Cost‑efectiveness Of Interventions For Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: A Systematic Review Of Economic Evaluations

May 11, 2022

Abstract
Introduction Chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) has profound quality of life and economic consequences for individuals, their families, formal services, and wider society. Little is known about which therapeutic interventions are more cost-effective.
Objective A systematic review was carried out to identify and critically appraise the evidence on the cost-effectiveness of CFS/ME interventions.
Methods The review protocol was prespecified (PROSPERO: CRD42018118731). Searches were carried out across two databases—MEDLINE (1946–2020) and EMBASE (1974–2020). Additional studies were identified by searching reference lists. Only peer-reviewed journal articles of full economic evaluations examining CFS/ME interventions were included. Trial and/or model-based economic evaluations were eligible. Data extraction and screening were carried out independently by two reviewers. The methodological quality of the economic evaluation and trial was assessed using the Consensus Health Economic Criteria checklist (CHEC-list) and Risk of Bias-2 (RoB-2) tool, respectively. A narrative synthesis was used to summarise the economic evidence for interventions for adults and children in primary and secondary care settings.
Results Ten economic evaluations, all based on data derived from randomized controlled trials, met our eligibility criteria. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) was evaluated across five studies, making it the most commonly evaluated intervention. There was evidence from three trials to support CBT as a cost-effective treatment option for adults; however, findings on CBT was not uniform, suggesting that cost-effectiveness may be context-specific. A wide array of other interventions were evaluated in adults, including limited evidence from two trials supporting the cost effectiveness of graded exercise therapy (GET). Just one study assessed intervention options for children. Our review highlighted the importance of informal care costs and productivity losses in the evaluation of CFS/ME interventions.

Conclusions We identified a limited patchwork of evidence on the cost-effectiveness of interventions for CFS/ME. Evidence supports CBT as a cost-effective treatment option for adults; however, cost-effectiveness may depend on the duration and frequency of sessions. Limited evidence supports the cost-effectiveness of getting. Key weaknesses in the literature included small sample sizes and a short duration of follow-up. Further research is needed on pharmacological interventions and therapies for children.


1 Introduction 

1.1 Background 

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), or myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), is medically unexplained, severe, and persistent fatigue that results in impairment and disability. There is no diagnostic test for CFS/ME and many different case definitions are used in research and clinical practice. Arecent systematic review estimated a global prevalence of  0.89% (95% confdence interval [CI] 0.60–1.33) for CFS/ ME using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s  (CDC) 1994 definition, the most commonly used case definition. The syndrome causes a profound loss in quality of life  and often results in financial implications to the individual  with CFS/ME, their family, formal healthcare services and  wider society. Compared with patients with chronic fatigue,  patients who meet the diagnostic criteria for CFS/ME (e.g.  chronic fatigue and symptoms such as cognitive difculties and post-exertional malaise) use 22% more healthcare services, experience twice as much lost income, and informal  caregivers (i.e. family and friends) will likely provide four  times more support. Across Europe (EU-28), CFS/ME  has been estimated to cost around €40 billion per year.  Productivity loss due to adults with CFS/ME discontinuing employment prior to accessing CFS/ME specialist assessment is estimated to cost the UK economy over £100 million per year and is potentially substantially higher as many  adults with CFS/ME do not access specialist support.  From the family perspective, many parents of children with  CFS/ME experience a loss in monthly income and increase  in monthly expenditure, for example travel/transport, diet,  leisure, educational items, and complementary/other therapies. Novel interventions may be benefcial in part, either by  reducing fatigue severity (e.g. measured using the Checklist Individual Strength (CIS) fatigue subscale [8]), or by  improving health-related quality of life (e.g. expressed in  terms of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) [9]), or by capability well-being. A number of potential treatment strategies have been proposed (e.g. pharmaceutical,  supplements, management strategies, and lifestyle changes),  but supportive evidence is often limited, of poor quality,  or inconclusive [11]. However, two Cochrane reviews have  concluded that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is effective in reducing fatigue, and that exercise therapy probably has a positive effect on fatigue [13]. In 2007,  the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence  (NICE) issued guidance and recommended CBT and graded  exercise therapy (GET), while also recommending further  research on diferent methods of delivering care. More  recently, several randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of various interventions have incorporated economic evaluations  and report clinical- and cost-efectiveness in both adults and  young people. The aim of this review was to assess the evidence on the  cost-efectiveness of interventions for CFS/ME. Furthermore, this review also aims to critically appraise the quality  of economic evidence to provide a guide for decision-makers to allocate resources for CFS/ME. 

