead PACE investigator Peter White, made the right decision. On Friday, September 9, the university announced its intention to comply with the tribunal ruling, and sent the data file to Mr. Matthees. The university has a short window of time before it has to release the data publicly.

I’m guessing that QMUL forced the PACE team’s hand by refusing to allow an appeal of the tribunal decision. I doubt that Dr. White and his colleagues would ever have given up their data willingly, especially now that I’ve seen the actual results. Perhaps administrators had finally tired of the PACE shenanigans, recognized that the study was not worth defending, and understood that continuing to fight would further harm QMUL’s reputation. It must be clear to the university now that its own reputational interests diverge sharply from those of Dr. White and the PACE team. I predict that the split will become more apparent as the trial’s reputation and credibility crumble; I don’t expect QMUL spokespeople to be out there vigorously defending the unacceptable conduct of the PACE investigators.

Last weekend, several smart, savvy patients helped Mr. Matthees analyze the newly available data, in collaboration with two well-known academic statisticians, Bruce Levin from Columbia and Philip Stark from Berkeley.  Yesterday, Virology Blog published the group’s findings of the single-digit, non-statistically significant “recovery” rates the trial would have been able to report had the investigators adhered to the methods they outlined in the protocol. That’s a remarkable drop from the original Psychological Medicine paper, which claimed that 22 percent of those in the favored intervention groups achieved “recovery,” compared to seven percent for the non-therapy group.

Now it’s clear: The PACE authors themselves are the anti-science faction. They tortured their data and ended up producing sexier results. Then they claimed they couldn’t share their data because of alleged worries about patient confidentiality and sociopathic anti-PACE vigilantes. The court dismissed these arguments as baseless, in scathing terms. (It should be noted that their ethical concerns for patients did not extend to complying with a critical promise they made in their protocol—to tell prospective participants about “any possible conflicts of interest” in obtaining informed consent. Given this omission, they have no legitimate informed consent for any of their 641 participants and therefore should not be allowed to publish any of their data at all.)

The day before QMUL released the imprisoned data to Mr. Matthees, the PACE authors themselves posted a pre-emptive re-analysis of results for the two primary outcomes of physical function and fatigue, according to the protocol methods. In the Lancet paper, they had revised and weakened their own definition of what constituted “improvement.” With this revised definition, they could report in The Lancetthat approximately 60 % in the cognitive behavior and graded exercise therapy arms “improved” to a clinically significant degree on both fatigue and physical function.

The re-analysis the PACE authors posted last week sought to put the best possible face on the very poor data they were required to release. Yet patients examining the new numbers quickly noted that, under the more stringent definition of “improvement” outlined in the protocol, only about 20 percent in the two groups could be called “overall improvers.”. Solely by introducing a more relaxed definition of “improvement,” the PACE team—enabled by The Lancet’s negligence and an apparently inadequate “endless” review process–was able to triple the trial’s reported success rate..

So now it’s time to ask what happens to the papers already published. The editors have made their feelings clear. I have written multiple e-mails to Lancet editor Richard Horton since I first contacted him about my PACE investigation, almost a year before it ran. He never responded until September 9, the day QMUL liberated the PACE data. Given that the PACE authors’ own analysis showed that the new data showed significantly less impressive results than those published in The Lancet, I sent Dr. Horton a short e-mail asking when we could expect some sort of addendum or correction to the 2011 paper. He responded curtly: “Mr. Tuller–We have no such plans.”

The editors of Psychological Medicine are Kenneth Kendler of Virginia Commonwealth University and Robin Murray of Kings College London. After I wrote to the journal last December, pointing out the problems, I received the following from Dr. Murray, whose home base is KCL’s Department of Psychosis Studies: “Obviously the best way of addressing the truth or otherwise of the findings is to attempt to replicate them. I would therefore like to encourage you to initiate an attempted replication of the study. This would be the best way for you to contribute to the debate…Should you do this, then Psychological Medicine will be most interested in the findings either positive or negative.”

This was not an appropriate response. I told Dr. Murray it was “disgraceful,” given that the paper was so obviously flawed. This week, I wrote again to Dr. Murray and Dr. Kendler, asking if they now planned to deal with the paper’s problems, given the re-analysis by Matthees et al. In response, Dr. Murray suggested that I submit a re-analysis, based on the released data, and Psychological Medicine would be happy to consider it. “We would, of course, send it out to referees for scientific scrutiny in the same manner as we did for the original paper,” he wrote.

I explained that it was his and the journal’s responsibility to address the problems, whether or not anyone submitted a re-analysis. I also noted that I could not improve on the Matthees re-analysis, which completed rebutted the results reported in Psychological Medicine’s paper. I urged Dr. Murray to contact either Dr. Racaniello or Mr. Matthees to discuss republishing it, if he truly wished to contribute to the debate. Finally, I noted that the peer-reviewers for the original paper had okayed a study in which participants could be disabled and recovered simultaneously, so I wasn’t sure if the journal’s assessment process could be trusted.

(By the way, Kings College London, where Dr. Murray is based, is also the home institution of PACE investigator Trudie Chalder as well as Simon Wessely, a close colleague of the PACE authors and president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists*. That could explain Dr. Murray’s inability or reluctance to acknowledge that the “recovery” paper his journal peer-reviewed and published is meaningless.)

Earlier today, the PACE authors posted a blog on The BMJ site, their latest effort to salvage their damaged reputations. They make no mention of their massive research errors and focus only on their supposed fears that releasing even anonymous data will frighten away future research participants. They have provided no evidence to back up this unfounded claim, and the tribunal flatly rejected it. They also state that only researchers who present  “pre-specified” analysis plans should be able to obtain trial data. This is laughable, since Dr. White and his colleagues abandoned their own pre-specified analyses in favor of analyses they decided they preferred much later on, long after the trial started.

They have continued to refer to their reported analyses, deceptively, as “pre-specified,” even though these methods were revised mid-trial. The following point has been stated many times before, but bears repeating: In an open label trial like PACE, researchers are likely to know very well what the outcome trends are before they review any actual data. So the PACE team’s claim that the changes they made were “pre-specified” because they were made before reviewing outcome data is specious. I have tried to ask them about this issue multiple times, and have never received an answer.

Dr. White, his colleagues, and their defenders don’t yet seem to grasp that the intellectual construct they invented and came to believe in—the PACE paradigm or the PACE enterprise or the PACE cult, have your pick—is in a state of collapse. They are used to saying whatever they want about patients—Internet Abuse! Knife-wielding! Death threats!!–and having it be believed. In responding to legitimate concerns and questions, they have covered up their abuse of the scientific process by providing non-answers, evasions and misrepresentations—the academic publishing equivalent of “the dog ate my homework.” Amazingly, journal editors, health officials, reporters and others have accepted these non-responsive responses as reasonable and sufficient. I do not.

Now their work is finally being scrutinized the way it should have been by peer reviewers before this damaging research was ever published in the first place. The fallout is not going to be pretty. If nothing else, they have provided a great gift to academia with their $8 million** disaster—for years to come, graduate students in the U.S., the U.K. and elsewhere will be dissecting PACE as a classic case study of bad research and mass delusion.

*Correction: The original version of the post mistakenly called the organization the Royal Society of Psychiatrists.

**Correction: The original version of the post stated that PACE cost $8 million, not $6.4 million. In fact, PACE cost five million pounds, so the cost in dollars depends on the exchange rate used. The $8 million figure is based on the exchange rate from last October, when Virology Blog published my PACE investigation. But the pound has fallen since the Brexit vote in June, so the cost in dollars at the current exchange rate is lower.

