Mora-Maltas Bernat, Lucas Ignacio, Granero Roser, Vintró-Alcaraz Cristina, Miranda-Olivos Romina, Baenas Isabel, Sánchez Isabel, Jiménez-Del Toro Jessica, Sánchez-González Jéssica, Krug Isabel, Tapia Javier, Jiménez-Murcia Susana, Fernández-Aranda Fernando
Clinical Psychology Unit, University Hospital Bellvitge and CIBERobn, Feixa Llarga s/n 08907 L'Hospitalet del Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain.
Psychoneurobiology of Eating and Addictive Behaviours Group, Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL), Barcelona, Spain.
J Eat Disord. 2023 Sep 11;11(1):155. doi: 10.1186/s40337-023-00875-z.
The severity criteria for eating disorders (EDs) proposed in the DSM-5 have been established without sufficient empirical support. Drive for thinness (DT) and duration of illness have been proposed as two alternative severity measures, however their empirical evidence is also limited. To date, no research has assessed the validity of current eating disorder (ED) severity criteria regarding cognitive flexibility factors. Cognitive flexibility is often impaired in EDs, becoming a possible severity symptom. The current study assessed for the first time (1) whether the severity indexes for EDs proposed in the DSM-5 were associated with deficits in cognitive flexibility and, (2) whether drive for thinness and illness duration, acted as an alternative, more meaningful severity indices for deficiencies in cognitive flexibility.
Participants were 161 patients diagnosed with an ED, who were categorized according to DSM-5 severity categories, DT and duration of illness. Discriminative capacity of each classification was assessed for cognitive flexibility measured by Wisconsin card sorting test (WCST).
The findings for the DSM-5 classification comprised: (a) In the anorexia nervosa (AN) group, patients with moderate severity showed better scores in WCST than patients with mild and severe/extreme severity. Also, patients with moderate severity showed lower percentage of cognitive flexibility deficits than the other two severity categories; (b) For the binge spectrum disorders (BSD) group, the patients with mild severity showed a higher percentage of cognitive flexibility deficits than did the moderate and severe/extreme categories. When assessing the alternative severity index of DT, no differences were found in cognitive flexibility in any of the groups. Regarding illness duration, in the AN group the task performance of the patients with longer illness duration was worse than the performance of the short duration group and, in the BSD group, patients with longer duration also showed more deficits in cognitive flexibility than the patients with shorter duration of illness.
Our findings point out the limitations of the DSM-5 severity criteria to categorize cognitive flexibility in EDs and support illness duration as an alternative severity approach for EDs.
《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM - 5)中提出的饮食失调(ED)严重程度标准在确立时缺乏充分的实证支持。追求瘦身驱力(DT)和病程已被提议作为两种替代的严重程度衡量指标,然而它们的实证依据也很有限。迄今为止,尚无研究评估当前饮食失调(ED)严重程度标准在认知灵活性因素方面的有效性。认知灵活性在饮食失调中常常受损,可能成为一种严重程度症状。本研究首次评估了:(1)DSM - 5中提出的饮食失调(ED)严重程度指标是否与认知灵活性缺陷相关;(2)追求瘦身驱力和病程是否作为认知灵活性缺陷的另一种更有意义的严重程度指标。
参与者为161名被诊断患有饮食失调的患者,他们根据DSM - 5严重程度类别、追求瘦身驱力(DT)和病程进行分类。通过威斯康星卡片分类测验(WCST)测量认知灵活性,评估每种分类的辨别能力。
DSM - 5分类的研究结果包括:(a)在神经性厌食症(AN)组中,中度严重程度的患者在WCST中的得分高于轻度和重度/极重度患者。此外,中度严重程度的患者认知灵活性缺陷的百分比低于其他两个严重程度类别;(b)对于暴食谱系障碍(BSD)组,轻度严重程度的患者认知灵活性缺陷的百分比高于中度和重度/极重度类别。在评估追求瘦身驱力(DT)的替代严重程度指标时,各组在认知灵活性方面均未发现差异。关于病程,在神经性厌食症(AN)组中,病程较长的患者的任务表现比病程较短的组差,在暴食谱系障碍(BSD)组中,病程较长的患者在认知灵活性方面的缺陷也比病程较短的患者更多。
我们的研究结果指出了DSM - 5严重程度标准在对饮食失调中的认知灵活性进行分类方面的局限性,并支持将病程作为饮食失调的另一种严重程度评估方法。