Flynn Michaela, Campbell Iain C, Schmidt Ulrike
Centre for Research in Eating and Weight Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK.
Centre for Research in Eating and Weight Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK; and Outpatient Eating Disorder Service, Maudsley Hospital, South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
BJPsych Open. 2024 Jun 6;10(4):e118. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2024.54.
Binge eating disorder (BED) is a common and disabling condition, typically presenting with multiple psychiatric and obesity-related comorbidities. Evidence-based treatments are either resource-intensive (psychotherapies) or have side-effects (medications): these achieve remission in around 50% of cases. Novel treatments are needed.
This randomised sham-controlled trial aimed to assess feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of at-home, self-administered transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and attention bias modification training (ABMT) in adults with binge eating disorder.
Eighty-two participants with binge eating disorder were randomly allocated to real tDCS with ABMT, sham tDCS with ABMT, ABMT only or waitlist control. Intervention groups received ten sessions of their allocated treatment over 2-3 weeks. tDCS (2 mA, 20 min) was self-administered using a bilateral (anode right/cathode left) montage targeting the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Outcomes were assessed at baseline, post-treatment and 6-week follow-up.
Prespecified feasibility criteria (recruitment ≥80 participants and retention rate ≥75%) were exceeded, and treatment completion rates were high (98.7%). All interventions reduced binge eating episodes, eating disorder symptoms and related psychopathology between baseline and follow-up, relative to waitlist control (medium-to-large between-group effect sizes for change scores). Small-to-medium effect sizes for change scores favoured real tDCS with ABMT versus comparators, suggesting the verum intervention produces superior outcomes.
At-home, self-administered tDCS with ABMT is feasible and acceptable, and preliminary data on efficacy are promising. This approach could be a useful and scalable alternative or adjunct to established treatments for binge eating disorder. Confirmatory trials can, and should, be pursued.
暴饮暴食症(BED)是一种常见且使人衰弱的病症,通常伴有多种精神疾病和肥胖相关的合并症。循证治疗要么资源密集型(心理治疗),要么有副作用(药物治疗):这些治疗在约50%的病例中可实现缓解。因此需要新的治疗方法。
这项随机假对照试验旨在评估在家中自我实施的经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)和注意力偏向矫正训练(ABMT)对患有暴饮暴食症的成年人的可行性、可接受性和初步疗效。
82名患有暴饮暴食症的参与者被随机分配到接受真实tDCS联合ABMT、假tDCS联合ABMT、仅接受ABMT或等待名单对照组。干预组在2至3周内接受10次分配的治疗。tDCS(2毫安,20分钟)采用双侧(阳极在右/阴极在左)电极放置方式自我实施,靶点为背外侧前额叶皮层。在基线、治疗后和6周随访时评估结果。
超过了预先设定的可行性标准(招募≥80名参与者且保留率≥75%),治疗完成率很高(98.7%)。与等待名单对照组相比,所有干预措施在基线和随访之间均减少了暴饮暴食发作、饮食失调症状及相关精神病理学问题(变化分数的组间效应大小为中到大型)。变化分数的小到中型效应大小表明,与对照组相比,接受真实tDCS联合ABMT的治疗产生了更好的结果。
在家中自我实施的tDCS联合ABMT是可行且可接受的,初步疗效数据很有前景。这种方法可能是现有暴饮暴食症治疗方法的一种有用且可扩展的替代或辅助方法。可以且应该进行确证性试验。