Filed Under: Commentary, Information Tagged With: chronic fatigue syndrome, clinical trial, Freedom of Information, GET, mecfs, myalgic encephalomyelitis, PACE

No ‘Recovery’ in PACE Trial, New Analysis Finds

21 September 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

Last October, Virology Blog posted David Tuller’s 14,000-word investigation of the many flaws of the PACE trial (link to article), which had reported that cognitive behavior therapy and graded exercise therapy could lead to “improvement” and “recovery” from ME/CFS. The first results, on “improvement,” were published in The Lancet in 2011; a follow-up study, on “recovery,” was published in the journal Psychological Medicine in 2013.

The investigation by Dr. Tuller, a lecturer in public health and journalism at UC Berkeley, built on the impressive analyses already done by ME/CFS patients; his work helped demolish the credibility of the PACE trial as a piece of scientific research. In February, Virology Blog posted an open letter (link) to The Lancet and its editor, Richard Horton, stating that the trial’s flaws “have no place in published research.” Surprisingly, the PACE authors, The Lancet, and others in the U.K. medical and academic establishment have continued their vigorous defense of the study, despite its glaring methodological and ethical deficiencies.

Today, I’m delighted to publish an important new analysis of PACE trial data—an analysis that the authors never wanted you to see.  The results should put to rest once and for all any question about whether the PACE trial’s enormous mid-trial changes in assessment methods allowed the investigators to report better results than they otherwise would have had. While the answer was obvious from Dr. Tuller’s reporting, the new analysis makes the argument incontrovertible.

ME/CFS patients developed and wrote this groundbreaking analysis, advised by two academic co-authors. It was compiled from data obtained through a freedom-of-information request, pursued with heroic persistence by an Australian patient, Alem Matthees. Since the authors dramatically weakened all of their “recovery” criteria long after the trial started, with no committee approval for the redefinition of “recovery,” it was entirely predictable that the protocol-specified results would be worse. Now we know just how much worse they are.

According to the new analysis, “recovery” rates for the graded exercise and cognitive behavior therapy arms were in the mid-single-digits and were not statistically significant. In contrast, the PACE authors managed to report statistically significant “recovery” rates of 22 percent for their favored interventions. Given the results based on the pre-selected protocol metrics for which they received study approval and funding, it is now up to the PACE authors to explain why anyone should accept their published outcomes as accurate, reliable or legitimate.

The complete text of the analysis is below. A pdf is also available (link to pdf).

***

A preliminary analysis of ‘recovery’ from chronic fatigue syndrome in the PACE trial using individual participant data

 

Wednesday 21 September 2016

Alem Matthees (1), Tom Kindlon (2), Carly Maryhew (3), Philip Stark (4), Bruce Levin (5).

1. Perth, Australia. alem.matthees@gmail.com
2. Information Officer, Irish ME/CFS Association, Dublin, Ireland.
3. Amersfoort, Netherlands.
4. Associate Dean, Mathematical and Physical Sciences; Professor, Department of Statistics; University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
5. Professor of Biostatistics and Past Chair, Department of Biostatistics, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, USA.

Summary

The PACE trial tested interventions for chronic fatigue syndrome, but the published ‘recovery’ rates were based on thresholds that deviated substantially from the published trial protocol. Individual participant data on a selection of measures has recently been released under the Freedom of Information Act, enabling the re-analysis of recovery rates in accordance with the thresholds specified in the published trial protocol. The recovery rate using these thresholds is 3.1% for specialist medical care alone; for the adjunctive therapies it is 6.8% for cognitive behavioural therapy, 4.4% for graded exercise therapy, and 1.9% for adaptive pacing therapy. This re-analysis demonstrates that the previously reported recovery rates were inflated by an average of four-fold. Furthermore, in contrast with the published paper by the trial investigators, the recovery rates in the cognitive behavioural therapy and graded exercise therapy groups are not significantly higher than with specialist medical care alone. The implications of these findings are discussed.

Introduction

The PACE trial was a large multi-centre study of therapeutic interventions for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in the United Kingdom (UK). The trial compared three therapies which were each added to specialist medical care (SMC): cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), graded exercise therapy (GET), and adaptive pacing therapy (APT). [1] Henceforth SMC alone will be ‘SMC’, SMC plus CBT will be ‘CBT’, SMC plus GET will be ‘GET’, and SMC plus APT will be ‘APT’. Outcomes consisted of two self-report primary measures (fatigue and physical function), and a mixture of self-report and objective secondary measures. The trial’s co-principal investigators are longstanding practitioners and proponents of the CBT and GET approach, whereas APT was a highly formalised and modified version of an alternative energy management approach.

After making major changes to the protocol-specified “recovery” criteria, White et al. (2013) reported that when using “a comprehensive and conservative definition of recovery”, CBT and GET were associated with significantly increased recovery rates of 22% at 52-week follow-up, compared to only 8% for APT and 7% for SMC [2]. However, those figures were not derived using the published trial protocol (White et al., 2007 [3]), but instead using a substantially revised version that has been widely criticised for being overly lax and poorly justified (e.g. [4]). For example, the changes created an overlap between trial eligibility criteria for severe disabling fatigue, and the new “normal range”. Trial participants could consequently be classified as recovered without clinically significant improvements to self-reported physical function or fatigue, and in some cases without any improvement whatsoever on these outcome measures. Approximately 13% of participants at baseline simultaneously met the trial eligibility criteria for ‘significant disability’ and the revised recovery criteria for normal self-reported physical function. The justification given for changing the physical function threshold of recovery was apparently based on a misinterpretation of basic summary statistics [5,6], and the authors also incorrectly described their revised threshold as more stringent than previous research [2]. These errors have not been corrected, despite the publishing journal’s policy that such errors should be amended, resulting in growing calls for a fully independent re-analysis of the PACE trial results [7,8].

More than six years after data collection was completed for the 52-week follow-up, the PACE trial investigators have still not published the recovery rates as defined in the trial protocol. Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), holder of the trial data and home of the chief principal investigator, have also not allowed access to the data for others to analyse these outcomes. Following a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for a selection of trial data, an Information Tribunal upheld an earlier decision from the Information Commissioner ordering the release of that data (see case EA/2015/0269). On 9 September 2016, QMUL released the requested data [9]. Given the public nature of the data release, and the strong public interest in addressing the issue of “recovery” from CFS in the PACE trial, we are releasing a preliminary analysis using the main thresholds set in the published trial protocol. The underlying data is also being made available [10], while more detailed and complete analyses on the available outcome measures will be published at a later date.

Methods

Measures and criteria

Using the variables available in the FOIA dataset, ‘recovery’ from CFS in the PACE trial is analysed here based on the main outcome measures described by White et al. (2013) in the “cumulative criteria for trial recovery” [2]. These measures are: (i) the Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire (CFQ); (ii) the Short-Form-36 (SF-36) physical function subscale; (iii) the Clinical Global Impression (CGI) change scale; and (iv) the Oxford CFS criteria. However, instead of the weakened thresholds used in their analysis, we will use the thresholds specified in the published trial protocol by White et al. (2007) [3]. A comparison between the different thresholds for each outcome measure is presented in Table 1.

table 1

Where follow-up data for self-rated CGI scores were missing we did not impute doctor-rated scores, in contrast to the approach of White et al., because the trial protocol stated that all primary and secondary outcomes are “either self-rated or objective in order to minimise observer bias” from non-blinded assessors. We discuss the minimal impact of this imputation below. Participants missing any recovery criteria data at 52-week follow-up were classified as non-recovered.

