Estrem Hayley H, Pederson Jaclyn L, Dodrill Pamela, Romeo Cuyler, Thompson Kelsey, Thomas Jennifer J, Zucker Nancy, Noel Richard, Zickgraf Hana, Menzel Jessie, Lukens Colleen T, Goday Praveen S, MacLaughlin Sarah, Sharp William G
School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina, USA.
Feeding Matters, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.
Int J Eat Disord. 2025 Mar;58(3):489-499. doi: 10.1002/eat.24349. Epub 2024 Dec 16.
As diagnoses covering dysfunctional feeding and eating in pediatrics, avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) and pediatric feeding disorder (PFD) contain inherent areas of overlap in their diagnostic criteria. Areas of overlap include criteria regarding nutritional consequences associated with feeding/eating dysfunction and shared emphasis on possible psychosocial impairment associated with restricted food intake. Complicating the differential diagnosis process is a lack of guidance regarding when the two conditions occur independently, co-qualify, and/or transition into the other. Feeding Matters' Research Initiatives Task Force planned and hosted a PFD-ARFID consensus meeting, with the aim of reaching a consensus regarding diagnostic clarity on PFD and ARFID.
Criteria for participation focused on US residents who either: (a) served as an author on the ARFID workgroup or PFD consensus papers, or (b) provided community representation via board or committee roles. The consensus process followed three stages: prework, the meeting, and post-work/writing. Twelve participants were present for the meeting, with 14 involved in pre- and post-work/writing.
The final panel included four psychologists representing the ARFID community and seven multidisciplinary members representing PFD's four domains (medical, nutrition, skill, and psychosocial) plus a Zero-to-Three community representative and two representatives from Feeding Matters. Results yielded 10 consensus statements and visuals to support the consensus statements.
The consensus process and results underscore an ongoing need to improve diagnostic systems and reinforce calls for strengthening healthcare expertise for both PFD and ARFID. Community-based participatory research is recommended to advance both diagnoses and reduce ambiguity in practice settings.
作为儿科中涵盖功能性喂养和进食功能障碍的诊断,回避/限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)和儿科喂养障碍(PFD)在其诊断标准中存在内在的重叠领域。重叠领域包括与喂养/进食功能障碍相关的营养后果标准,以及对与食物摄入受限相关的可能心理社会损害的共同强调。使鉴别诊断过程复杂化的是,缺乏关于这两种情况何时独立发生、共同符合标准和/或转变为另一种情况的指导。喂养问题研究倡议特别工作组计划并主办了一次PFD-ARFID共识会议,目的是就PFD和ARFID的诊断清晰度达成共识。
参与标准侧重于以下美国居民:(a)担任ARFID工作组或PFD共识文件的作者,或(b)通过董事会或委员会角色提供社区代表。共识过程分为三个阶段:前期工作、会议和后期工作/撰写。12名参与者出席了会议,14人参与了前期和后期工作/撰写。
最终小组包括四名代表ARFID社区的心理学家和七名代表PFD四个领域(医学、营养、技能和心理社会)的多学科成员,以及一名零至三岁社区代表和两名来自喂养问题组织的代表。结果产生了10条共识声明和支持这些共识声明的可视化材料。
共识过程和结果强调了持续改进诊断系统的必要性,并再次呼吁加强对PFD和ARFID的医疗专业知识。建议开展基于社区的参与性研究,以推进这两种诊断并减少实践环境中的模糊性。