Longitudinal change in chronic fatigue syndrome: what home-based assessments reveal.
Friedberg, Fred, Sohl, Stephanie J · Journal of behavioral medicine · 2009 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study followed 75 people with ME/CFS for 2 years and compared different ways of measuring how they were doing. Researchers used both traditional questionnaires and home-based measurements like activity trackers and daily fatigue diaries. They found that people who reported feeling better had lower fatigue levels and stood up more often at home, but these improvements didn't always show up on activity trackers or psychological tests.
Why It Matters
This research highlights that standard questionnaires may not capture all meaningful improvements in ME/CFS, and that home-based measurements like activity diaries can reveal real changes in daily functioning that patients notice. Understanding which outcome measures best reflect actual symptom change is essential for designing better treatment studies and recognizing patient progress.
Observed Findings
Self-reported global improvement was significantly associated with lower momentary fatigue and higher frequency of standing at home
Actigraphy change was significantly correlated with changes in self-reported physical function
Less than 20% of participants scored in the healthy adult range for fatigue impact and physical function at 2-year follow-up
Self-reported global improvement was NOT significantly associated with objective actigraphy measures or changes in psychological variables
Home-based ecological measures revealed symptom changes not captured by standard self-report questionnaires alone
Inferred Conclusions
Home-based ecological assessments provide clinically meaningful information about symptom change that complements standard self-report measures
Objective activity tracking (actigraphy) and subjective fatigue perception may measure different aspects of ME/CFS and should be used together for comprehensive outcome assessment
Most patients in this sample showed limited improvement to normal functioning over 2 years despite some subjective reports of change
Interpretation of self-report improvement in CFS requires triangulation with multiple home-based measurement approaches
Remaining Questions
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that improved activity levels *cause* fatigue reduction, only that they are associated. The findings are limited to a relatively high-functioning subset of ME/CFS patients and may not apply to more severely affected individuals. Correlation between actigraphy and self-reported function does not establish whether activity changes are therapeutic or represent post-activity crashes.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionNo Controls
How do findings generalize to people with more severe ME/CFS who are less able to participate in longitudinal studies?
What specific changes in daily activity patterns (measured ecologically) are most predictive of sustainable symptom improvement?
Why do some patients report global improvement when objective measures and standardized questionnaires show minimal change, and does this discordance predict long-term outcomes?
Could home-based ecological measures serve as more sensitive early indicators of treatment response compared to traditional outcome measures?