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Considering the high likelihood of chronicity, it is imperative to understand the risk factors and outcomes associated with severe anorexia nervosa (AN), for which Danish registers provide a unique opportunity. We developed a measure of AN severity adapted from clinical literature for use in register-based research.
Methods
The study population included all Danish individuals born between 1963 and 2007 who were diagnosed with AN from 1969 to 2013. Using register data, we constructed the anorexia nervosa register-based severity index (AN-RSI), incorporating early or late illness onset, number of inpatient admissions and outpatient treatments, cumulative treatment length, and illness duration, each weighted based on clinical importance. Associations between AN-RSI scores, evaluated 5 years after first AN diagnosis, and mortality were estimated using survival analysis.
Results
Among 9167 individuals diagnosed with AN, 132 died during follow-up: 17 from AN, 30 from suicide, and 85 from other causes. Higher AN-RSI scores were associated with increased rates of mortality from AN, somatic anorexia diagnosis, suicide, alcohol-related causes, and any cause. AN cases who scored in the top 20% of AN-RSI had especially high mortality rates. Furthermore, severe AN cases were also more likely to be in treatment in the next 5 years after severity was established.
Conclusions
AN-RSI effectively captures mortality and long-term treatment in the absence of detailed patient records and is associated with later mortality in AN patients. AN-RSI could serve as a tool to examine epidemiological and genetic risk factors associated with AN course and outcomes.
Despite growing interest in novel treatments for anorexia nervosa, outcomes remain poor – often not because existing interventions are inherently ineffective, but due to systemic barriers that hinder their delivery. Written by a person with lived experience, this article critiques the prioritisation of innovation over implementation, highlighting how funding structures, methodological limitations and ethical practices in research can exacerbate inequalities and constrain real-world impact. It explores the untapped potential of existing treatments, the ethical complexities of researching anorexia nervosa and the risks of reinforcing false dichotomies – such as those between old and new, promise and futility, and body and mind. The paper argues for an integrated approach that values both innovation and refinement, closing current gaps in knowledge and treatment through greater collaboration across disciplines. Recommendations are made to support the orientation of research and care systems towards more effective, personalised and just treatment for anorexia nervosa.
DSM-5 specifies bulimia nervosa (BN) severity based on specific thresholds of compensatory behavior frequency. There is limited empirical support for such severity groupings. Limited support could be because the DSM-5’s compensatory behavior frequency cutpoints are inaccurate or because compensatory behavior frequency does not capture true underlying differences in severity. In support of the latter possibility, some work has suggested shape/weight overvaluation or use of single versus multiple purging methods may be better severity indicators. We used structural equation modeling (SEM) Trees to empirically determine the ideal variables and cutpoints for differentiating BN severity, and compared the SEM Tree groupings to alternate severity classifiers: the DSM-5 indicators, single versus multiple purging methods, and a binary indicator of shape/weight overvaluation.
Methods
Treatment-seeking adolescents and adults with BN (N = 1017) completed self-report measures assessing BN and comorbid symptoms. SEM Trees specified an outcome model of BN severity and recursively partitioned this model into subgroups based on shape/weight overvaluation and compensatory behaviors. We then compared groups on clinical characteristics (eating disorder symptoms, depression, anxiety, and binge eating frequency).
Results
SEM Tree analyses resulted in five severity subgroups, all based on shape/weight overvaluation: overvaluation <1.25; overvaluation 1.25–3.74; overvaluation 3.75–4.74; overvaluation 4.75–5.74; and overvaluation ≥5.75. SEM Tree groups explained 1.63–6.41 times the variance explained by other severity schemes.
Conclusions
Shape/weight overvaluation outperformed the DSM-5 severity scheme and single versus multiple purging methods, suggesting the DSM-5 severity scheme should be reevaluated. Future research should examine the predictive utility of this severity scheme.
Weight suppression represents the difference between highest and current body weight and predicts maintenance of bulimia nervosa and related syndromes (BN-S). This study tested a biobehavioral model of binge-eating severity in which greater weight suppression links to reduced leptin, which links to reduced glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) release, which links to both decreased reward satiation and increased reward valuation, which link, respectively, to excessive food intake and loss of control while eating – the defining features of DSM-5 binge-eating episodes.