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1.2 Research Question 


What evidence is there that interventions for CFS/ME are  cost-efective, and is this evidence of sufcient quality to  inform policy? 


2 Methods 2.1 Protocol and Eligibility Criteria 

The methods for this systematic review were based on the  Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and  Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) checklist [15] (ESM  5) and  were prespecifed in a registered protocol (PROSPERO:  CRD42018118731). Eligible studies were full economic  evaluations comparing both costs and effects of two or  more interventions. Eligible analysis methods included costefectiveness analyses (CEA), cost-utility analyses (CUA),  cost-beneft analyses (CBA), and cost-consequence analyses  (CCA). Comparative studies and/or model-based economic  evaluations assessing any intervention in any CFS/ME population subgroup were eligible. The review was restricted to  peer-reviewed studies as this was expected to yield higher-quality studies.

2.2 Search Strategy and Study Selection

Searches (see Table 1 in electronic supplementary material  [ESM] 1) were conducted in MEDLINE (via OVID from  1946 to April 2020) and EMBASE (via OVID from 1974 to  week 17 2020) and were restricted to the English language.  We ran a focused search strategy based on the key terms  ‘cost-efectiveness’ and ‘CFS’. In addition, the reference lists  of eligible studies and systematic reviews related to CFS/ME  were hand searched. We compared the results of our focused search (Table 1 in ESM 2) with a search that used broaderterms (Table 2 in ESM 1) in the NHS Economic Evaluation  Database (NHS EED). The NHS EED provides access to economic evaluations published between 1968 and December 2014, however, our broader search in the NHS EED did not identify any additional studies (Table 2 in ESM 2) and therefore indicated that our focused search in MEDLINE and  EMBASE, along with hand searching of reference lists, were likely to have identified all eligible studies. Two reviewers (MC, EM) independently screened the title and abstract  of potentially eligible studies against the eligibility criteria, followed by full-text screening if required. Disagreement between reviewers was resolved by consulting a third reviewer (WH). 


2.3 Data Collection Process and Data Items

Data on study design and findings were extracted into a  spreadsheet by one reviewer (EM) and checked by a second reviewer (MC). Disagreements were resolved by discussion with a third reviewer (WH). Extracted information included (1) record details (author, title, publication date,  journal); (2) study characteristics (trial design, country,  sample size, analytical technique, population, intervention and comparator names and descriptions, primary clinical and economic outcome measure, time horizon, study perspective, cost categories, currency, price year); (3) study results (mean costs, mean effects, incremental costs, incremental effects, a summary measure of efficiency (e.g. incremental cost-effectiveness ratio [ICER], net monetary beneft  [NMB]). Information describing the intervention and comparator groups (including type, frequency and duration) and  CFS/ME case defnition were added to the data extraction  sheet after the review had started. 


2.4 Assessment of Methodological Quality and Risk of Bias in the Individual Studies

The methodological quality of the economic evaluation was assessed using the Consensus Health Economic Criteria checklist (CHEC-list) [16]. Two reviewers (MC, EM)  independently applied the checklist to the included studies.  In addition, as all studies identifed through the searches  were economic evaluations based on single RCTs, we used  the Cochrane Risk of Bias-2 (RoB-2) tool [17] for assessing the potential bias in the underlying trials. The RoB-2  tool assesses risk of bias across fve domains: randomisation process, deviations from intended interventions, missing  outcome data, measurement of the outcome and selection of  reported result. All RoB-2 assessments were judged by one  reviewer (MC) and a 10% sample was checked by a second  reviewer (EM) [ESM 4]. 


