Well-conducted
surveys can clarify unmet clinical need and explore many unresolved
scientific issues. Surveys can generate hypotheses about the
biologic underpinnings of the symptom, characterize fatigue
syndromes in different populations of medically ill patients,
and clarify the relationships among fatigue characteristics
and various etiologies or comorbidities. The relationships
between fatigue qualities (possible subtypes) and demographic,
disease-related or treatment-related variables, and objective
indicators of disease (e.g. specific metabolic disturbances
such as cytokine levels) can be illuminated by this research.
Surveys also can potentially clarify responses to therapy
and guide the development of subsequent trials. For example,
evaluation of a range of responses following treatment with
epoetin alfa might be able to infer a direct cognitive response
consistent with new information about the presence of erythropoietin
receptors in brain (Brines
et al., 2000). If so, this would affirm the value
of a trial in fatigued patients without significant anemia.