Methods
Women (N = 399) who met DSM-5 criteria for bulimia nervosa or another eating disorder with binge eating (n = 321) or had no lifetime eating disorder symptoms (n = 78) participated in a multi-visit protocol, including structured clinical interviews, height, weight, weight history, percent body fat, fasting leptin, post-prandial GLP-1 response to a fixed meal, and self-report and behavioral assessments of food reward satiation (ad lib meal) and food and nonfood reward valuation (progressive ratio tasks).
Results
A structural equation model (SEM) demonstrated excellent fit to data with significant pathways from greater weight suppression to lower leptin, to blunted GLP-1 response, to lower reward satiation, to larger eating/binge-eating episode size, with significant indirect paths through leptin, GLP-1, and reward satiation. SEM with paths via reward valuation to loss of control eating demonstrated inadequate fit.
Conclusions
Findings specifically link reduced GLP-1 response to severity of binge-episode size and support weight history assessment in eating disorders, DSM-5 over ICD-11 criteria for binge eating, and may inform future clinical trials of GLP-1 agonists for BN-S.
Low-income, publicly insured youth face numerous barriers to adequate mental health care, which may be compounded for those with multiple marginalized identities. However, no research has examined how identity and diagnosis may interact to shape the treatment experiences of under-resourced youth with psychiatric conditions. Applying an intersectional lens to treatment disparities is essential for developing targeted interventions to promote equitable care.
Methods
Analyses included youth ages 7–18 with eating disorders (EDs; n = 3,311), mood/anxiety disorders (n = 3,219), or psychotic disorders (n = 3,035) enrolled in California Medicaid. Using state billing records, we examined sex- and race and ethnicity-based disparities in receipt of core services – outpatient therapy, outpatient medical care, and inpatient treatment – in the first year after diagnosis and potential differences across diagnostic groups.
Results
Many youth (50.7% across diagnoses) received no outpatient therapy, and youth with EDs were least likely to receive these services. Youth of color received fewer days of outpatient therapy than White youth, and Latinx youth received fewer therapy and medical services across outpatient and inpatient contexts. Sex- and race and ethnicity-based disparities were especially pronounced for youth with EDs, with particularly low levels of service receipt among boys and Latinx youth with EDs.
Conclusions
Results raise concerns for unmet treatment needs among publicly insured youth, which are exacerbated for youth with multiple marginalized identities and those who do not conform to historical stereotypes of affected individuals (e.g., low-income boys of color with EDs). Targeted efforts are needed to ensure equitable care.
Research on mortality and admissions for physical health problems across eating disorder diagnoses in representative settings is scarce. Inequalities in these outcomes across a range of sociodemographic characteristics have rarely been investigated.
Aims
We investigated whether people with eating disorders had greater all-cause mortality and physical health-related in-patient admissions compared with those without eating disorders, and whether associations varied by sex, ethnicity, deprivation, age and calendar year at diagnosis.
Method
Using primary care Clinical Research Practice Datalink linked to Hospital Episode Statistics, we matched people with an incident eating disorder diagnosis (any, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, eating disorders not otherwise specified, generic eating disorder or a referral code) from primary care Read codes to four people without eating disorders (1:4 matching) on year of birth, sex, primary care practice, year of registration and index date. We used univariable and multivariable Cox (mortality) and Poisson (admissions) models, and fitted interactions to investigate whether associations varied by sociodemographic characteristics.
Results
We included 58 735 people (90.1% female, 91.6% White). People with any eating disorders had higher all-cause mortality (hazard ratio: 2.15, 95% CI: 1.73–2.67). Anorexia nervosa had the highest mortality (hazard ratio: 3.49, 95% CI: 2.43–5.01). People with any eating disorders had higher rates of planned (incidence rate ratio (IRR): 1.80, 95% CI: 1.4–1.87) and emergency admissions for physical health problems (IRR: 2.35. 95% CI: 2.35–2.46) and emergency admissions for injuries, accidents and substance misuse (IRR: 5.26, 95% CI: 5.24–5.29). Mortality and admission rate ratios were greater in males.
