Discharge Body Mass Index, Not Illness Chronicity, Predicts 6-Month Weight Outcome In Patients Hospitalized With Anorexia Nervosa

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY(2021)

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摘要
Proposed treatments for severe and enduring anorexia nervosa (SE-AN) focus on quality of life, and psychological and social functioning. By de-emphasizing weight restoration as a priority, however, premature diagnosis of SE-AN may reduce potential for recovery. The present study assessed the effect of weight restoration, illness duration, and severity on treatment outcome 6 months after discharge from an intensive, meal-based behavioral treatment program. Participants included hospitalized adult women (N = 191) with AN or underweight other specified feeding and eating disorder (OSFED). Participants were characterized as short-term (ill n = 74) or long-term ill (ill >= 7 years; n = 117). Compared with short-term ill, long-term ill patients were older, had lower lifetime body mass index (BMI), more prior admissions, and exhibited greater depression and neuroticism. Long-term vs. short-term ill patients gained weight at the same rate (similar to 2 kg/wk) and were equally likely to be weight restored by discharge (>75% reached BMI >= 19 kg/m(2) in both groups). At 6-month follow-up (n = 99), both groups had equivalent self-reported BMI, and depression, drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction, and bulimia scores. The only predictor of BMI >= 19 kg/m(2) at follow-up was discharge BMI. The likelihood of a BMI >= 19 kg/m(2) at follow-up was 5-fold higher for those with discharge BMI >= 19 kg/m(2). Few studies of long-term ill inpatients with AN have examined the impact of full weight restoration on short-term outcomes. This study supports the therapeutically optimistic stance that, regardless of illness duration, hospitalized patients with AN benefit from gaining weight to a BMI >= 19 kg/m(2).
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关键词
inpatient, severe and enduring anorexia nervosa, treatment, outcomes, weight-restoration
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