E2 ModerateModerate confidencePEM unclearCross-SectionalPeer-reviewedMachine draft
Can the chronic fatigue syndrome be defined by distinct clinical features?
Hickie, I, Lloyd, A, Hadzi-Pavlovic, D et al. · Psychological medicine · 1995 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study examined whether all people diagnosed with ME/CFS have the same illness or whether they actually have different types. Researchers analyzed symptoms from 565 patients and found that ME/CFS is not one uniform condition—instead, they identified two distinct patient groups with different symptom patterns, illness duration, and recovery rates.
Why It Matters
This study challenges the assumption that ME/CFS is a single disease entity and demonstrates that patients diagnosed with CFS may have different underlying biological and psychological mechanisms. Understanding these subgroups is crucial for developing targeted treatments and improving research design by ensuring participants are more homogeneous within studies.
Observed Findings
- Two statistically derived patient classes emerged: 27% with somatoform-like features and 73% with fatigue and neuropsychological symptoms
- The larger class (73%) remained clinically heterogeneous despite more limited symptom combinations and moderate disability
- Significant differences between subgroups in illness duration, spontaneous recovery rates, psychological morbidity severity, and CD8 T cell subset counts
- Symptom distribution among patients was non-unimodal, indicating differences reflected more than simple severity variation
- Utilization of medical services differed between the two proposed subgroups
Inferred Conclusions
- ME/CFS patients diagnosed under current consensus criteria do not constitute a clinically homogeneous class
- Cliical heterogeneity suggests aetiological heterogeneity, implying different underlying causes may drive symptoms in different patient subgroups
- Current diagnostic criteria fail to reduce heterogeneity sufficiently for research purposes and may conflate distinct conditions
- Immunological markers (CD8 T cell counts) may differentiate clinically distinct subgroups
Remaining Questions
- What biological or environmental factors drive the distinction between the two identified subgroups?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that the two subgroups identified are biologically distinct entities or that they require fundamentally different treatment approaches. As a cross-sectional analysis, it cannot establish causation or determine whether subgroup membership changes over time, and the statistical clustering approach is exploratory rather than confirmatory of true disease categories.
Tags
Symptom:Cognitive DysfunctionFatigue
Biomarker:Blood Biomarker
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionNo ControlsExploratory Only
Metadata
- DOI
- 10.1017/s0033291700037417
- PMID
- 8588011
- Review status
- Machine draft
- Evidence level
- Single-study or moderate support from human research
- Last updated
- 8 April 2026
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 →
Spotted an error in this entry? Report it →