Prevalence of chronic fatigue syndrome in Italian patients with persistent fatigue.
Conti, F, Priori, R, De Petrillo, G et al. · Annali italiani di medicina interna : organo ufficiale della Societa italiana di medicina interna · 1994
Quick Summary
Researchers in Rome studied 63 patients with persistent fatigue lasting at least 6 months to see how many actually had ME/CFS. They found that only 6 patients (about 10%) met the official diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS, while 37 patients (59%) had other medical conditions explaining their fatigue, such as infections or other illnesses. This suggests that ME/CFS is relatively uncommon as a cause of severe fatigue compared to other treatable conditions.
Why It Matters
This study highlights the diagnostic challenge of ME/CFS by demonstrating that the majority of patients presenting with persistent fatigue have alternative explanable causes. For patients, it underscores the importance of thorough medical evaluation before or alongside ME/CFS diagnosis. For researchers, it provides epidemiological context for CFS prevalence in a European population and emphasizes the critical need for improved diagnostic criteria to distinguish ME/CFS from other fatigue-producing conditions.
Observed Findings
Only 6 of 63 patients (9.5%) met CDC criteria for CFS diagnosis
37 of 63 patients (59%) had alternative diagnoses identified through clinical and laboratory evaluation
18 of 63 patients (29%) could not be assigned a definitive diagnosis despite comprehensive assessment
2 cases of CFS followed a clear infectious trigger (infectious mononucleosis)
Substantial clinical and diagnostic overlap exists between CFS and other fatigue-associated conditions
Inferred Conclusions
ME/CFS is an infrequent diagnosis in a selected population of Italian patients with severe persistent fatigue
Multiple treatable medical conditions commonly present with clinical features resembling ME/CFS, necessitating thorough differential diagnosis
Systematic evaluation including clinical examination and laboratory testing is essential before attributing persistent fatigue to ME/CFS
A significant proportion of severely fatigued patients may have unidentified or undiagnosable conditions even after comprehensive assessment
Remaining Questions
What was the nature of the 18 undiagnosed cases, and do they represent true ME/CFS or other as-yet-unidentified conditions?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that ME/CFS is rare globally—findings are specific to an Italian fatigue clinic population and may not reflect prevalence in the general population or in specialized ME/CFS centers. The cross-sectional design cannot establish causation or demonstrate how many people in the community actually have undiagnosed ME/CFS. The use of CDC criteria (which are now considered to have limitations) rather than modern case definitions affects the applicability of these findings to current diagnostic standards.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Phenotype:Infection-Triggered
Method Flag:Weak Case DefinitionNo ControlsSmall SampleMixed Cohort
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →