San Diego State University/University of California San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, San Diego, California, USA.
Department of Psychology, College of Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, California, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2023 Jun;56(6):1055-1074. doi: 10.1002/eat.23933. Epub 2023 Mar 14.
Many individuals diagnosed with an eating disorder (ED) have been exposed to traumatic events, and some of these individuals are diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Although theorized by researchers and clinicians, it is unclear whether traumatic event exposure or PTSD interferes with outcomes from ED treatment. The objective of the current study was to systematically review the literature on traumatic events and/or PTSD as either predictors or moderators of psychological treatment outcomes in EDs.
A PRISMA search was conducted to identify studies that assessed the longitudinal association between traumatic events or PTSD and ED outcomes. Eighteen articles met the inclusion criteria for review.
Results indicated that traumatic event exposure was associated with greater ED treatment dropout, but individuals with a traumatic event history benefited from treatment similarly to their unexposed peers. Findings also indicated that traumatic events may be associated with greater symptom relapse posttreatment.
Given the limited number of studies examining PTSD, results are considered very tentative; however, similar to studies comparing trauma-exposed and nontrauma-exposed participants, individuals with PTSD may have similar treatment gains compared to individuals without PTSD, but individuals with PTSD may experience greater symptom relapse posttreatment. Future researchers are encouraged to examine whether trauma-informed care or integrated treatment for EDs and PTSD mitigates dropout from treatment and improves symptom remission outcomes. Furthermore, researchers are encouraged to examine how the developmental timing of traumatic events, self-perceived impact of trauma, and cumulative trauma exposure may be associated with differential ED treatment outcomes.
Eating disorders (EDs), trauma, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) often co-occur. Individuals with traumatic event exposure and/or PTSD demonstrate greater ED symptoms; it is unclear whether these individuals benefit similarly in ED treatment to their peers. The current study found that individuals with traumatic event exposure are more likely to drop out of treatment but benefit from treatment with similar symptom remission. Traumatic history was associated with greater relapse posttreatment.
许多被诊断患有饮食障碍 (ED) 的个体都曾经历过创伤事件,其中一些个体被诊断患有创伤后应激障碍 (PTSD)。尽管研究人员和临床医生对此进行了理论推测,但目前尚不清楚创伤事件的暴露或 PTSD 是否会干扰 ED 治疗的结果。本研究的目的是系统地回顾有关创伤事件和/或 PTSD 作为 ED 心理治疗结果的预测因子或调节因子的文献。
采用 PRISMA 检索方法,确定评估创伤事件或 PTSD 与 ED 结局之间纵向关联的研究。有 18 篇文章符合综述纳入标准。
结果表明,创伤事件暴露与 ED 治疗脱落率增加有关,但有创伤史的个体与未暴露的个体一样,从治疗中获益。研究结果还表明,创伤事件可能与治疗后症状复发有关。
鉴于研究 PTSD 的研究数量有限,结果被认为非常初步;然而,与比较创伤暴露和非创伤暴露参与者的研究类似,患有 PTSD 的个体与没有 PTSD 的个体相比可能具有相似的治疗效果增益,但患有 PTSD 的个体在治疗后可能会经历更大的症状复发。鼓励未来的研究人员研究创伤知情护理或 ED 和 PTSD 的综合治疗是否可以减轻治疗脱落率并改善症状缓解结果。此外,鼓励研究人员研究创伤事件的发展时间、创伤的自我感知影响以及累积创伤暴露如何与不同的 ED 治疗结果相关。
饮食障碍 (ED)、创伤和创伤后应激障碍 (PTSD) 经常同时发生。有创伤事件暴露和/或 PTSD 的个体表现出更严重的 ED 症状;目前尚不清楚这些个体在 ED 治疗中是否与同龄人一样受益。本研究发现,有创伤事件暴露史的个体更有可能退出治疗,但接受治疗后症状缓解情况相似。创伤史与治疗后复发有关。