Statistical analysis

White et al. (2013) conducted an available-case analysis which excluded from the denominators of each group the participants who dropped out [2]. This is not the recommended practice in clinical trials, where intention-to-treat analysis (which includes all randomised participants) is commonly preferred. An available-case analysis may overestimate real-world treatment effects because it does not include participants who were lost to follow-up. Attrition from trials can occur for various reasons, including an inability to tolerate the prescribed treatment, a perceived lack of benefit, and adverse reactions. Thus, an available-case analysis only takes into account the patients who were willing and able to tolerate the prescribed treatments. Nonetheless, both types of analyses are presented here for comparison. We present a preliminary exploratory analysis of the frequency and percentage of participants meeting all the recovery criteria in each group, based on the intention-to-treat principle, as well as the available-case subgroup.

Neither the published trial protocol [3] nor the published statistical analysis plan [11] specified a method for determining the statistical significance of the differences in recovery rates between treatment groups. In their published paper on recovery, White et al. (2013) presented logistic regression analyses for trial arm pairwise comparisons, adjusting for the baseline stratification variables of treatment centre, meeting CDC CFS criteria, meeting London ME criteria, and having a depressive illness [2]. However, it has been shown that logistic regression may be an inappropriate method of analysis in the context of randomised trials [12]. While Fisher’s exact test would be preferable, a more rigorous approach would also take into account stratification variables, which unfortunately were not part of the available FOIA dataset. Nonetheless, there is reason to believe that the effect of including these stratification variables would be minimal on our analyses: the stratification variables were approximately evenly distributed between groups [1], and attempting to replicate the previously published [2] odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals using logistic regression, but without stratification variables, yielded very similar results to the ones previously published (see Table 3).

We therefore present recovery rates for each group and compare the observed rates for each active treatment arm with those of the SMC arm using Fisher’s exact tests. The confidence intervals for recovery rates in each group and comparative odds ratios are exact 95% confidence intervals using the point probability method [13]. For sake of direct comparison with results published by White et al. (2013), we also present results of logistic regression analysis which included only the treatment arm as a predictor variable, with conventional approximate 95% confidence intervals.

Results

For our analysis of ‘recovery’ in the PACE trial, full data were available for 89% to 94% of participants, depending on the treatment group and outcome measure. Percentages are calculated for both intention-to-treat, and on an available-case basis. Imputing the missing self-rated CGI scores with doctor-rated CGI scores made no difference to the intention-to-treat analysis, as there were no participants with missing self-rated CGI scores with an assessor rating of 1, required for recovery; in the available-case analysis, the only effect this had was to decrease the CBT denominator by 1, and the assessor score for that participant was 3, “a little better”, therefore non-recovered. Table 2 provides the results and Figure 1 compares our recovery rates with those of White et al. (2013):

table 2

figure 1

The CBT, GET, and APT groups did not demonstrate a statistically significant advantage over the SMC group in any of the above analyses, nor an empirical recovery rate that would generally be considered adequate (the highest observed rate was 7.7%). In the intention-to-treat analysis, the exact p value for the three degree of freedom chi-squared test for no overall differences amongst the four groups was 0.14. In the available-case analysis, the p value was 0.10. Given the number of comparisons, a correction for multiple testing might be appropriate, but as none of the uncorrected p values were significant at the p<0.05 level, this more conservative approach would not alter the conclusion. Our findings therefore contradict the conclusion of White et al. (2013), that CBT and GET were significantly more likely than the SMC group to be associated with ‘recovery’ at 52 weeks [2]. However, the very low recovery rates substantially decrease the ability to detect statistically significant differences between groups (see the Limitations section). The multiple changes to the recovery criteria had inflated the estimates of recovery by approximately 2.3 to 5.1 -fold, depending on the group, with an average inflation of 3.8-fold.

Limitations

Lack of statistical power

When designing the PACE trial and determining the number of participants needed, the investigators’ power analyses were based not on recovery estimates but on the prediction of relatively high rates of clinical improvement in the additional therapy groups compared to SMC alone [3]. However, the very low recovery rates introduce a complication for tests of significance, due to insufficient statistical power to detect modest but clinically important differences between groups. For example, with the CBT vs. SMC comparison by intention-to-treat, a true odds ratio of 4.2 would have been required to give Fisher’s exact test 80% power to declare significance, given the observed margins. If we assume SMC has a probability of 3.1%, an odds ratio of 4.2 would have conferred a recovery probability of 11.8%, which was not achieved in the trial.

We believe that for our preliminary analysis it was important to follow the protocol-specified recovery criteria, which make more sense than the revised thresholds. For example, the former required level of physical function would suggest a ‘recovered’ individual could at least do most normal activities, but may have limitations with a few of the items on the SF-36 health survey, such as vigorous exercise, walking up flights of stairs, or bending down. The revised threshold that White et al. (2013) used meant that a ‘recovered’ individual could have remained limited on four to eight out of ten items depending on severity. We found that when using the revised recovery criteria, 8% (7/87) of the ‘recovered’ participants still met trial eligibility criteria for ‘significant disability’.

Weakening the recovery thresholds increases statistical power to detect group differences because it makes the event (i.e. ‘recovery’) rates more frequent (i.e. less close to zero) but it also leads to the inclusion of patients who still, for example, have significant illness-related restrictions in physical capacity as per SF-36 physical function score. We argue that if significant differences between groups cannot be detected in sample sizes of approximately n=160 per group, then this may indicate that CBT and GET simply do not substantially increase recovery rates.

Lack of data on stratification variables

In order to increase the chance of being granted or enforced, the FOIA request asked for a ‘bare minimum’ set of variables, as asking for too many variables, or for variables that may be judged to significantly increase the risk of re-identification of participants, would have decreased the chance that the FOIA request would be granted. This was a reasonable compromise given that QMUL had previously blocked all requests for the protocol-specified recovery rates and the underlying data to calculate them. Some non-crucial variables are therefore missing from the dataset acquired under the FOIA but there is reason to believe that this would have little effect on the results.

Allocation of participants in the PACE trial was stratified [1]: “The first three participants at each of the six clinics were allocated with straightforward randomisation. Thereafter allocation was stratified by centre, alternative criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome and myalgic encephalomyelitis, and depressive disorder (major or minor depressive episode or dysthymia), with computer-generated probabilistic minimisation.”

This means that testing for statistical significance assuming simple randomisation results in p- values that are approximate and effect-size estimates that might be biased. The FOIA dataset does not contain the stratification variables. While the lack of these variables may somewhat alter the estimated treatment effects and the p-values or confidence levels, we expect the differences to be minor, a conclusion that is supported by Table 3 below. Table 1 of the publication of the main trial results (White et al., 2011) shows that the stratification variables were approximately evenly distributed between groups [1]. We have replicated the rates of “trial recovery” as previously published by White et al. (2013) [2]. We also attempted to replicate their previously reported logistic regression, without the stratification variables, and the results were essentially the same (see Table 3), suggesting that the adjustments would not have a significant impact on the outcome of our own analysis of recovery.

table 3

If QMUL or the PACE trial investigators believe that further adjustment is necessary here to have confidence in the results, then we invite them to present analyses that include stratification variables or release the raw data for those variables without unnecessary restrictions.

Lack of data on alternative ME/CFS criteria

For the same reasons described in the previous subsection, the FOIA dataset does not contain the variables for meeting CDC CFS criteria or London ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) criteria. These were part of the original definition of recovery, but we argue that these are superfluous because:

(a) While our definition of recovery is less stringent without the alternative ME/CFS criteria, these additional criteria had no significant effect on the results reported by White et al. (2013) [2]). (b) The alternative ME/CFS criteria used in the trial had some questionable modifications [14], that have not been used in any other trial, thus seriously limiting cross-trial comparability and validation of their results. (c) The Oxford CFS criteria are the most sensitive and least specific (most inclusive) criteria, so those who fulfil all other aspects of the recovery criteria would most likely also fail to meet alternative ME/CFS criteria. (d) All participants were first screened using the Oxford CFS criteria as this was the primary case definition, whereas the additional case criteria were not entry requirements [1].

