Mannan Haider, Touyz Stephen, Hay Phillipa
THRI, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, NSW, Australia.
Inside Out Institute, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
Eat Weight Disord. 2025 Mar 13;30(1):24. doi: 10.1007/s40519-025-01732-5.
The association of night eating (NE) and NE syndrome (NES) with dysfunctional eating behaviors, mental health and quality-of-life outcomes has been little explored in the general population. The objective of this study was to explore this for dysfunctional eating behaviors: binge-eating, use of purging, dietary restriction, use of medication to control weight; mental health: anxiety/depression; and quality-of-life outcomes: mental and physical health-related quality of life (M/PHRQoL). NE captured whether in the past 3 months, the respondents had any episodes of waking from sleep and eating, or episodes of eating a very large amount of food after evening meal excluding any such events at social gatherings or travelling overseas on a night flight or because of work shifts. NES was defined by at least weekly episodes of NE with 'a lot' of distress.
In 2017, 2977 adults from randomly selected households in South Australia were interviewed. Analyses for bivariate association were conducted using weighted tetrachoric and weighted polychoric correlations, and ordinal and binary logistic models, to determine the association between current (3 months) NE or NES as an outcome, and binge-eating, use of purging, dietary restriction, use of medication to control weight, anxiety/depression, mental and physical health-related quality of life (M/PHRQoL) as predictors after controlling for age, sex, and body weight. All analyses adjusted for design effect by stratified cluster sampling.
Ordinal logistic regression found significantly higher odds of episodes of NE with binge-eating (OR = 1.756, 95% CI 1.527-2.020, p < 0.001), and significantly lower odds with increased MHRQoL (OR = 0.948, 95% 0.921-0.975, p < 0.001) and increased PHRQoL (OR = 0.976, 95% CI 0.966-0.986, p < 0.001). Binary logistic regression found significantly higher odds of NES with binge-eating (OR = 2.62, p < 0.001), and restrictive dieting (OR = 2.491, 95% CI 1.647-3.769, p < 0.01), and significantly lower odds with MHRQoL (OR = 0.913, 95% CI 0.879-0.948, p < 0.001).
Those with a history of binge-eating have higher likelihood of having both NE and NES which are also increased for the former in those with poorer MHRQoL and PHRQoL, and for the latter in only those with poorer MHRQoL. Revisions of diagnostic schemes may consider these findings in the context of delineation of boundaries between eating disorder syndromes.
Multivariate binary logistic regression analyses found there were significantly higher odds of having night eating syndrome in association with binge eating and restrictive dieting and significantly lower odds of night eating syndrome in association with increases in MHRQoL. These results support the Muscatello et al. (Aust N Z J Psychiatry 56:120-1362022, 2022) review noting associations and overlap between night eating syndrome and other eating disorders characterized by recurrent binge-eating, and the reported associations with disorders of restrictive eating. As both night eating and binge-eating are symptoms of over or excessive eating this was not unexpected. However, the findings at a diagnostic level in this study did also support research that has found overlap between night eating syndrome and disorders characterized by restrictive eating and/or purging behaviors. By "at a diagnostic level" what we meant was when at a level associated with marked distress, as the DSM requires either functional impairment or psychological distress to be present as a defining feature of any mental health disorder and distress is a defining feature of NES (American Psychiatric Association 2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5. Arlington, American Psychiatric Publishing Inc.). MHRQoL rather than PHRQoL was associated with night eating syndrome. More research is required to confirm this result and it does not negate the clinical importance of consideration of physical health status of people with night eating syndrome (Muscatello et al. Aust N Z J Psychiatry 56:120-136, 2022; Sakthivel et al. Eat Weight Disorders-Stud Anorexia Bulimia Obes 28:77, 2023). This study did not find that those who have perceived subjective anxiety/depression have significantly higher odds of NE as well as NES. This may have been because the present study did not have an assessment of depression or anxiety using a validated instrument, but rather a broad self-reported experience of current perceived anxiety and/or depression. Other studies have been also more often conduced in clinical populations which may be expected to have higher rates of mental health comorbidities (Muscatello et al. Aust N Z J Psychiatry 56:120-136, 2022) than this general population sample.