Conclusions
People with eating disorders have high rates of mortality and physical health-related admissions. Observed inequalities call for an understanding of why such inequalities exist. These findings highlight the need for prompt and effective treatment for eating disorders, and for improved guidance on primary care management of people with eating disorders.
Eating disorders (EDs) are particularly prevalent among young adult females. Previous research has shown that childhood trauma and reduced mentalizing abilities are involved in ED symptoms. The current study was aimed at testing the mediating effects of failures in mentalizing on the relationship between childhood trauma and ED risk among young adult females. The sample consisted of 409 Caucasian young adult females, aged between 18 and 30 years old (M = 23.45, SD = 2.76). The reported mean body mass index was within the normal range (M = 22.62; SD = 4.35). Self-report instruments were administered to assess the variables of interest. Structural equation modeling revealed that childhood trauma predicted increased failures in mentalizing (β = .36) and ED risk (β = .30), that failures in mentalizing predicted an increased ED risk (β = .35), and that the positive association between childhood trauma and ED risk was partially mediated by failures in mentalizing (indirect effect: β = .13). These findings suggest that ED symptoms might result from unprocessed and painful feelings embedded in child abuse and neglect. Clinical interventions focused at improving mentalizing abilities might reduce the ED risk among young adult females who have been exposed to childhood trauma.
Eating disorders and psychotic disorders represent two of the most serious psychiatric conditions. Emerging lines of evidence from genetic and epidemiological studies suggest that these disorders may commonly co-occur. This systematic review investigated the association between these disorders across community and clinical populations.
Method
A systematic review was preregistered (CRD42021231771) and conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. Web of Science, PsycINFO and Medline were searched for articles on the association and comorbidity between psychosis and eating disorders up to the 26th February 2024. A random effects meta-analysis was conducted for studies reporting comorbidity of eating disorders and psychotic disorders based on clinical diagnosis or interview measures, to estimate prevalence of the comorbidity between these disorders. A narrative synthesis was conducted for all other studies and grouped by sample (general population, eating disorders or psychotic disorders).
Results
In total 43 studies met inclusion criteria for the systematic review and 16 were included in the meta-analysis. Findings suggest substantial comorbidity between eating disorders and psychotic disorders, with a pooled comorbidity prevalence of 8% (CI: 3, 14) based on clinical diagnosis or interview measures. Studies using self-report questionnaires also highlight the association between eating disorders and psychosis across clinical and community populations.
Conclusions
Eating disorders and psychotic disorders frequently co-occur. Further research should investigate the temporal order of symptom development and consider the need for novel interventions targeted at overlapping psychotic and eating disorder symptoms and associated phenomena.
Binge-eating disorder (BED) is characterized by highly distressing episodes of loss-of-control over-eating. We have examined the use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for the treatment of people with BED and associated obesity. Such non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques are used therapeutically in several psychiatric conditions and there is an associated scientific rationale.
Methods
Sixty participants were randomly allocated to receive 20 sessions of neuronavigated 10 Hz rTMS administered to the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) or sham treatment. Primary outcomes were the frequency of binge eating episodes (BEE) and the ‘urge to eat’ (craving) evaluated at baseline and end-of-treatment (8 weeks post-randomization). Secondary outcomes included body mass index (BMI), hunger, general and specific eating disorder psychopathology. Follow-up analyses were conducted for most outcomes at 16 weeks post-randomization. Multilevel models were used to evaluate group, time, and group-by-time interactions for the association between rTMS exposure and outcomes.
Results
The real rTMS group (compared with sham treatment), showed a significantly greater decrease in the number of BEE at the end of treatment (Estimated Mean [EM]: 2.41 95% CI: 1.84–3.15 versus EM: 1.45 95% CI: 1.05–1.99, p = 0.02), and at follow-up (EM: 3.79 95% CI: 3–4.78 versus EM: 2.45 95% CI: 1.88–3.17, p = 0.02; group × time interaction analysis p = 0.02). No group differences were found for other comparisons.