Discussion

It is important that patients, health care professionals, and researchers have accurate information about the chances of recovery from CFS. In the absence of definitive outcome measures, recovery criteria should set reasonable standards that approach restoration of good health, in keeping with commonly understood conceptions of recovery from illness [15]. Accordingly, the changes made by the PACE trial investigators after the trial was well under way resulted in the recovery criteria becoming too lax to allow conclusions about the efficacy of CBT and GET as rehabilitative treatments for CFS. This analysis, based on the published trial protocol, demonstrates that the major changes to the thresholds for recovery had inflated the estimates of recovery by an average of approximately four-fold. QMUL recently posted the PACE trial primary ‘improvement’ outcomes as specified in the protocol [16] and that also showed a similar difference between the proportion of participants classified as improved compared to the post-hoc figures previously published in the Lancet in 2011 [1]. It is clear from these results that the changes made to the protocol were not minor or insignificant, as they have produced major differences that warrant further consideration.

The PACE trial protocol was published with the implication that changes would be unlikely [17], and while the trial investigators describe their analysis of recovery as pre-specified, there is no mention of changes to the recovery criteria in the statistical analysis plan that was finalised shortly before the unblinding of trial data [11]. Confusion has predictably ensued regarding the timing and nature of the substantial changes made to the recovery criteria [18]. Changing study endpoints should be rare and is only rarely acceptable; moreover, trial investigators may not be appropriate decision makers for endpoint revisions [19,20]. Key aspects of pre-registered design and analyses are often ignored in subsequent publications, and positive results are often the product of overly flexible rules of design and data analysis [21,22].

As reported in a recent BMJ editorial by chief editor Fiona Godlee (3 March 2016), when there is enough doubt to warrant independent re-analysis [23]: “Such independent reanalysis and public access to anonymised data should anyway be the rule, not the exception, whoever funds the trial.” The PACE trial provides a good example of the problems that can occur when investigators are allowed to substantially deviate from the trial protocol without adequate justification or scrutiny. We therefore propose that a thorough, transparent, and independent re-analysis be conducted to provide greater clarity about the PACE trial results. Pending a comprehensive review or audit of trial data, it seems prudent that the published trial results should be treated as potentially unsound, as well as the medical texts, review articles, and public policies based on those results.

Acknowledgements

Writing this article in such a brief period of time would not have been possible without the diverse and invaluable contributions from patients, and others, who chose not to be named as authors.

Declarations

AM submitted a FOIA request and participated in legal proceedings to acquire the dataset. TK is a committee member of the Irish ME/CFS Association (voluntary position).

References

1. White PD, Goldsmith KA, Johnson AL, Potts L, Walwyn R, DeCesare JC, Baber HL, Burgess M, Clark LV, Cox DL, Bavinton J, Angus BJ, Murphy G, Murphy M, O’Dowd H, Wilks D, McCrone P, Chalder T, Sharpe M; PACE trial management group. Comparison of adaptive pacing therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, graded exercise therapy, and specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (PACE): a randomised trial. Lancet. 2011 Mar 5;377(9768):823-36. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60096-2. Epub 2011 Feb 18. PMID: 21334061. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3065633/

2. White PD, Goldsmith K, Johnson AL, Chalder T, Sharpe M. Recovery from chronic fatigue syndrome after treatments given in the PACE trial. Psychol Med. 2013 Oct;43(10):2227-35. doi: 10.1017/S0033291713000020. PMID: 23363640. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3776285/

3. White PD, Sharpe MC, Chalder T, DeCesare JC, Walwyn R; PACE trial group. Protocol for the PACE trial: a randomised controlled trial of adaptive pacing, cognitive behaviour therapy, and graded exercise, as supplements to standardised specialist medical care versus standardised specialist medical care alone for patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis or encephalopathy. BMC Neurol. 2007 Mar 8;7:6. PMID: 17397525. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2147058/

4. A list of articles by David Tuller on ME/CFS and PACE at Virology Blog. https://www.virology.ws/mecfs/

5. Kindlon T, Baldwin A. Response to: reports of recovery in chronic fatigue syndrome may present less than meets the eye. Evid Based Ment Health. 2015 May;18(2):e5. doi: 10.1136/eb-2014-101961. Epub 2014 Sep 19. PMID: 25239244. http://ebmh.bmj.com/content/18/2/e5.long

6. Matthees A. Assessment of recovery status in chronic fatigue syndrome using normative data. Qual Life Res. 2015 Apr;24(4):905-7. doi: 10.1007/s11136-014-0819-0. Epub 2014 Oct 11. PMID: 25304959. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11136-014-0819-0

7. Davis RW, Edwards JCW, Jason LA, et al. An open letter to The Lancet, again. Virology Blog. 10 February 2016. https://www.virology.ws/2016/02/10/open-letter-lancet-again/

8. #MEAction. Press release: 12,000 signature PACE petition delivered to the Lancet. http://www.meaction.net/press-release-12000-signature-pace-petition-delivered-to-the-lancet/

9. Queen Mary University of London. Statement: Disclosure of PACE trial data under the Freedom of Information Act. 9 September 2016 Statement: Release of individual patient data from the PACE trial. http://www.qmul.ac.uk/media/news/items/smd/181216.html

10. FOIA request to QMUL (2014/F73). Dataset file: https://sites.google.com/site/pacefoir/pace-ipd_foia-qmul- 2014-f73.xlsx Readme file: https://sites.google.com/site/pacefoir/pace-ipd-readme.txt

11. Walwyn R, Potts L, McCrone P, Johnson AL, DeCesare JC, Baber H, Goldsmith K, Sharpe M, Chalder T, White PD. A randomised trial of adaptive pacing therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, graded exercise, and specialist medical care for chronic fatigue syndrome (PACE): statistical analysis plan. Trials. 2013 Nov 13;14:386. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-14-386. PMID: 24225069. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4226009/

12. Freedman DA. Randomization Does Not Justify Logistic Regression. Statistical Science. 2008;23(2):237–249. doi:10.1214/08-STS262. https://arxiv.org/pdf/0808.3914.pdf

13. Fleiss JL, Levin B, Paik MC. Statistical methods for rates and proportions. 3rd ed. Hoboken, N.J: J. Wiley; 2003. 760 p. IBSN: 978-0-471-52629-2. (Wiley series in probability and statistics). http://au.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0471526290.html

14. Matthees A. Treatment of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Ann Intern Med. 2015 Dec 1;163(11):886-7. doi: 10.7326/L15-5173. PMID: 26618293.

