Pinhas Leora, Nicholls Dasha, Crosby Ross D, Morris Anne, Lynn Richard M, Madden Sloane
Eating Disorders Residential Program, Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences, Whitby, Whitby, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Int J Eat Disord. 2017 Jun;50(6):657-664. doi: 10.1002/eat.22666. Epub 2017 Jan 20.
This study tested the hypothesis that latent class analysis (LCA) would successfully classify eating disorder (ED) symptoms in children into categories that mapped onto DSM-5 diagnoses and that these categories would be consistent across countries. Childhood onset ED cases were ascertained through prospective active surveillance by the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit, the Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Program, and the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit for 36, 24, and 14 months, respectively. Pediatricians and child psychiatrists reported symptoms of any child aged ≤ 12 years with a newly diagnosed restrictive ED. Descriptive analyses and LCA were performed separately for all three countries and compared. Four hundred and thirty-six children were included in the analysis (Australia n = 70; Canada n = 160; United Kingdom n = 206). In each country, LCA revealed two distinct clusters, both of which presented with food avoidance. Cluster 1 (75%, 71%, 66% of the Australian, Canadian, and United Kingdom populations, respectively) presented with symptoms of greater weight preoccupation, fear of being fat, body image distortion, and over exercising, while Cluster 2 did not (all p < .05). Cluster 1 was older, had greater mean weight loss and was more likely to have been admitted to an inpatient unit and have unstable vital signs (all p < .01). Cluster 2 was more likely to present with a comorbid psychiatric disorder (p < .01). Clusters 1 and 2 closely resembled the DSM-5 criteria for anorexia nervosa and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder, respectively. Symptomatology and distribution were remarkably similar among countries, which lends support to two separate and distinct restrictive ED diagnoses.
潜在类别分析(LCA)能够成功地将儿童饮食失调(ED)症状分类为与《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-5)诊断相对应的类别,并且这些类别在不同国家之间具有一致性。通过澳大利亚儿科监测单位、加拿大儿科监测项目和英国儿科监测单位分别进行为期36个月、24个月和14个月的前瞻性主动监测,确定了儿童期起病的ED病例。儿科医生和儿童精神科医生报告了所有年龄≤12岁、新诊断为限制性ED的儿童的症状。对所有三个国家分别进行描述性分析和LCA,并进行比较。共有436名儿童纳入分析(澳大利亚70名;加拿大160名;英国206名)。在每个国家,LCA均显示出两个不同的类别,二者均表现出食物回避。类别1(分别占澳大利亚、加拿大和英国人群的75%、71%和66%)表现出更关注体重、害怕发胖、身体形象扭曲和过度运动等症状,而类别2则没有(所有p<.05)。类别1年龄更大,平均体重减轻更多,更有可能入住住院病房且生命体征不稳定(所有p<.01)。类别2更有可能伴有共病精神障碍(p<.01)。类别1和类别2分别与DSM-5中神经性厌食症和回避/限制性食物摄入障碍的标准非常相似。各国之间的症状学和分布显著相似,这支持了两种单独且不同的限制性ED诊断。