Conclusion
rTMS was associated with reduced BEE during and after treatment: it suggests rTMS is a promising intervention for BED.
This paper highlights systemic research and clinical deficiencies in addressing eating disorders among males and men, focusing on societal stigma, gender-biased diagnostics and barriers to care. It advocates for comprehensive reforms, including addressing systemic underfunding, closing research gaps, improving clinician training and tailored interventions to reduce disparities and improve outcomes.
Involuntary treatment for patients with anorexia nervosa is common and lifesaving, but also highly intrusive. Understanding how morbidity patterns relate to involuntary treatment can help minimise its use.
Aim
We estimate the relative risk of involuntary treatment according to morbidity profiles in patients with anorexia nervosa.
Method
This register-based cohort study included all individuals diagnosed with anorexia nervosa (ICD-10: F50.0, F50.1) between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2016 in Denmark. Individuals were grouped by prior morbidities using latent class analysis (LCA). Cox proportional hazards regression estimated the relative risk of first involuntary treatment (e.g. involuntary admission, detention, locked wards) after a diagnosis with anorexia nervosa, regardless of the associated diagnosis. The relative risk of involuntary treatment was estimated with latent classes and the number of morbidities as exposure.
Results
A total of 9892 individuals with anorexia nervosa were included (93.3% female), of which 821 (8.3%) individuals experienced at least one involuntary treatment event. The LCA produced six classes, with distinct morbidity profiles. The highest hazard ratio was observed for a group characterised by personality disorders, self-harm and substance misuse (hazard ratio 4.46, 95% CI: 3.43–5.79) followed by a high burden group with somatic and psychiatric disorders (hazard ratio 3.96, 95% CI: 2.81–5.59) and a group with developmental and behavioural disorders (hazard ratio 3.61, 95% CI: 2.54–5.11). The relative risk of involuntary treatment increased primarily with the number of psychiatric morbidities.
Conclusions
Specific morbidity groups are associated with highly elevated risk of involuntary treatment among patients with anorexia nervosa. Targeting preventive interventions to high-risk groups may help reduce the need for involuntary treatment.
As the use of guided digitally-delivered cognitive-behavioral therapy (GdCBT) grows, pragmatic analytic tools are needed to evaluate coaches’ implementation fidelity.
Aims
We evaluated how natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning (ML) methods might automate the monitoring of coaches’ implementation fidelity to GdCBT delivered as part of a randomized controlled trial.
Method
Coaches served as guides to 6-month GdCBT with 3,381 assigned users with or at risk for anxiety, depression, or eating disorders. CBT-trained and supervised human coders used a rubric to rate the implementation fidelity of 13,529 coach-to-user messages. NLP methods abstracted data from text-based coach-to-user messages, and 11 ML models predicting coach implementation fidelity were evaluated.
Results
Inter-rater agreement by human coders was excellent (intra-class correlation coefficient = .980–.992). Coaches achieved behavioral targets at the start of the GdCBT and maintained strong fidelity throughout most subsequent messages. Coaches also avoided prohibited actions (e.g. reinforcing users’ avoidance). Sentiment analyses generally indicated a higher frequency of coach-delivered positive than negative sentiment words and predicted coach implementation fidelity with acceptable performance metrics (e.g. area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] = 74.48%). The final best-performing ML algorithms that included a more comprehensive set of NLP features performed well (e.g. AUC = 76.06%).
Conclusions
NLP and ML tools could help clinical supervisors automate monitoring of coaches’ implementation fidelity to GdCBT. These tools could maximize allocation of scarce resources by reducing the personnel time needed to measure fidelity, potentially freeing up more time for high-quality clinical care.
Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common mental disorders in adolescents, and a full syndrome diagnosis requires a combination of persistent symptoms. In a multicentre cross-sectional study from Italy using a non-clinical sample from a secondary school comprising 440 adolescents, published in this issue of BJPsych Open, Gostoli et al examined whether unhealthy lifestyle habits are linked to both clinical manifestation of ADHD and subclinical symptomatology. In line with the literature, the authors demonstrate an association between clinical ADHD diagnosis, unhealthy lifestyle behaviours and psychosocial impairments. Modifiable, adverse lifestyle behaviours are also prevalent in subclinical ADHD manifestations. This observation may be important for child and adolescent psychiatry when considering targeted health promotion approaches that delay or prevent progression from subclinical to clinical ADHD. In this article, we discuss from a clinical perspective the putative relevance of addressing subclinical ADHD symptoms in the context of the existing literature.
