Matthews Abigail, Lin Jessica, Jhe Grace, Peters Triinu, Sim Leslie, Hebebrand Johannes
Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Division of Adolescent and Transition Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2024 Apr;57(4):983-992. doi: 10.1002/eat.24188. Epub 2024 Mar 8.
Anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN are conceptualized as distinct illnesses, despite similar characteristics and sequelae. Whereas DSM-5 differentiates youth with AN and atypical AN by the presence of clinical 'underweight' (i.e., 5th BMI percentile for age-and-sex (BMI%)), we hypothesized that using this weight cut-off to discern diagnoses creates a skewed distribution for premorbid weight.
Participants included hospitalized youth with AN (n = 165, 43.1%) and atypical AN (n = 218, 56.9%). Frequency analyses and chi-square tests assessed the distribution of premorbid BMI z-scores (BMIz) for diagnosis. Non-parametric Spearman correlations and Stepwise Linear regressions examined relationships between premorbid BMIz, admission BMIz, and weight loss in kg.
Premorbid BMIz distributions differed significantly for diagnosis (p < .001), with an underrepresentation of 'overweight/obesity' (i.e., BMI% ≥ 85th) in AN. Despite commensurate weight loss in AN and atypical AN, patients with premorbid 'overweight/obesity' were 8.31 times more likely to have atypical AN than patients with premorbid BMI% < 85th. Premorbid BMIz explained 57% and 39% of the variance in admission BMIz and weight loss, respectively.
Findings support a homogenous model of AN and atypical AN, with weight loss predicted by premorbid BMI in both illnesses. Accordingly, premorbid BMI and weight loss (versus presenting BMI) may better denote the presence of an AN-like phenotype across the weight spectrum. Findings also suggest that differentiating diagnoses with BMI% < 5th requires that youth with higher BMIs lose disproportionately more weight for an AN diagnosis. This is problematic given unique treatment barriers experienced in atypical AN.
Anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN are considered distinct conditions in youth, with differential diagnosis hinging upon a presenting weight status of 'underweight' (i.e., BMI percentile for age-and-sex (BMI%) < 5th). In our study, youth with premorbid 'overweight/obesity' (BMI% ≥ 85th) disproportionately remained above this threshold, despite similar weight loss. Coupled with prior evidence for commensurate characteristics and sequelae in both diagnoses, we propose that DSM-5 differentiation of AN and atypical AN inadvertently reinforces weight stigma and may contribute to treatment disparities in atypical AN.
神经性厌食症(AN)和非典型神经性厌食症被视为不同的疾病,尽管它们有相似的特征和后遗症。虽然《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第5版(DSM - 5)通过临床“体重过轻”(即年龄和性别的第5百分位体重指数(BMI%))来区分患有AN和非典型AN的青少年,但我们假设使用这个体重临界值来辨别诊断会导致病前体重分布出现偏差。
参与者包括住院的患有AN的青少年(n = 165,43.1%)和非典型AN的青少年(n = 218,56.9%)。频率分析和卡方检验评估了病前BMI z分数(BMIz)用于诊断的分布情况。非参数斯皮尔曼相关性分析和逐步线性回归分析研究了病前BMIz、入院时BMIz和体重减轻千克数之间的关系。
病前BMIz分布因诊断不同而有显著差异(p <.001),在AN中“超重/肥胖”(即BMI%≥第85百分位)的比例不足。尽管AN和非典型AN的体重减轻程度相当,但病前“超重/肥胖”的患者患非典型AN的可能性是病前BMI% < 85th的患者的8.31倍。病前BMIz分别解释了入院时BMIz和体重减轻差异的57%和39%。
研究结果支持AN和非典型AN的同质模型,两种疾病的体重减轻都可由病前BMI预测。因此,病前BMI和体重减轻(相对于就诊时的BMI)可能更能表明在整个体重范围内存在类似AN的表型。研究结果还表明,用BMI% < 第5百分位来区分诊断要求BMI较高的青少年为了诊断AN需要不成比例地多减轻体重。考虑到非典型AN中存在的独特治疗障碍,这是个问题。
神经性厌食症(AN)和非典型AN在青少年中被视为不同的病症,鉴别诊断取决于就诊时的“体重过轻”状态(即年龄和性别的BMI百分位(BMI%)<第5百分位)。在我们的研究中,病前“超重/肥胖”(BMI%≥第85百分位)的青少年尽管体重减轻程度相似,但仍不成比例地高于这个临界值。再加上先前关于两种诊断具有相应特征和后遗症的证据,我们认为DSM - 5对AN和非典型AN的区分无意中强化了体重歧视,可能导致非典型AN的治疗差异。