Soares, Letícia, Davis, Hannah, Spier, Ezra et al. · EBioMedicine · 2026 · DOI
This paper provides guidance for researchers designing clinical trials to test treatments for long COVID, with special attention to post-exertional malaise (PEM)—a key symptom where people feel much worse after physical or mental activity. The authors recommend that trials should carefully measure patients at the start, track them over time, include a placebo group for comparison, and make sure patients in different treatment groups have similar severity of illness. The paper highlights that the field urgently needs funding to develop better ways to measure these outcomes before large-scale treatment trials can succeed.
This paper directly addresses a critical bottleneck in developing treatments for long COVID and ME/CFS—the lack of standardized, validated ways to measure patient outcomes in clinical trials. By proposing structured recommendations for trial design, particularly regarding PEM measurement, it provides a roadmap that could accelerate the approval of effective treatments. For patients, this work is essential because without proper outcome measures, clinical trials cannot reliably detect whether new treatments actually work.
This paper does not test any treatment or establish that any intervention is effective. It does not validate specific outcome measures or demonstrate which endpoints are most sensitive to change. The recommendations are consensus-based rather than empirically proven, and the paper explicitly acknowledges that proposed outcomes require concurrent validation research—this is guidance for future trial design, not evidence from completed trials.
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 →
Contribute
Private, reviewed by a human. Not a public comment thread.