Depression in paediatric chronic fatigue syndrome.
Bould, Helen, Collin, Simon M, Lewis, Glyn et al. · Archives of disease in childhood · 2013 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study looked at how many young people with ME/CFS also experience depression. Researchers surveyed 542 children aged 12-18 and found that about 29% had depression—much higher than in the general population. Depression was more common in those with worse physical symptoms, higher disability, more pain, and poorer school attendance.
Why It Matters
Depression is a common and undertreated comorbidity in pediatric ME/CFS that significantly impacts quality of life and recovery. This study establishes the need for systematic depression screening as standard care in specialist ME/CFS services for young people. Understanding the association between disease severity and depression can help clinicians identify high-risk patients and tailor interventions.
Observed Findings
29% (156/542) of children with ME/CFS screened positive for depression—substantially higher than general population rates
Female sex was associated with higher odds of depression in univariable analysis
Physical disability (measured by SF-36 physical function subscale) was the strongest factor associated with depression in multivariable analysis
Poorer school attendance was associated with depression
Age of onset and duration of illness were not significantly associated with depression
Inferred Conclusions
Depression is a highly prevalent comorbidity in pediatric ME/CFS that warrants systematic screening and treatment
Depression is associated with markers of greater disease severity and functional impairment
Depression should be recognized as an important clinical consideration in this population requiring integrated assessment and management
Remaining Questions
Does depression develop as a consequence of ME/CFS severity, or do pre-existing mood vulnerabilities influence ME/CFS presentation?
What is the temporal relationship between depression onset and ME/CFS symptom severity?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study cannot establish whether depression causes worsening ME/CFS symptoms, whether ME/CFS symptoms cause depression, or whether both are consequences of underlying disease mechanisms. Cross-sectional data cannot determine causality or temporal relationships. The study also does not prove that treating depression will improve ME/CFS outcomes.
Tags
Symptom:PainFatigue
Phenotype:Pediatric
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionNo Controls