What treatments work for anxiety and depression in children and adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome? An updated systematic review

Author:

Clery PhilippaORCID,Royston Alexander,Driver Katie,Bailey Jasmine,Crawley Esther,Loades Maria

Abstract

ObjectivesChildren with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) experience a higher prevalence of depression and anxiety compared with age-matched controls. Our previous systematic reviews in 2015/16 found little evidence for effective treatment for children with CFS/ME with comorbid depression and/or anxiety. This review updates these findings.DesignA systematic review. We searched Cochrane library, Medline, Embase and PsycINFO databases from 2015 to 2020. We combined the updated results with our previous reviews in a narrative synthesis.ParticipantsInclusion criteria: <18 years old; diagnosed with CFS/ME (using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence or Oxford criteria); validated measures of depression and/or anxiety.InterventionsObservational studies or randomised controlled trials.ComparisonAny or none.OutcomesStudies with outcome measures of anxiety, depression or fatigue.ResultsThe updated review identified two studies. This brings the total number of paediatric CFS/ME studies with a measure of anxiety and/or depression since 1991 to 16. None of the studies specifically targeted depression, nor anxiety. One new study showed the Lightning Process (in addition to specialist care) was more effective at reducing depressive and anxiety symptoms compared with specialist care alone. Previous studies evaluated cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT); pharmacological interventions and behavioural approaches. CBT-type interventions had most evidence for improving comorbid anxiety and/or depressive symptoms but varied in delivery and modality. Other interventions showed promise but studies were small and have not been replicated.ConclusionVery few paediatric CFS/ME intervention studies have been conducted. This review update does not significantly add to what is known from previous reviews. The evidence is of poor quality and insufficient to conclude which interventions are effective at treating comorbid anxiety and/or depression in paediatric CFS/ME.PROSPERO registration numbersCRD42016043488 and CRD42015016813.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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