15. Adamowicz JL, Caikauskaite I, Friedberg F. Defining recovery in chronic fatigue syndrome: a critical review. Qual Life Res. 2014 Nov;23(9):2407-16. doi: 10.1007/s11136-014-0705-9. Epub 2014 May 3. PMID: 24791749. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11136-014-0705-9

16. Goldsmith KA, White PD, Chalder T, Johnson AL, Sharpe M. The PACE trial: analysis of primary outcomes using composite measures of improvement. 8 September 2016. http://www.wolfson.qmul.ac.uk/images/pdfs/pace/PACE_published_protocol_based_analysis_final_8th_Sept_201 6.pdf

17. BMC editor’s comment on [Protocol for the PACE trial] (Version: 2. Date: 31 January 2007) http://www.biomedcentral.com/imedia/2095594212130588_comment.pdf

18. UK House of Lords. PACE Trial: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis. 6 February 2013. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201213/ldhansrd/text/130206-gc0001.htm

19. Evans S. When and how can endpoints be changed after initiation of a randomized clinical trial? PLoS Clin Trials. 2007 Apr 13;2(4):e18. PMID 17443237. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1852589/

20. Moher D, Hopewell S, Schulz KF, Montori V, Gøtzsche PC, Devereaux PJ, Elbourne D, Egger M, Altman DG. CONSORT 2010 explanation and elaboration: updated guidelines for reporting parallel group randomised trials. BMJ. 2010 Mar 23;340:c869. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c869. PMID: 20332511. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2844943

21. Simmons JP, Nelson LD, Simonsohn U. False-positive psychology: undisclosed flexibility in data collection and analysis allows presenting anything as significant. Psychol Sci. 2011 Nov;22(11):1359-66. doi: 10.1177/0956797611417632. Epub 2011 Oct 17. PMID: 22006061. http://pss.sagepub.com/content/22/11/1359.long

22. Wagenmakers EJ, Wetzels R, Borsboom D, van der Maas HL, Kievit RA. An Agenda for Purely Confirmatory Research. Perspect Psychol Sci. 2012 Nov;7(6):632-8. doi: 10.1177/1745691612463078. PMID: 26168122. http://pps.sagepub.com/content/7/6/632.full

23. Godlee F. Data transparency is the only way. BMJ 2016;352:i1261. (Published 03 March 2016) doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i1261 http://www.bmj.com/content/352/bmj.i1261

Filed Under: Commentary, Information Tagged With: chronic fatigue syndrome, data request, Freedom of Information, mecfs, myalgic encephalomyelitis, PACE trial, recovery

Trial By Error, Continued: My Questions for Lancet Editor Richard Horton

1 September 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

By David Tuller, DrPH

In January, I posted a list of the questions I still wanted to ask the PACE authors, who have repeatedly refused my requests to interview them about their ethically and methodologically challenged study. Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, has similarly declined to talk with me, ignoring my e-mails seeking comment for the initial investigation, posted on Virology Blog last October, as well as for several follow-up articles. Now Dr. Horton has doubled-down on his efforts to keep a lid on the controversy by rejecting a letter that he personally solicited—a major breach of professional courtesy to the 43 well-regarded researchers and clinicians who signed it.

As Dr. Racaniello explained this week at Virology Blog, he submitted the letter on behalf of the group in March, in response to an express invitation from Dr. Horton. The invitation came right after Virology Blog posted an open letter, based on my investigation, that outlined the trial’s major missteps. Dr. Racaniello presumed from the wording of Dr. Horton’s invitation that the letter would, in fact, be published, as did the other signatories. On Monday, having been dissed by The Lancet, Dr. Racaniello finally posted the letter on PubMed Commons. He also called the PACE trial “a sham.” (I’ve called it “a piece of crap.” I might also have referred to it somewhere as “doggie-poo,” but I’m not sure.)

In rejecting the letter that he himself solicited, Dr. Horton certainly appeared to be trying to squelch the growing public controversy over PACE and its recommendations that graded exercise therapy and cognitive behavior therapy are effective treatments for chronic fatigue syndrome (or myalgic encephalomyelitis, CFS, ME, CFS/ME, or ME/CFS, or some other name). But The Lancet’s effort to shield PACE is doomed, not only because the study is so bad but because the emerging science presents a completely different portrait of the illness. On Monday, a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reported distinct patterns of metabolites in the plasma of ME/CFS patients—an important finding that, if confirmed, could finally lead to diagnostic tests. The PNAS paper and other recent research support the conclusion of reports last year from both the Institute of Medicine and National Institutes of Health: ME/CFS is a devastating physiological disease.

Back in January, Columbia statistics professor Andrew Gelman blogged about the harm Dr. Horton was already inflicting on his journal by not addressing the serious questions that serious critics were raising about PACE. The longstanding claim of the PACE authors, The Lancet and the trial’s other defenders—that the opponents were a small cabal of irrational, dangerous, and anti-psychiatry patients—has been exposed as false. The PACE authors, The Lancet and their colleagues wielded this narrative for years to discredit those challenging the trial. To their dismay, this tactic is no longer working.

The Lancet’s decision to reject the Virology Blog letter will only compound the journal’s growing reputational damage over the issue. It also seems deeply short-sighted, in light of last month’s powerful court decision ordering Queen Mary University of London, the professional home of principal PACE investigator Peter White, to release the raw trial data. That would allow others to determine whether the PACE investigators altered their outcome assessments strategies to produce results more likely to get published in The Lancet and other journals. (The answer should not surprise anyone except those in extreme stages of denial.)

The decision involved a freedom-of-information request filed two years ago by Alem Matthees, an Australian patient. Since the published results did not include the results per the assessment methods outlined in the PACE trial protocol, Matthees wanted the data necessary to calculate those results for the two primary outcomes of fatigue and physical function, as well as for the original definition of “recovery.” Last October, the Information Commissioner’s Office, an independent agency, found that QMUL had no grounds for refusing to provide the data. QMUL appealed that ruling to the First-Tier Tribunal, which issued the recent decision.

The U.K. medical-academic-media establishment has wholly endorsed the PACE trial’s unreliable findings and accepted the authors’ unsubstantiated claims that they have been subjected to a concerted campaign of threats and harassment. In contrast, the tribunal demonstrated a refreshing unwillingness to play along. In robust language, the tribunal smacked down the specious arguments raised by the university in its attempt to shield the data from public disclosure.

The chance that any participant could or would be identified from the anonymized data was “remote,” the tribunal found. The scenarios envisioned ed by QMUL’s data security expert, who sketched out far-fetched strategies that “activist” patients might pursue to re-identify and then harass trial participants, were “grossly exaggerated” and “a considerable amount of supposition and speculation,” wrote the tribunal. In fact, noted the tribunal, the only incident of “harassment” proven by QMUL’s experienced legal team was that someone somewhere once heckled Trudie Chalder, a principal PACE investigator who also testified at the tribunal hearing. (I also have some thoughts on Dr. Chalder’s testimony, but will hold those for another time.)

In contrast to the QMUL portrait of PACE opponents, the tribunal cited Virology Blog’s open letter to The Lancet as evidence of a robust scientific debate, noting that “the identity of those questioning the research…was impressive.” The tribunal also noted that QMUL’s decision to share data with friendly researchers but not with others had created the impression that it was acting out of self-interest, not principle. “There is a strong public interest in releasing the data given the continued academic interest so long after the research was published and the seeming reluctance for Queen Mary University to engage with other academics they thought were seeking to challenge their findings,” declared the tribunal in the decision.

The PACE authors, QMUL, Dr. Horton, and The Lancet are stonewalling the obvious, at the expense of millions of sick patients. Although Dr. Horton will never grant me an interview, I want to highlight some of the questions I have about his actions, claims and thoughts, in case someone else gets the chance to talk with him. This list of questions is certainly not exhaustive, but it’s a decent start.

So, Dr. Horton–Here’s what I’d like to ask you:

1) Do you agree that the invitation you sent to Dr. Racaniello certainly implied, even if it didn’t explicitly promise, that The Lancet would publish the letter? Since the letter submitted by Dr. Racaniello, on behalf of himself and 42 other experts, reflected the points made in the Virology Blog open letter that triggered your invitation, what changed your mind about whether it added something to the debate? Since you personally solicited the letter from Dr. Racaniello and his colleagues, do you feel you should have sent him a personal apology, rather than leaving your correspondence editor, Audrey Ceschia, to answer for your behavior?

2) In your invitation to Dr. Racaniello, you noted that the PACE authors would have a chance to respond, alongside the published letter. That was a fair plan. When did that plan of offering them a response morph into the plan of offering them a role in discussions about whether to publish the critical letter in the first place? What impact did their views have on your decision? Did the PACE authors argue, as they have in the past, that they have already answered all these criticisms?

