Forney K Jean, Bodell Lindsay P, Haedt-Matt Alissa A, Keel Pamela K
Department of Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2016 Jul;49(7):651-62. doi: 10.1002/eat.22508. Epub 2016 Feb 3.
Of the two primary features of binge eating, loss of control (LOC) eating is well validated while the role of eating episode size is less clear. Given the ICD-11 proposal to eliminate episode size from the binge-eating definition, the present study examined the incremental validity of the size criterion, controlling for LOC.
Interview and questionnaire data come from four studies of 243 women with bulimia nervosa (n = 141) or purging disorder (n = 102). Hierarchical linear regression tested if the largest reported episode size, coded in kilocalories, explained additional variance in eating disorder features, psychopathology, personality traits, and impairment, holding constant LOC eating frequency, age, and body mass index (BMI). Analyses also tested if episode size moderated the association between LOC eating and these variables.
Holding LOC constant, episode size explained significant variance in disinhibition, trait anxiety, and eating disorder-related impairment. Episode size moderated the association of LOC eating with purging frequency and depressive symptoms, such that in the presence of larger eating episodes, LOC eating was more closely associated with these features. Neither episode size nor its interaction with LOC explained additional variance in BMI, hunger, restraint, shape concerns, state anxiety, negative urgency, or global functioning.
Taken together, results support the incremental validity of the size criterion, in addition to and in combination with LOC eating, for defining binge-eating episodes in purging syndromes. Future research should examine the predictive validity of episode size in both purging and nonpurging eating disorders (e.g., binge eating disorder) to inform nosological schemes. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. (Int J Eat Disord 2016; 49:651-662).
在暴饮暴食的两个主要特征中,失控性进食已得到充分验证,而进食发作量的作用尚不清楚。鉴于国际疾病分类第11版(ICD - 11)提议从暴饮暴食的定义中剔除发作量,本研究检验了发作量标准在控制失控性进食情况下的增量效度。
访谈和问卷数据来自四项针对243名神经性贪食症(n = 141)或清除型进食障碍(n = 102)女性的研究。分层线性回归检验了报告的最大发作量(以千卡计)是否能解释进食障碍特征、精神病理学、人格特质和损害方面的额外变异,同时保持失控性进食频率、年龄和体重指数(BMI)不变。分析还检验了发作量是否调节了失控性进食与这些变量之间的关联。
在保持失控性进食不变的情况下,发作量解释了去抑制、特质焦虑和进食障碍相关损害方面的显著变异。发作量调节了失控性进食与清除频率和抑郁症状之间的关联,即在进食发作量较大时,失控性进食与这些特征的关联更为紧密。发作量及其与失控性进食的交互作用均未解释BMI、饥饿感、克制、体型关注、状态焦虑、消极紧迫感或整体功能方面的额外变异。
综合来看,研究结果支持了发作量标准除失控性进食之外且与之结合时,在定义清除型综合征中的暴饮暴食发作方面的增量效度。未来研究应检验发作量在清除型和非清除型进食障碍(如暴饮暴食障碍)中的预测效度,以为疾病分类方案提供信息。© 2016威利期刊公司(《国际进食障碍杂志》2016;49:651 - 662)