Chapter 4 presents intersectionality theory to explain the cumulative and interactive gender-based and child-based discrimination encountered by the girl child. It explores interactive intersectional discrimination, whereby each infringement on the rights of the girl child leads to a series of violations that occur throughout her childhood. Chapter 4 conducts a case study of the practice of son preference and daughter devaluation in the private sphere leading to girl child neglect, which in turn weakens her access to education and economic empowerment. It also discusses the negative impact of sexualized social and dress codes, notably the over-sexualization of girls in mainstream and social media, including Instagram and TikTok, leading to digitized dysmorphia, eating disorders, violence against girl children, sex trafficking and child pornography. The chapter concludes that the international legal framework cannot protect the girl child unless the interactive intersectional discrimination she experiences is acknowledged.
Research is only beginning to shape our understanding of eating disorders as metabolic-psychiatric illnesses. How eating disorders (EDs) are classified is essential to future research for understanding the etiology of these severe illnesses and both developing and tailoring effective treatments. The gold standard for classification for research and diagnostic purposes has primarily been and continues to be the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). With the reconceptualization of EDs comes new challenges of considering how EDs are classified to reflect clinical reality, prognosis and lived experience. In this article, we explore the DSM-5 method of categorical classification and how it may not accurately represent the fluidity in which EDs present themselves. We discuss alternative methods of conceptualizing EDs, and their relevance and implications for genetic research.
We conducted a prospective study to advance knowledge of biological factors that predict the future onset of binge eating and compensatory weight control behaviors because few biological risk factors for eating pathology have been identified.
Methods
Adolescent girls free of binge eating or compensatory behaviors (N = 88; Mage = 14.5; [SD = 0.9]) completed functional magnetic resonance imaging tasks assessing individual differences in neural responsivity hypothesized to increase risk for onset of binge eating and compensatory behaviors, along with additional self-report measures, and were assessed over a 4-year follow-up.
Results
Elevated responsivity of regions implicated in attention and valuation (dorsal anterior cingulate cortex; ventromedial prefrontal cortex) to thin models and lower responsivity of a reward valuation region (caudate) to anticipated milkshake tastes (which correlated with feeling fat) predicted the future onset of binge eating or compensatory behaviors over 4-year follow-up. Parental history of binge eating and compensatory behaviors, emotionality, weight/shape overvaluation, feeling fat, and elevated BMI also predicted the future onset of binge eating or compensatory behaviors.
Conclusions
The evidence that elevated attentional bias for, and valuation of the thin ideal, in combination with lower valuation of high-calorie foods, predicted the future onset of eating-disordered behaviors are novel findings. The evidence that weight/shape overvaluation, feeling fat, elevated body mass, emotionality, and parental history of eating pathology predicted the future onset of eating-disordered behaviors extend past findings.
Growing evidence highlights the critical role of patient choice of treatment, with significant benefits for outcomes found in some studies. While four meta-analyses have previously examined the association between treatment choice and outcomes in mental health, robust conclusions have been limited by the inclusion of studies with biased preference trial designs. The current systematic review included 30 studies across three common and frequently comorbid mental health disorders (depression N = 23; anxiety, N = 5; eating disorders, N = 2) including 7055 participants (Mage 42.5 years, SD 11.7; 69.5% female). Treatment choice most often occurred between psychotherapy and antidepressant medication (43.3%), followed by choice between two different forms of psychotherapy, or elements within psychotherapy (36.7%). There were insufficient studies with stringent designs to conduct meta-analyses for anxiety or eating disorders as outcomes, or for treatment uptake. Treatment choice significantly improved outcomes for depression (d = 0.17, n = 18) and decreased therapy dropout, both in a combined sample targeting depression (n = 12), anxiety (n = 4) and eating disorders (n = 1; OR = 1.46, 95% CI: 1.17, 1.83), and in a smaller sample of the depression studies alone (OR = 1.65, 95% CI: 1.05, 2.59). All studies evaluated the impact of adults making treatment choices with none examining the effect of choice in adolescents. Clear directions in future research are indicated, in terms of designing studies that can adequately test the treatment choice and outcome association in anxiety and eating disorder treatment, and in youth.
