Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna Italy.
Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna Italy; Department of Medicine, Surgery and Health Sciences, University of Trieste, Italy Azienda Sanitaria Universitaria Giuliano-Isontina - ASUGI, Trieste, Italy.
J Affect Disord. 2020 Dec 1;277:927-939. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.09.003. Epub 2020 Sep 8.
The high comorbidity between Eating Disorders (EDs) and Obsessive-Compulsive disorder (OCD) is well known, as well as its implications in terms of worse outcome and need to adapt treatment. Estimates of OCD comorbidities in EDs are variable in different studies and poorly informative for clinical purposes. In this study, we sought to derive more consistent estimates, taking into account potential methodological and sampling confounding factors.
We searched published studies reporting lifetime and current rates of comorbid OCD in ED samples based on recent diagnostic criteria. Comorbidity rates were meta-analyzed using a binary random effects model. Heterogeneity among the studies and publication bias were systematically checked. Potential confounding factors were tested by meta-regression analysis and adjusted by sensitivity analysis.
Globally, respectively 18% and 15% of all patients with an ED had a lifetime and current comorbidity with OCD. Rates were slightly higher in anorexia (19% and 14%) than in bulimia nervosa (13% and 9%), although only the current comorbid OCD was significantly higher in anorexia than in bulimia. Prospective follow-up studies provided considerably higher lifetime estimates (EDs 38%, anorexia 44%, bulimia 19%).
Temporal/causal relationship between ED and OCD could not be defined.
OCD comorbidity in EDs is a relevant phenomenon, affecting almost one fifth of the patients in cross-sectional observations and up to nearly 40% in prospective follow-up studies. These data indicate the need for focused attention to non-food or body-shape related OCD symptoms, for better diagnostic and prognostic accuracy, and targeted treatment.
饮食障碍(EDs)和强迫症(OCD)之间的高共病率是众所周知的,这对其预后和治疗方法的调整都有影响。不同研究中 OCD 在 EDs 中的共病率估计值存在差异,对于临床目的来说信息不足。在这项研究中,我们试图考虑到潜在的方法学和抽样混杂因素,得出更一致的估计值。
我们检索了基于近期诊断标准报道 ED 样本中终生和当前 OCD 共病率的已发表研究。使用二项随机效应模型对共病率进行荟萃分析。系统检查了研究之间的异质性和发表偏倚。通过元回归分析测试潜在的混杂因素,并通过敏感性分析进行调整。
总体而言,所有 ED 患者中分别有 18%和 15%存在 OCD 的终生和当前共病。在厌食症中(19%和 14%)略高于神经性贪食症(13%和 9%),尽管只有当前的 OCD 共病在厌食症中明显高于神经性贪食症。前瞻性随访研究提供了更高的终生估计值(EDs 38%,厌食症 44%,神经性贪食症 19%)。
ED 和 OCD 之间的时间/因果关系无法确定。
EDs 中的 OCD 共病是一个相关现象,在横断面观察中影响近五分之一的患者,前瞻性随访研究中高达近 40%。这些数据表明需要关注非食物或身体形状相关的 OCD 症状,以提高诊断和预后的准确性,并进行针对性治疗。