Prevalence, incidence, impairment, course, and diagnostic progression and transition of eating disorders, overweight, and obesity in a large prospective study of high-risk young women.

IF 3.1 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Eric Stice, Chris Desjardins, Heather Shaw, Sarah Siegel, Kristen Gee, Paul Rohde
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Abstract

We examined prevalence, incidence, impairment, course, and diagnostic transitions for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition, eating disorders, overweight, and obesity in a high-risk sample of 1,952 young women (Mage = 19.7 years) who completed diagnostic interviews over a 3-year period. The baseline prevalence of any eating disorder was 13.3% and 25.4% showed onset (incidence) over 3-year follow-up. Baseline prevalence of overweight and obesity were 17.2% and 11.9%, respectively, with respective 3-year incidence rates of 18.3% and 6.8%. The average duration of eating disorders ranged from 2.2 to 5.0 months. Episode duration for overweight and obesity were 14.9 and 20.0 months, respectively. Most eating disorders (82%-96%) showed remission within 1 year; recurrence rates varied from 12% (atypical anorexia nervosa [AN]) to 44% (subthreshold bulimia nervosa). Three-year remission rates for overweight (53%) and obesity (34%) were lower, as was recurrence (15% and 9%, respectively). All eating disorders were characterized by a mixture of binge eating and compensatory weight control behaviors. Functional impairment was elevated for half the examined eating disorders and obesity. Diagnostic progression varied from 3% of those with atypical AN progressing to AN to 29% of those with subthreshold binge eating disorder progressing to binge eating disorder. Regarding diagnostic crossover, the most frequent pattern was shifting from a threshold to a subthreshold eating disorder, followed by shifting from a binge-related eating disorder to overweight. Results extend knowledge of the natural history of eating disorders and provide novel evidence of the relation between eating disorders and overweight/obesity. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

在一项针对高危年轻女性的大型前瞻性研究中,饮食失调、超重和肥胖症的流行率、发病率、损伤、病程以及诊断进展和转变。
我们对 1952 名年轻女性(平均年龄 = 19.7 岁)的高风险样本进行了研究,这些样本在 3 年内完成了诊断访谈,研究了《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》(第五版)、进食障碍、超重和肥胖的患病率、发病率、损伤、病程和诊断转换。任何饮食失调症的基线患病率为 13.3%,25.4% 的患者在 3 年的随访中发病(发病率)。超重和肥胖的基线发病率分别为 17.2% 和 11.9%,3 年的发病率分别为 18.3% 和 6.8%。饮食失调的平均持续时间从 2.2 个月到 5.0 个月不等。超重和肥胖的发病时间分别为 14.9 个月和 20.0 个月。大多数饮食失调症(82%-96%)在一年内得到缓解;复发率从12%(非典型神经性厌食症[AN])到44%(亚阈值神经性贪食症)不等。超重(53%)和肥胖(34%)的三年缓解率较低,复发率也较低(分别为 15%和 9%)。所有饮食失调症的特点都是暴饮暴食和补偿性体重控制行为并存。在接受检查的饮食失调症和肥胖症患者中,有一半人的功能障碍程度较高。诊断进展各不相同,从3%的非典型自闭症患者进展为自闭症,到29%的阈下暴食症患者进展为暴食症。在诊断交叉方面,最常见的模式是从阈值进食障碍转变为亚阈值进食障碍,其次是从暴饮暴食相关进食障碍转变为超重。研究结果拓展了人们对饮食失调自然史的认识,并为饮食失调与超重/肥胖之间的关系提供了新的证据。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
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