Ghazzawi Hadeel A, Nimer Lana S, Haddad Areen Jamal, Alhaj Omar A, Amawi Adam T, Pandi-Perumal Seithikurippu R, Trabelsi Khaled, Seeman Mary V, Jahrami Haitham
Department of Nutrition and Food Technology, School of Agriculture, The University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan.
Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, University of Petra, Amman, Jordan.
J Eat Disord. 2024 Feb 7;12(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s40337-024-00982-5.
The purpose of this meta-analysis was to provide a pooled prevalence estimate of self-reported disordered eating (SRDE) in athletes based on the available literature, and to identify risk factors for their occurrence.
Across ten academic databases, an electronic search was conducted from inception to 7th January 2024. The proportion of athletes scoring at or above predetermined cutoffs on validated self-reporting screening measures was used to identify disordered eating (DE). Subgroup analysis per country, per culture, and per research measure were also conducted. Age, body mass index (BMI), and sex were considered as associated/correlated factors.
The mean prevalence of SRDE among 70,957 athletes in 177 studies (132 publications) was 19.23% (17.04%; 21.62%), I = 97.4%, τ = 0.8990, Cochran's Q p value = 0. Australia had the highest percentage of SRDE athletes with a mean of 57.1% (36.0%-75.8%), while Iceland had the lowest, with a mean of 4.9% (1.2%-17.7%). The SRDE prevalence in Eastern countries was higher than in Western countries with 29.1% versus 18.5%. Anaerobic sports had almost double the prevalence of SRDE 37.9% (27.0%-50.2%) compared to aerobic sports 19.6% (15.2%-25%). Gymnastics sports had the highest SRDE prevalence rate, with 41.5% (30.4%-53.6%) while outdoor sports showed the lowest at 15.4% (11.6%-20.2%). Among various tools used to assess SRDE, the three-factor eating questionnaire yielded the highest SRDE rate 73.0% (60.1%-82.8%). Meta-regression analyses showed that female sex, older age, and higher BMI (all p < 0.01) are associated with higher prevalence rates of SRDE.
The outcome of this review suggests that factors specific to the sport affect eating behaviors throughout an athlete's life. As a result, one in five athletes run the risk of developing an eating disorder. Culture-specific and sport-specific diagnostic tools need to be developed and increased attention paid to nutritional deficiencies in athletes.
本荟萃分析的目的是根据现有文献提供运动员自我报告的饮食失调(SRDE)的合并患病率估计,并确定其发生的风险因素。
在十个学术数据库中,进行了从数据库建立到2024年1月7日的电子检索。使用经过验证的自我报告筛查量表得分达到或高于预定临界值的运动员比例来确定饮食失调(DE)。还按国家、文化和研究量表进行了亚组分析。年龄、体重指数(BMI)和性别被视为相关因素。
177项研究(132篇出版物)中70957名运动员的SRDE平均患病率为19.23%(17.04%;21.62%),I=97.4%,τ=0.8990,Cochran's Q p值=0。澳大利亚SRDE运动员的比例最高,平均为57.1%(36.0%-75.8%),而冰岛最低,平均为4.9%(1.2%-17.7%)。东方国家的SRDE患病率高于西方国家,分别为29.1%和18.5%。与有氧运动的19.6%(15.2%-25%)相比,无氧运动的SRDE患病率几乎高出一倍,为37.9%(27.0%-50.2%)。体操运动的SRDE患病率最高,为41.5%(30.4%-53.6%)而户外运动的患病率最低,为15.4%(11.6%-20.2%)。在用于评估SRDE的各种工具中,三因素饮食问卷得出的SRDE率最高,为73.0%(60.1%-82.8%)。Meta回归分析表明,女性、年龄较大和BMI较高(所有p<0.01)与SRDE的较高患病率相关。
本综述结果表明,运动特有的因素会影响运动员一生的饮食行为。因此,五分之一的运动员有患饮食失调症的风险。需要开发针对特定文化和特定运动的诊断工具,并更多关注运动员的营养缺乏问题。