2.5 Summary Measures and Methods of Analysis 

A structured narrative synthesis of the included studies was  more appropriate than a meta-analysis, given the expected  variation in patient groups, interventions and methods of  economic analysis between studies. We summarised the  primary measure of efciency (e.g. ICER, NMB). Evidence  tables were produced to present key study results. Separate  evidence tables were presented for interventions in adults  and children, as well as the most common intervention type  (CBT). For simplicity, where studies had used both a wide  (e.g. societal) and narrow (e.g. health service) study perspective, we presented only the wider perspective fndings.  Similarly, where studies conducted both CEA and CUA, we  presented only the CUA fndings.


3 Results 

3.1 Study Selection 

The database and supplementary searches yielded 34 articles after removing duplicates (Fig. 1). After initial screening  of titles and abstracts, 15 potentially relevant studies were  reviewed in full; 10 studies [1827] met all eligibility criteria and were included in our analysis. The major reasons for  studies not meeting the eligibility criteria were as follows:  11 were not full economic evaluations, three were not specific to chronic fatigue, and eight were protocols of studies  including economic evaluations. In 9 of the 10 economic evaluations included in our review, the trial methods were  detailed in a separate clinical effectiveness paper.  In these cases, the RoB-2 assessment was based on both publications.


3.2 Characteristics of Studies All economic evaluations were conducted alongside RCTs;  in nine studies, the primary RCT results were reported separately. Most studies (Table 1) were conducted in the  UK (70%, n = 7), one was conducted in  the US  and two were conducted in The Netherlands . The sample sizes of the studies ranged from 100  to 640 participants, with a median of 133. Five studies randomised patients to more than two interventions, therefore sample size per arm was often relatively small.  Only one study focused on children. In the remaining studies, the mean participant age was between 37 and 49  years. There was wide variation in the CFS/ME case definition used to assess participant eligibility, and, in most trials recruiting from primary care, not all participants met the  established CFS/ME case definitions. The baseline Chalder  Fatigue Questionnaire (CFQ) score (reported in six studies) 

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ranged from 23 to 28 points. Baseline EuroQol  5-Dimension (EQ5D) scores (reported in six studies) typically lay within the range of 0.42 to 0.56; however,  two studies were outliers, one reporting substantially lower scores in children and the other reporting substantially higher scores. Five of the studies reported on interventions used in  patients recruited in primary care settings. The follow-up period varied from 6 to 17 months, with  a median of 12 months. Only two studies had a time horizon  > 12 months. Six studies presented an analysis from the societal perspective. The most common intervention evaluated was CBT; however, the description of CBT was often brief and there was between-study variation in the personnel involved and the number and duration of sessions. Three trials evaluated GET, two evaluated counselling sessions, and two evaluated support groups. A number of interventions including fatigue self-management, pragmatic rehabilitation, adaptive pacing therapy, supportive listening, and the lightning process  were evaluated in a single trial. Many studies compared a  specified intervention to some form of ‘usual care, which was often not well-described and variously labelled (e.g.  treatment as usual, standard medical care). The studies were similar in terms of their design, the cost elements included, and choice of outcome measures. Six studies used the QALY as the measure of health benefit. Two studies used the CIS fatigue subscale and three studies used the CFQ as the measure of health benefit


3.3 Consensus Health Economic Criteria Checklist  (CHEC‑List) Assessment

Overall, the quality of the economic evaluations was good  (ESM 3); all studies appropriately addressed the majority of items on the CHEC-list. Nonetheless, for seven items 

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(items 1, 2, 13, 15, 17, 18, 19), methodological quality was affected due to a minority of studies reporting insufficient detail. More specifically, two studies did not report a summary cost-effectiveness result (e.g. ICER, NMB), as  specified in item 13. 