This repeated claim that they have answered all questions is simply untrue. They have never explained, for example, how it is possible to be disabled and “within normal range” on an indicator simultaneously, and why 13 % of their participants were already “within normal range” on one or both primary outcome sat baseline. When anyone asks legitimate questions, they evade, ignore or misstate the issues—including in the correspondence following The Lancet’s 2011 paper. (This pattern of non-response is clear from their non-responsive responses to the charges raised in my Virology Blog investigation, and my rebuttal of their non-responses.)

3) What’s your reaction to the First-Tier Tribunal’s decision ordering the release of the PACE trial data? Do you agree with the tribunal’s observation, referring to Virology Blog’s February open letter to you and The Lancet, that the roster of scientists and researchers now publicly questioning the methodology and findings of PACE is “impressive”?

4) Do think QMUL should spend more public money to appeal the decision?

If QMUL decides to appeal, do you think this will fuel the already-widespread assumption that PACE had null findings per the original protocol methods of assessment?

5) The PACE interventions, as described in The Lancet, are based on the premise that deconditioning rather than any pathological process perpetuates the illness, and that increased activity and a new psychological mind-set will fix the problem. The descriptions of the interventions categorically exclude the possibility of a continuing organic disease as the cause. Do you think this portrait of the illness squares with the view emerging from this week’s study in PNAS and other recent research, including last year’s reports from the Institute of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health?

6) The IOM report identified “exertion intolerance”—the prolonged relapses patients often suffer after minimal activity–as the core symptom of the illness. Yet a key aspect of the PACE rehabilitative interventions, GET and CBT, is urging patients to increase their activity and to interpret a resurgence of symptoms as a transient event, not a sign of deterioration. Given the IOM’s focus on “exertion intolerance” as the central phenomenon, isn’t the PACE approach contraindicated?

7) Does it bother you that you published a paper in which 13% of the sample had already, at baseline, met the outcome thresholds for one or both primary measures? These outcome thresholds, which represented worse health than the entry criteria, were variously defined as being “within normal range” (the Lancet paper), “back to normal” (Dr. Chalder’s statement at the press conference for the Lancet paper), and “a strict criterion for recovery” (the Lancet commentary by colleagues of the PACE authors). Can you point me to any other studies published in The Lancet, or anywhere, in which positive outcome scores represented worse health than entry criteria?

8) Does it bother you personally that the PACE authors did not inform you or your editorial staff that a significant minority of patients were already “within normal range” on at least one primary outcome at baseline? (I presume they didn’t mention it to you because, well, it’s hard to imagine you would have published the paper if you or anyone there had been told about or noticed the inexplicable overlap in the entry criteria and the post-hoc “normal range” thresholds.)

9) During a 2011 Australian radio interview not long after The Lancet published the first PACE results, you said the following about the trial’s critics: “One sees a fairly small, but highly organised, very vocal and very damaging group of individuals who have I would say actually hijacked this agenda and distorted the debate so that it actually harms the overwhelming majority of patients.” Given that the First-Tier Tribunal expressed a different perspective on the stature and credibility of those criticizing PACE, do you still agree with your 2011 characterization of the trial’s opponents?

10) During the same interview, you stated that the PACE trial had undergone “endless rounds of peer review.” Yet the trial was also “fast-tracked” to publication, as indicated on the version of the article in the ScienceDirect database. Can you explain the mechanics of “fast-tracking” a paper to publication while simultaneously subjecting it to “endless rounds of peer review”? How long was the fast-track process for the PACE paper, and how many actual rounds of review did the paper undergo during that endless period?

11) Can you explain why the Lancet’s endless peer review process did not catch the most criticized aspect of the paper—the very obvious fact that participants could be simultaneously disabled enough for entry yet already “within normal range”/”back to normal”/”recovered” on the primary outcomes? Can you explain why the reviewers did not request the authors to provide either the original results promised in the protocol or else sensitivity analyses to assess the impact of the mid-trial changes they introduced?

12) Do you think it was appropriate for the PACE investigators to publish a mid-trial newsletter that promoted the therapies under study and included glowing testimonials from earlier participants about their excellent outcomes? Can you point to other published studies that featured such mid-trial dissemination of personal testimonials and explicit descriptions of outcomes? The PACE authors have stated that the newsletter testimonials did not identify participants’ trial arms and therefore could not have created any bias. Do you agree with this novel and creative argument that influencing all remaining participants in a trial in a positive direction is not a form of bias?

13) Did The Lancet’s peer review process include an evaluation of the PACE trial’s consent forms, given the authors’ explicit promise in the protocol to abide by the Declaration of Helsinki? The Declaration of Helsinki requires investigators to disclose “any possible conflicts of interest” not just to journals but to prospective participants. Yet the PACE consent forms did not disclose the authors’ close financial and consulting ties with the insurance industry. Do you agree this omission violates their protocol promise, and that given this violation the PACE authors failed to obtain legitimate informed consent from their participants? Without legitimate informed consent, did the PACE authors have the right to publish their findings in The Lancet and other journals? What should happen to the PACE papers already published, since the authors do not appear to have legitimate informed consent from participants?

14) Who do you think should be held responsible for the $8,000,000 in U.K. government funds wasted on the PACE trial? Who should be held responsible for the harm it has caused? What responsibility, if any, does The Lancet bear for the debacle?

Filed Under: Commentary, Information Tagged With: chronic fatigue syndrome, mecfs, myalgic encephalomyelitis, PACE trial, Richard Horton, The Lancet

Once Again, Lancet Stumbles on PACE

29 August 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

Last February, Virology Blog posted an open letter to The Lancet and its editor, Dr. Richard Horton, describing the indefensible flaws of the PACE trial of treatments for ME/CFS, the disease otherwise known as chronic fatigue syndrome (link to letter). Forty-two well-regarded scientists, academics and clinicians put their names to the letter, which declared flatly that the flaws in PACE “have no place in published research.” The letter called for a completely independent re-analysis of the PACE trial data, since the authors have refused to publish the results they outlined in their original protocol. The letter was also sent directly to Dr. Horton.

The open letter was based on the extensive investigative report written by David Tuller, the academic coordinator of UC Berkeley’s joint program in journalism and public health, which Virology Blog posted last October (link to report). This report outlines such egregious failings as outcome thresholds that overlapped with entry criteria, mid-trial promotion of the therapies under investigation, failure to provide the original results as outlined in the protocol, failure to adhere to a specific promise in the protocol to inform participants about the investigators’ conflicts of interest, and other serious lapses.

Virology Blog first posted the open letter in November, with six signatories (link to letter). At that time, Dr. Horton’s office responded that he would reply after returning from “traveling.” Three months later, we still had not heard back from Dr. Horton–perhaps he was still “traveling”–so we decided to republish it with many more people signed on.

The day the second open letter was posted, Dr Horton e-mailed me and solicited a letter from the group. (He did not explain where he had been “traveling” for the previous three months.) Here’s what he wrote: “Many thanks for your email. In the interests of transparency, I would like to invite you to submit a letter for publication–please keep your letter to around 500 words. We will then invite the authors of the study to reply to your very serious allegations.”

Dr. Horton’s e-mail clearly indicated that the letter would be published, with the PACE authors’ response to the charges raised; there was no equivocation or possibility of misinterpretation. In good faith, we submitted a letter for publication the following month, with 43 signatories this time, through The Lancet’s online editorial system (see the end of this article for a list of those who signed the letter). After several months with no response, we learned only recently by checking the online editorial system that The Lancet had flatly rejected the letter, with no explanation. No one contacted me to explain the decision or why we were asked to spend time creating a letter that The Lancet clearly had no intention of publishing.