The study aim was to determine the prevalence of food addiction (FA) in individuals with type 2 diabetes and to assess the association between FA and type 2 diabetes. MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Sciences, Latin American and Caribbean Literature in Health Sciences, ScienceDirect, Scopus and PsycINFO were searched until November 2024. This study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42023465903). Cross-sectional studies, case–control, cohorts and clinical trials that were carried out with individuals with type 2 diabetes, regardless of age and sex, were included. The complete data extracted included the prevalence, OR and/or risk ratio of FA, the number of individuals evaluated, age, sex, weight, presence of co-morbidities, age of participants and FA symptoms. A pooled prevalence of FA of 30 % (95 % CI (18, 44) with estimated predictive interval (0; 85); I2 = 99·51; 12 studies; 15 947 participants) was identified. For the associations between FA and type 2 diabetes, we found a grouped crude OR value of 2·35 (95 % CI (1·71, 2·98)). The pooled OR adjusted for age and sex was 2·60 (95 % CI (1·77, 3·42)). Finally, the OR adjusted for age, sex and BMI was 2·01 (95 % CI (1·39, 2·64)). The results of the meta-analyses showed a high prevalence of FA in individuals with type 2 diabetes and that the associations between these two conditions remained even after adjustment for age, sex and BMI, although with a high heterogeneity among individual estimates.
Variation exists in our attitude and behaviour towards food and exercise, resulting in different degrees of health and ill health. Cultural and economic factors contribute to this, alongside personal choices, leading to a spectrum from normative eating, through disordered eating to the extremes of eating disorders (EDs). Understanding the intricate interplay between biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors to eating, exercise and body image is paramount to understand the current state regarding EDs and to deliver/develop multifaceted and individualised treatments. Significant service developments have occurred following the launch of the Irish Health Service Executive Model of Care for EDs in 2018. However, incomplete roll out and surge in EDs referrals post Covid-19 require generic child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) to be competent in assessment of EDs, and to keep abreast of clinical updates in order to offer effective treatment.
This review provides an evidenced based update on eating related difficulties, outlines a useful assessment framework, offers information on appropriate clinical management, and highlights exciting clinically relevant research developments.
Family-based treatment (FBT) has proven efficacy among adolescents with eating disorders (ED). However, it is not effective or suitable for all young people and their families, which makes alternative treatments important. This is the first pilot study to compare the relative effectiveness of manualised enhanced cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT-E) among a transdiagnostic eating disorder sample of adolescents for whom CBT-E was their first ED treatment (n=42), and a group who had previously started FBT which had been discontinued without full recovery (n=27). Participants (n=69) aged 13–17 with an eating disorder completed manualised CBT-E. Outcome measures included body mass index (BMI) centile, ED psychopathology and clinical impairment. Across the cohort, results showed improvements across ED psychopathology, clinical impairment and BMI centile. The effect of the intervention on ED psychopathology and clinical impairment did not vary between groups, nor did attrition rates. There was a difference between the groups on BMI centile, with those who had previously been treated with FBT showing no change in BMI centile, whereas those with no previous FBT increased BMI at post-treatment. Implications from this research suggest that CBT-E is a viable promising alternative and could be offered among those for whom FBT has not achieved full recovery.
Key learning aims
(1) Delivering CBT-E to adolescents with eating disorders who have previously engaged in FBT but have not achieved full recovery is a promising subsequent treatment option.
(2) CBT-E was similarly completed and displayed similar overall group reductions in eating disorder symptoms in those who had discontinued FBT without full recovery compared with those who had not previously engaged with FBT.
(3) Results suggest that CBT-E could be offered when FBT has not achieved full recovery, although more research is required to understand optimal timings of treatment transition in such instances.