3.4 Risk‑of‑Bias Assessment 3.4.1 Randomisation Process

Eight of the 10 studies were judged to have a low risk of bias from the randomization process. In one study, two  interventions (CBT and GET) were randomly allocated, but  were also compared with a non-randomly allocated usual  care group [21]. In another study, although allocation to the  groups was random, the authors did not confrm whether the  allocation sequence was concealed until participants were  enrolled and assigned to the groups [22]. 

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3.4.2 Deviations from Intended Interventions 

Just one study stated they were able to blind approximately  two thirds (n = 84/127) of participants to the intervention  group they had been assigned [23]. The authors reported  blinding was not possible for patients randomised to the  third group (standard medical care). No other study stated  that participants were blinded to the intervention group  they were allocated to. Similarly, no studies reported that  the staf delivering the intervention had been blinded to the  intervention group. Despite this observation, three studies  were judged to be low risk of bias as they measured protocol  deviations and found a good level of adherence to the therapy protocol [20, 24, 27]. For the remaining seven studies,  there was not enough information to judge whether the trial  could have led to deviations from the intended intervention. 

3.4.3 Missing Outcome Data

With the exception of the study by O’Dowd et al. [23], all  studies were judged to be low risk of bias for missing outcome data. Although three studies reported having a sizeable  proportion of missing outcome data, the risk of bias was  judged to be low as authors partially checked to see if missingness was related to the characteristics of the completers  and non-completers [19, 26] or the intervention group [25].  One study reported a high prevalence of missing data, particularly self-reported medication use, direct patient costs  and productivity losses [23]. As a consequence, the study  authors stated that the economic analysis was constructed  on poor-quality data. 

3.4.4 Measurement of the Outcome 

All studies used participant-reported outcome measures,  which raised some concerns around whether the participants’ assessment of the outcome may have been infuenced  by their knowledge of the intervention status.

 3.4.5 Selection of the Reported Result 

Just under half of the studies referred to a prespecifed  analysis plan and confrmed that the plan had been fnalised  before the outcome data had been analysed [19, 20, 24, 27].  For the remaining six studies, there was insufcient detail  to assess the analysis intentions. 


3.5 Results of Individual Studies and Synthesis  of Results 

3.5.1 Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) in Adults 

Table 2 presents the results for studies evaluating CBT in  adults. The largest trial [20] concluded that CBT was most  likely to be cost-efective (likelihood = 59.5%) compared  with GET (34.8%), specialist medical care (5.5%) and adaptive pacing (0.2%) at a £30,000 cost per QALY threshold.  Two further CUAs found evidence that CBT was more costefective than multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment [27]  and guided support groups [26]; however, the evidence did  not uniformly support CBT; one CEA reported that CBT was  dominated by counselling when the outcome was reported  as cost per unit of improved fatigue score [18]. 

3.5.2 Other Interventions in Adults 

Table 3 presents the results for studies evaluating other  interventions in adults.  One CEA concluded that GET  was more efective and cheaper than counselling and was  more cost-efective than usual care plus self-help booklet  if society is willing to pay more than £987 for a clinically  signifcant improvement in the Chalder fatigue score [25].  A CUA reported that home-based fatigue self-management  was cheaper and more efective than treatment as usual in  primary care patients with severe chronic fatigue [22]. However, in the third CUA, treatment as usual was cheaper and  more efective than both pragmatic rehabilitation and supportive listening in primary care patients [24]. 

3.5.3 Interventions for Young People

Table 4 presents the only economic evaluation of treatment in children. This study, a CUA [19] reported evidence that  the lightning process (an intervention that trains individuals to understand how the brain and body interact) with

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APT adaptive pacing therapy, CBT cognitive behavioural therapy, CI confdence interval, COUN counselling, EAS education and support group, GET graded exercise therapy, MRT multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment, N no, NA not applicable, NC natural course, NR not reported, QALYs quality-adjusted life-years, SD standard deviation, SG guided support groups, SMC standard medical care, SpMC specialist medical care, Y yes, CEAC cost-efectiveness acceptability curve, CEP cost-efectiveness plane aChange in efect/costs from baseline to follow-up bNo CIs reported cLikelihood of being the most cost-efective option from a societal perspective dThis study reports incremental costs adjusted for baseline imbalances with 90% CIs eHealthcare perspective only


