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神经胃肠病学患者中尝试排除饮食与回避/限制型食物摄入障碍的关联:一项回顾性图表回顾研究。

History of trying exclusion diets and association with avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder in neurogastroenterology patients: A retrospective chart review.

机构信息

Center for Neurointestinal Health, Division of Gastroenterology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

出版信息

Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2023 Mar;35(3):e14513. doi: 10.1111/nmo.14513. Epub 2023 Jan 4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Exclusion diets for gastrointestinal symptom management have been hypothesized to be a risk factor for avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID; a non-body image-based eating disorder). In a retrospective study of pediatric and adult neurogastroenterology patients, we aimed to (1) identify the prevalence and characteristics of an exclusion diet history and (2) evaluate if an exclusion diet history was concurrently associated with the presence of ARFID symptoms.

METHODS

We conducted a chart review of 539 consecutive referrals (ages 6-90, 69% female) to adult (n = 410; January-December 2016) and pediatric (n = 129; January 2016-December 2018) neurogastroenterology clinics. Masked coders (n = 4) retrospectively applied DSM-5 criteria for ARFID and a separate coder assessed documentation of exclusion diet history. We excluded patients with no documentation of diet in the chart (n = 35) or who were not orally fed (n = 9).

RESULTS

Of 495 patients included, 194 (39%) had an exclusion diet history, and 118 (24%) had symptoms of ARFID. Of reported diets, dairy-free was the most frequent (45%), followed by gluten-free (36%). Where documented, exclusion diets were self-initiated by patients/parents in 66% of cases, and recommended by gastroenterology providers in 30%. Exclusion diet history was significantly associated with the presence of ARFID symptoms (OR = 3.12[95% CI 1.92-5.14], p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

History of following an exclusion diet was common and was most often patient-initiated among pediatric and adult neurogastroenterology patients. As patients with self-reported exclusion diet history were over three times as likely to have ARFID symptoms, providers should be cognizant of this potential association when considering dietary interventions.

摘要

背景

胃肠道症状管理的排除饮食被假设为回避/限制型食物摄入障碍(ARFID;一种非基于身体意象的进食障碍)的一个风险因素。在一项对儿科和成人神经胃肠病患者的回顾性研究中,我们旨在:(1)确定排除饮食史的患病率和特征;(2)评估排除饮食史是否与 ARFID 症状的存在同时相关。

方法

我们对 539 例连续转诊患者(年龄 6-90 岁,69%为女性)进行了图表回顾,这些患者分别来自成人(n=410;2016 年 1 月至 12 月)和儿科(n=129;2016 年 1 月至 2018 年 12 月)神经胃肠病学诊所。四位蒙面编码员(n=4)回顾性地应用了 ARFID 的 DSM-5 标准,而另一位编码员评估了排除饮食史的记录情况。我们排除了图表中没有饮食记录的患者(n=35)或不能经口进食的患者(n=9)。

结果

在 495 例纳入的患者中,有 194 例(39%)有排除饮食史,有 118 例(24%)有 ARFID 症状。在所报告的饮食中,无乳制品饮食最为常见(45%),其次是无麸质饮食(36%)。在有记录的情况下,排除饮食在 66%的情况下是由患者/家长自行决定的,在 30%的情况下是由胃肠病学提供者建议的。排除饮食史与 ARFID 症状的存在显著相关(OR=3.12[95%CI 1.92-5.14],p<0.001)。

结论

遵循排除饮食的历史很常见,在儿科和成人神经胃肠病患者中,这种情况大多是由患者自行决定的。由于自我报告有排除饮食史的患者出现 ARFID 症状的可能性是三倍多,因此在考虑饮食干预时,提供者应注意到这种潜在的关联。

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