I wrote back to Dr. Horton, pointing out that his behavior was highly unprofessional and requesting an explanation for the rejection. I also asked him if he was in the habit of soliciting letters from busy scientists and researchers that his journal had no actual interest in publishing. I further asked if the journal planned to reconsider this rejection, in light of the recent First-Tier Tribunal decision, which demolished the PACE authors’ bogus reasons for refusing to provide data for independent analysis.

Dr. Horton did not himself apologize or even deign to respond. Instead, Audrey Ceschia, the Lancet’s correspondence editor, replied, explaining that the Lancet editorial staff decided, after discussing the matter with the PACE authors, that the letter did not add anything substantially new to the discussion. She assured us that if we submitted another letter focused on the First-Tier Tribunal decision, it would be “seriously” considered. I’m not sure why she or Dr. Horton think that any such assurance from The Lancet is credible at this point.

The reasons given for the rejection are clearly specious. The letter for publication reflected the matters addressed in the open letter that prompted Dr. Horton’s invitation in the first place, and closely adhered to his directive  to outline our “serious allegations”. If outlining these allegations was not considered publication-worthy by The Lancet, it is incomprehensible to us why Dr. Horton solicited the letter in the first place. Perhaps it was just an effort to hold off further criticism for a period of months while we awaited publication of the letter, unaware of the journal’s intention to reject it. It is certainly surprising that The Lancet appears to have given the PACE authors some power to determine what letters appear in the journal itself.

Dr. Tuller’s investigation, based on the groundbreaking analyses conducted by many savvy patients and advocates since The Lancet published the first PACE results in 2011, has effectively demolished the credibility of the findings. So has a follow-up analysis by Dr. Rebecca Goldin, a math professor at George Mason University and director of Stats.org, a think tank co-sponsored by the American Statistical Association. In short, the PACE study is a sham, with meaningless results. In this case, the emperor truly has no clothes. Dr. Horton and his editorial team at The Lancet are stark naked.

Yet the PACE study remains in the literature. Its recommendation of treatments that are potentially harmful to patients–specifically, graded exercise therapy and cognitive behavior therapy, both designed specifically to increase patients’ activity levels–remains highly influential.

Of particular concern, the PACE findings have laid the groundwork for the MAGENTA study, a so-called “PACE for kids” that will be testing graded exercise therapy in children and adolescents. A feasibility study, sponsored by Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, is currently recruiting participants. It is, of course, completely unacceptable that any study should justify itself based on the uninterpretable findings of the PACE trial. The MAGENTA trial should be halted until the PACE authors have done what the First-Tier Tribunal ordered them to do–release their raw data and allow others to analyze it according to the outcomes specified in the PACE trial protocol.

Today, because of the urgency of the issue, we are posting on PubMed Commons the letter that The Lancet rejected. That way readers can judge for themselves whether it adds anything to the current debate.

Please note that the opinions in this blog post are mine only, not those of any of the other signers of the Lancet letter, listed below

Vincent R. Racaniello, PhD
Professor of Microbiology and Immunology
Columbia University
New York, New York

Ronald W. Davis, PhD
Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics
Stanford University
Stanford, California

Jonathan C.W. Edwards, MD
Emeritus Professor of Medicine
University College London
London, England, United Kingdom

Leonard A. Jason, PhD
Professor of Psychology
DePaul University
Chicago, Illinois

Bruce Levin, PhD
Professor of Biostatistics
Columbia University
New York, New York

Arthur L. Reingold, MD
Professor of Epidemiology
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California

******

Dharam V. Ablashi, DVM, MS, Dip Bact
Scientific Director – HHV-6 Foundation
Former Senior Investigator
National Cancer Institute, NIH
Bethesda, Maryland

James N. Baraniuk, MD
Professor, Department of Medicine
Georgetown University
Washington, D.C.

Lisa F. Barcellos, PhD, MPH
Professor of Epidemiology
School of Public Health
California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences
University of California
Berkeley, California

Lucinda Bateman MD PC
MECFS and Fibromyalgia clinician
Salt Lake City, Utah

Alison C. Bested MD FRCPC
Clinical Associate Professor of Hematology
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

John Chia, MD
Clinician/Researcher
EV Med Research
Lomita, California

Lily Chu, MD, MSHS
Independent Researcher
San Francisco, California

Derek Enlander, MD, MRCS, LRCP
Attending Physician
Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York
ME CFS Center, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
New York, New York

Mary Ann Fletcher, PhD
Schemel Professor of Neuroimmune Medicine
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Nova Southeastern University
Professor Emeritus, University of Miami School of Medicine
Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Kenneth Friedman, PhD
Associate Professor of Pharmacology and Physiology (retired)
New Jersey Medical School
University of Medicine and Dentistry of NJ
Newark, New Jersey

Robert F. Garry, PhD
Professor of Microbiology and Immunology
Tulane University School of Medicine
New Orleans, Louisiana

Rebecca Goldin, PhD
Professor of Mathematics
George Mason University
Fairfax, Virginia

David L. Kaufman, MD,
Medical Director
Open Medicine Institute
Mountain View, California

Susan Levine, MD
Clinician, Private Practice
Visiting Fellow, Cornell University
New York, New York

Alan R. Light, PhD
Professor, Department of Anesthesiology
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah

Patrick E. McKnight, PhD
Professor of Psychology
George Mason University
Fairfax, Virginia

Zaher Nahle, PhD, MPA
Vice President for Research and Scientific Programs
Solve ME/CFS Initiative
Los Angeles, California

James M. Oleske, MD, MPH
Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Professor of Pediatrics
Senator of RBHS Research Centers, Bureaus, and Institutes
Director, Division of Pediatrics Allergy, Immunology & Infectious Diseases
Department of Pediatrics
Rutgers – New Jersey Medical School
Newark, New Jersey

Richard N. Podell, M.D., MPH
Clinical Professor
Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
New Brunswick, New Jersey

William Satariano, PhD
Professor of Epidemiology and Community Health
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California

Paul T Seed MSc CStat CSci
Senior Lecturer in Medical Statistics
King’s College London, Division of Women’s Health
St Thomas’ Hospital
London, England, United Kingdom

Charles Shepherd, MB BS
Honorary Medical Adviser to the ME Association
London, England, United Kingdom

Christopher R. Snell, PhD
Scientific Director
WorkWell Foundation
Ripon, California

Nigel Speight, MA, MC, BChir, FRCP, FRCPCH, DCH
Pediatrician
Durham, England, United Kingdom

Philip B. Stark, PhD
Professor of Statistics
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California

Eleanor Stein, MD FRCP(C)
Assistant Clinical Professor
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta, Canada

John Swartzberg, MD
Clinical Professor Emeritus
School of Public Health
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, California

Ronald G. Tompkins, MD, ScD
Summer M Redstone Professor of Surgery
Harvard University
Boston, Massachusetts

Rosemary Underhill, MB BS.
Physician, Independent Researcher
Palm Coast, Florida

Dr Rosamund Vallings MNZM, MB BS
General Practitioner
Auckland, New Zealand

Michael VanElzakker, PhD
Research Fellow, Psychiatric Neuroscience Division
Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts

Mark Vink, MD
Family Physician
Soerabaja Research Center
Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Prof Dr FC Visser
Cardiologist
Stichting CardioZorg
Hoofddorp, The Netherlands

William Weir, FRCP
Infectious Disease Consultant
London, England, United Kingdom

John Whiting, MD
Specialist Physician
Private Practice
Brisbane, Australia

Marcie Zinn, PhD
Research Consultant in Experimental Neuropsychology, qEEG/LORETA, Medical/Psychological Statistics
NeuroCognitive Research Institute, Chicago
Center for Community Research
DePaul University
Chicago, Illinois

Mark Zinn, MM
Research consultant in experimental electrophysiology
Center for Community Research
DePaul University
Chicago, Illinois

Filed Under: Commentary Tagged With: adaptive pacing therapy, chronic fatigue syndrome, cognitive behavior therapy, graded exercise therapy, mecfs, myalgic encephalomyelitis, PACE trial, specialist medical care, The Lancet

TWiV 397: Trial by error

10 July 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

Journalism professor David Tuller returns to TWiV for a discussion of the PACE trial for ME/CFS: the many flaws in the trial, why its conclusions are useless, and why the data must be released and re-examined.