4 Discussion
4.1 Principal Findings
We identifed a limited patchwork of evidence on the cost-effectiveness of interventions for CFS/ME. CBT was the 

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BUC usual care plus self-help booklet,  COUN counselling, CFS chronic fatigue syndrome, CI confdence interval, FSM fatigue self-management, GET graded exercise therapy, N no, NA not applicable, NR not reported, PR pragmatic rehabilitation, QALYs quality-adjusted life years, SD standard deviation, SL supportive listening, TAU treatment as usual, Y yes, CEAC cost-effectiveness acceptability curve, CEP cost-effectiveness plane aChange in efect/costs from baseline to follow-up bHealthcare perspective only

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most commonly evaluated intervention. There was evidence from three trials to support CBT as a cost-effective treatment option for adults; however, the findings for CBT were not uniform, suggesting that (cost-) effectiveness may relate to, for example, the duration and frequency of sessions. There was some evidence from two trials supporting GET as a potentially cost-effective treatment option in adults. One small trial demonstrated the potential for home-based fatigue self-management to be more cost-effective than usual primary care among adults. A wide array of other interventions, including multidisciplinary rehabilitation, support groups, supportive listening, counseling, and adaptive pacing, have been evaluated but have not been demonstrated to be cost-effective. In adolescents, one small, single-center trial found that the lightning process was probably a cost-efective addition to specialist medical care. Key weaknesses in the literature included small sample sizes and a short duration of follow-up in most trials. There are large gaps in the literature, including pharmacological interventions for symptom control and on all therapies in children. Although most economic evaluations were methodologically robust, heterogeneity in the inclusion of productivity losses, measurement of QALYs and reporting of incremental cost-effectiveness  hampered evidence synthesis across studies.

4.2 Strengths and Weaknesses of the Study

We believe this is the first systematic review of the economic consequences of interventions to treat CFS/ME. We used two large bibliographic databases, predefined published eligibility criteria, and two researchers to screen and extract information from eligible studies to ensure consistent decisions that were independent of the characteristics and findings of the primary studies themselves. We used established tools to identify potential sources of bias in the  RCT evidence and the methodological quality of the economic evaluations. Our search strategy was brief and was limited to peer-reviewed publications in the English language. It is possible that other relevant studies have been  missed. We mitigated this risk by hand searching the reference lists of eligible studies and systematic reviews relevant  to CFS/ME and consider it unlikely that any high-quality  economic evaluations have been overlooked. However, it  is known that trials with planned economic evaluations are  more likely to report efectiveness data than the economic  results and therefore our findings might be afected by  publication bias. Most studies reported fndings from more  than one perspective (e.g. societal or health system) or used  more than one outcome measure in the economic evaluation  (e.g. fatigue score or QALY). Where this was the case, we  selected the broadest perspective and reported the outcome  measure (i.e. the QALY) that allowed greatest comparability between trials. However, this approach sometimes simplied nuanced study findings; for example, Vos-Vromans  et al. reported discordant findings dependent on whether  the QALY or the fatigue score was used in the economic  evaluation. There were also underlying weaknesses in the primary studies. Due to the nature of the interventions and  the objective to evaluate them pragmatically, participants and therapists could not be blind to the therapy randomly  assigned. As key costs and outcomes were self-reported,  there is a risk of both performance and detection bias [39]. 


