Chronic fatigue syndrome in private practice psychiatry: family history of physical and mental health.
Endicott, N A · Journal of psychosomatic research · 1999 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study looked at 45 psychiatric patients with ME/CFS and compared their family medical histories to two similar groups of psychiatric patients without ME/CFS. Researchers found that ME/CFS patients' parents tended to die younger and had more cancer, autoimmune disorders, and ME/CFS-like illnesses compared to the families of control patients. There were no significant differences in mental health conditions between the families.
Why It Matters
This research provides evidence that ME/CFS may cluster within families alongside other physical health conditions like autoimmune diseases and cancer, suggesting possible shared biological mechanisms or genetic predisposition. Understanding familial patterns could help identify at-risk individuals and guide future research into the biological underpinnings of ME/CFS.
Observed Findings
CFS patients' mothers died at younger ages than C-II mothers
Both parents died before age 65 more frequently in CFS families than C-I families
CFS family members had increased prevalence of cancer compared to control families
CFS family members had increased prevalence of autoimmune disorders compared to control families
CFS family members had increased prevalence of CFS-like conditions compared to control families
No significant differences in family psychiatric history between CFS and control groups
Inferred Conclusions
ME/CFS may demonstrate familial clustering with physical health disorders, particularly cancer and autoimmune diseases
Early parental mortality is more common in CFS family histories, suggesting potential genetic predisposition to serious health conditions
The association of ME/CFS with familial physical illness patterns suggests biological rather than purely psychiatric mechanisms may underlie the condition
Remaining Questions
Are the familial patterns of physical illness genetic, environmental, or multifactorial in origin?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not establish whether the familial clustering is genetic, environmental, or both—it only documents reported family history. The study cannot prove causation or determine whether parents' early death and health conditions directly caused or contributed to ME/CFS development in offspring. Additionally, findings may not generalize beyond psychiatric populations or reflect actual medical diagnoses versus patient reports.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Method Flag:Weak Case DefinitionSmall SampleExploratory Only