E0 ConsensusHigher confidencePEM ✓Meta-AnalysisPeer-reviewedReviewed
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Meta-analysis investigating post-exertional malaise between patients and controls.

Brown, Abigail, Jason, Leonard A · Journal of health psychology · 2020 · DOI

Quick Summary

This study looked at research from multiple studies to understand how common post-exertional malaise (PEM) is in people with ME/CFS. Post-exertional malaise is when symptoms get worse after physical or mental activity. The researchers found that people with ME/CFS are about 10 times more likely to experience post-exertional malaise than people without the condition, suggesting it is a key feature of ME/CFS.

Why It Matters

This meta-analysis provides robust evidence that post-exertional malaise is a core distinguishing feature of ME/CFS, which could improve diagnostic accuracy and clinical recognition. Understanding that PEM is significantly more common in ME/CFS than in healthy populations validates the patient experience and emphasizes the importance of including this symptom in case definitions used by healthcare providers worldwide.

Observed Findings

  • Post-exertional malaise was found to be 10.4 times more likely in ME/CFS patients compared to controls.
  • Patient recruitment strategy significantly moderated the effect size of the association between PEM and ME/CFS diagnosis.
  • Control selection strategy significantly moderated the effect size of the association between PEM and ME/CFS diagnosis.

Inferred Conclusions

  • Post-exertional malaise should be considered a cardinal symptom of ME/CFS based on its strong association with the condition.
  • Methodological factors in study design (recruitment and control selection) influence the magnitude of observed associations with PEM.
  • The consistency of PEM as a distinguishing feature across multiple studies supports its inclusion in ME/CFS case definitions.

Remaining Questions

  • What biological or physiological mechanisms underlie post-exertional malaise in ME/CFS?
  • How do variations in how PEM is measured or defined affect the strength of its association with ME/CFS?
  • Is post-exertional malaise specific to ME/CFS, or does it occur with similar frequency in other conditions, and if so, how can it be used diagnostically?
  • What is the optimal threshold or severity of post-exertional malaise needed to include it in diagnostic criteria?

What This Study Does Not Prove

This study does not establish the biological mechanisms causing post-exertional malaise or why it occurs in ME/CFS. It also does not prove that PEM is unique to ME/CFS, only that it is much more common in this population than in controls. Additionally, as a meta-analysis relying on previously published studies, the quality of evidence depends on the individual studies included.

Topics

Tags

Method Flag:PEM_DEFINEDStrong Phenotyping
Symptom:Post-Exertional Malaise

Metadata

DOI
10.1177/1359105318784161
PMID
29974812
Review status
Editor reviewed
Evidence level
Established evidence from major reviews, guidelines, or evidence maps
Last updated
7 April 2026