4.3 Policy Implications

By design, the scope of our review is broad and included all  therapeutic interventions delivered in primary and specialist care settings to patients with chronic fatigue of variously defned severity, duration and diagnostic criteria. This was  feasible due to the small volume of literature in this area, but  it also cautions against unthinking ‘pooling’ of data across  studies, or assuming that fndings from one trial can be simply generalized to other settings. For example, in one trial  [23], CBT was delivered in eight group sessions, and, in the  remainder, the number of planned individual CBT sessions  varied from six 45-min sessions to sixteen 60-min sessions. It is notable that the three studies that found  CBT to be cost-effective all had a higher number  of individual CBT sessions. In these three studies, the cost  of CBT itself was in the approximate range of £1000–£2000  per patient, representing a substantial investment. This  investment may well represent very good value for money if the initial improvements in fatigue and health-related quality of life are sustained in the long-term, particularly if this  is accompanied by lower health service use, informal care needs and higher return to work. Long-term follow-up from  the PACE trial demonstrates that the advantage of CBT  and GET over the comparator groups on fatigue and physical function narrowed over time, highlighting the need for  longer-term economic analyses. Access to specialist CFS/ME care is already limited in  many settings and the type of care provided is highly variable. In order to increase access, novel approaches are  needed to provide stepped access to low- or high-intensity  CBT and GET provided by appropriately trained therapists in primary care settings and/or using remotely delivered (e.g. internet-based) therapy methods . These new  services are being established, partly in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, but they will  require careful evaluation to determine whether efcacy is  maintained and whether efciency increased. We  note that several economic evaluations of such services in adults and children are currently underway.  Good economic evidence to support treatment options  in children is particularly important as current therapy is  largely based on the assumption that fndings from adults  can be generalised to children.


4.4 Methodological Implications

Our review highlighted the importance of informal care and productivity losses in the evaluation of CFS/ME interventions. These costs frequently dominated the cost estimates.  Despite this, not every study quantifed productivity or informal care and there was little consistency in how they were measured. There was further methodological uncertainty on the most appropriate way to value productivity losses,  with some studies using both the human capital and friction-based methods. Friction-based methods tend to result  in smaller productivity loss estimates, but it is unclear how  pivotal this would be as most studies did not observe large between-arm differences in productivity. The recent development of new questionnaires to measure informal care costs and productivity losses could increase standardization within economic evaluations and aid policymakers wishing to synthesize evidence across studies.

The primary fatigue outcome measure used was strongly correlated with the country of origin, making international comparisons problematic. UK studies used the CFQ, studies  from The Netherlands used the CIS fatigue subscale, and the  US study used the Fatigue Severity Scale. Those studies that  did not estimate QALYs typically struggled to translate their  results into clear recommendations for policy makers. The  EQ5D baseline scores reported in the studies reviewed were  substantially lower than working aged population norms in high-income countries, which typically exceed 0.80.  This demonstrates the huge impact of CFS/ME on health-related quality of life and great potential for successful therapies to be cost-efective. In two studies identifed by our review, signifcant treatment efects on fatigue scores were refected in  diferences in EQ5D-derived utility scores and QALYs. This  suggests that the QALY metric can be sensitive in detecting  clinically important improvements in CFS/ME. However,  in a third study, Vos-Vromans et al. [27] report that significant improvements on the CIS fatigue score did not translate  into any diference in QALYs. The more recent development of the EQ5D-5L (5 levels) should in theory increase responsiveness to small but important changes in health-related quality of life. However, some doubts remain about  the validity of the EQ5D in CFS/ME [54] and, more generally, in all health conditions that fuctuate frequently over  time. We did not identify any economic evaluations that used a  decision analysis model to compare treatments or extrapolate costs and outcomes over a longer time horizon. This possibly refects the difculty of meta-analyzing the fndings of the relatively small trials that have compared a wide range of  complex interventions in disparate patient populations. It is also due to the lack of longitudinal data on the costs and outcomes of CFS/ME that could be used to estimate trajectories in the long term. 


4.5 Future Research 

Further research is needed to establish the cost-effectiveness of therapies for CFS/ME, including larger studies to assess  whether the potential cost-effectiveness of fatigue self-management in adults and the lightning process in children can be replicated. Evidence-based services that provide less  intensive or remotely delivered therapy will also be needed to increase access to therapy in the future. Better epidemiological data on cost and outcome trajectories in CFS/ME are  essential for developing models to predict the long-term cost effectiveness of interventions. 



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