You can find TWiV #397 at microbe.tv/twiv, or listen below.

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Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: adaptive pacing therapy, CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome, clinical trial, cognitive behavior therapy, graded exercise therapy, mecfs, myalgic encephalomyeltiis, PACE trial

An open letter to PLoS One

23 May 2016 by Vincent Racaniello

Update: July 30, 2018

This letter inaccurately explained the issues with the PLoS One study. Specifically, when I wrote it I misunderstood which analyses had and hadn’t been done. The letter was e-mailed to PloS One long ago, so I can’t correct what has already been sent. But the following three paragraphs should have replaced the middle section of the letter:

“The PACE statistical analysis plan included three separate assumptions for how to measure the costs of what they called “informal care”–the care provided by family and friends—in assessing cost-effectiveness from the societal perspective. The investigators promised to analyze the data based on valuing this informal care at: 1) the cost of a home-care worker; 2) the minimum wage; and 3) zero cost. The latter, of course, is what happens in the real world—families care for loved ones without getting paid anything by anyone.

In PLoS One, the main analysis for assessing informal care presented only the results under a fourth assumption not mentioned in the statistical analysis plan—valuing this care at the mean national wage. The paper did not explain the reasons for this switch. Under this new assumption, the authors reported, CBT and GET proved more cost-effective than the two other PACE treatment arms. The paper did not include the results based on any of the three ways of measuring informal care promised in the statistical analysis plan. But the authors noted that sensitivity analyses using alternative approaches “did not make a substantial difference to the results” and that the findings were “robust” under other assumptions for informal care.

Sensitivity analyses are statistical tests used to determine whether, and to what extent, different assumptions lead to changes in results. The “alternative approaches” mentioned in the study as being included in the sensitivity analyses were the first two approaches cited in the statistical analysis plan—valuing informal care at the cost of a home-care worker and at minimum wage. The paper did not explain why it had dropped any mention of the third promised method of valuing informal care—the zero-cost assumption.”

**********

PLoS One
1160 Battery Street
Koshland Building East, Suite 100
San Francisco, CA 94111

Dear PLoS One Editors:

In 2012, PLoS One published “Adaptive Pacing, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Graded Exercise, and Specialist Medical Care for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis.” This was one in a series of papers highlighting results from the PACE study—the largest trial of treatments for the illness, also known as ME/CFS. Psychologist James Coyne has been seeking data from the study based on PLoS’ open-access policies, an effort we support.

However, as David Tuller from the University of California, Berkeley, documented in an investigation of PACE published last October on Virology Blog, the trial suffered from many indefensible flaws, as patients and advocates have argued for years. Among Dr. Tuller’s findings: the main claim of the PLoS One paper–that cognitive behavior therapy and graded exercise therapy are cost-effective treatments–is wrong, since it is based on an erroneous characterization of the study’s sensitivity analyses. The PACE authors have repeatedly cited this inaccurate claim of cost-effectiveness to justify their continued promotion of these interventions.

Yet the claim is not supported by the evidence, and it is not necessary to obtain the study data to draw this conclusion. The claim is based solely on the decision to value the free care provided by family and friends as if it were compensated at the level of a well-paid health care worker. Here is what Dr. Tuller wrote last October about the PLoS One paper and its findings:

        The PLoS One paper argued that the graded exercise and cognitive behavior therapies were the most cost-effective treatments from a societal perspective. In reaching this conclusion, the investigators valued so-called  “informal” care—unpaid care provided by family and friends–at the replacement cost of a homecare worker. The PACE statistical analysis plan (approved in 2010 but not published until 2013) had included two additional, lower-cost assumptions. The first valued informal care at minimum wage, the second at zero compensation. 

       The PLoS One paper itself did not provide these additional findings, noting only that “sensitivity analyses revealed that the results were robust for alternative assumptions.”

Commenters on the PLoS One website, including [patient] Tom Kindlon, challenged the claim that the findings would be “robust” under the alternative assumptions for informal care. In fact, they pointed out, the lower-cost conditions would reduce or fully eliminate the reported societal cost-benefit advantages of the cognitive behavior and graded exercise therapies. 

        In a posted response, the paper’s lead author, Paul McCrone, conceded that the commenters were right about the impact that the lower-cost, alternative assumptions would have on the findings. However, McCrone did not explain or even mention the apparently erroneous sensitivity analyses he had cited in the paper, which had found the societal cost-benefit advantages for graded exercise therapy and cognitive behavior therapy to be “robust” under all assumptions. Instead, he argued that the two lower-cost approaches were unfair to caregivers because families deserved more economic consideration for their labor.

        “In our opinion, the time spent by families caring for people with CFS/ME has a real value and so to give it a zero cost is controversial,” McCrone wrote. “Likewise, to assume it only has the value of the minimum wage is also very restrictive.”

       In a subsequent comment, Kindlon chided McCrone, pointing out that he had still not explained the paper’s claim that the sensitivity analyses showed the findings were “robust” for all assumptions. Kindlon also noted that the alternative, lower-cost assumptions were included in PACE’s own statistical plan.

      “Remember it was the investigators themselves that chose the alternative assumptions,” wrote Kindlon. “If it’s ‘controversial’ now to value informal care at zero value, it was similarly ‘controversial’ when they decided before the data was looked at, to analyse the data in this way. There is not much point in publishing a statistical plan if inconvenient results are not reported on and/or findings for them misrepresented.”

Given that Dr. McCrone, the lead author, directly contradicted in his comments what the paper itself claimed about sensitivity analyses having confirmed the “robustness” of the findings under other assumptions, it is clearly not necessary to scrutinize the study data to confirm that this central finding cannot be supported. Dr. McCrone has not responded to e-mail requests from Dr. Tuller to explain the discrepancy. And PLoS One, although alerted to this problem last fall by Dr. Tuller, has apparently not yet taken steps to rectify the misinformation about the sensitivity analyses contained in the paper.

PLoS One has an obligation to question Dr. McCrone about the contradiction between the text of the paper and his subsequent comments, so he can either provide a reasonable explanation, produce the actual sensitivity analyses demonstrating “robustness” under all three assumptions outlined in the statistical analysis plan, or correct the paper’s core finding that CBT and GET are “cost-effective” no matter how informal care is valued.  Should he fail to do so, PLoS One has an obligation itself to correct the paper, independent of the disposition of the issue of access to trial data.

We appreciate your quick response to these concerns.

Sincerely,

Ronald W. Davis, PhD
Professor of Biochemistry and Genetics
Stanford University

Rebecca Goldin, Ph.D.
Professor of Mathematical Sciences
George Mason University

Bruce Levin, PhD
Professor of Biostatistics
Columbia University

Vincent R. Racaniello, PhD
Professor of Microbiology and Immunology
Columbia University

Arthur L. Reingold, MD
Professor of Epidemiology
University of California, Berkeley

Filed Under: Commentary, Information Tagged With: chronic fatigue syndrome, cognitive behavior therapy, data request, graded exercise therapy, mecfs, PACE

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