To our knowledge this is the first study in a representative adult general population examining the relationships between night eating (NE), NE syndrome (NES) and binge eating, purging, strict dieting and general anxiety or general depression. Those with a history of binge eating and having poorer MHRQoL and PHRQoL have higher likelihoods of experiencing NE. The same associations of these factors except for that of PHRQoL were found with NES. Revisions of diagnostic schemes may consider these findings in the context of delineation of boundaries between eating disorder syndromes. As the nature of overeating is defined more broadly in NES than in other eating disorders it is important to explore all forms of overeating when undertaking estimates of the population prevalence and burden of eating disorder.
在普通人群中,夜间进食(NE)和夜间进食综合征(NES)与功能失调性饮食行为、心理健康及生活质量之间的关联鲜有研究。本研究的目的是探讨NE和NES与以下方面的关系:功能失调性饮食行为,如暴饮暴食、清除行为、饮食限制、使用药物控制体重;心理健康,如焦虑/抑郁;生活质量,如与身心健康相关的生活质量(M/PHRQoL)。NE的定义为在过去3个月内,受访者是否有从睡眠中醒来进食的情况,或晚餐后进食大量食物的情况,但不包括社交聚会、夜间航班出国旅行或因轮班工作等情况。NES的定义为至少每周出现一次NE且伴有“很多”痛苦。
2017年,对南澳大利亚随机抽取家庭中的2977名成年人进行了访谈。使用加权四分相关和加权多分相关,以及有序和二元逻辑模型进行双变量关联分析,以确定在控制年龄、性别和体重后,当前(3个月)的NE或NES作为结果与暴饮暴食、清除行为、饮食限制、使用药物控制体重、焦虑/抑郁、与身心健康相关的生活质量(M/PHRQoL)作为预测因素之间的关联。所有分析均通过分层整群抽样对设计效应进行了调整。
有序逻辑回归发现,NE发作与暴饮暴食的几率显著更高(OR = 1.756,95% CI 1.527 - 2.020,p < 0.001),而与MHRQoL升高(OR = 0.948,95% 0.921 - 0.975,p < 0.001)和PHRQoL升高(OR = 0.976,95% CI 0.966 - 0.986,p < 0.001)的几率显著更低。二元逻辑回归发现,NES与暴饮暴食的几率显著更高(OR = 2.62,p < 0.001),与限制性节食的几率显著更高(OR = 2.491,95% CI 1.647 - 3.769,p < 0.01),而与MHRQoL的几率显著更低(OR = 0.913,95% CI 0.879 - 0.948,p < 0.001)。
有暴饮暴食史的人同时出现NE和NES的可能性更高,对于前者,在MHRQoL和PHRQoL较差的人群中几率增加,而对于后者,仅在MHRQoL较差的人群中几率增加。诊断方案的修订可能需要在界定饮食失调综合征之间的界限时考虑这些发现。
多变量二元逻辑回归分析发现,与暴饮暴食和限制性节食相关的夜间进食综合征几率显著更高,而与MHRQoL升高相关的夜间进食综合征几率显著更低。这些结果支持了马斯卡特洛等人(《澳大利亚和新西兰精神病学杂志》56:120 - 136,2022年)的综述,该综述指出夜间进食综合征与其他以反复暴饮暴食为特征的饮食失调之间的关联和重叠,以及与限制性饮食失调的报道关联。由于夜间进食和暴饮暴食都是过度进食的症状,这并不意外。然而,本研究在诊断层面的发现也确实支持了一些研究,这些研究发现夜间进食综合征与以限制性饮食和/或清除行为为特征的疾病之间存在重叠。我们所说的“在诊断层面”是指在与明显痛苦相关的层面,因为《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》要求功能损害或心理痛苦作为任何精神健康障碍的定义特征,而痛苦是NES的定义特征之一(美国精神病学协会,2013年)。《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》:DSM - 5。阿灵顿,美国精神病学出版社)。与夜间进食综合征相关的是MHRQoL而非PHRQoL。需要更多研究来证实这一结果,并且这并不否定考虑夜间进食综合征患者身体健康状况的临床重要性(马斯卡特洛等人,《澳大利亚和新西兰精神病学杂志》56:120 - 136,2022年;萨克蒂韦尔等人,《饮食与体重失调 - 厌食症、贪食症和肥胖症研究》28:77,2023年)。本研究未发现那些主观感知到焦虑/抑郁的人出现NE和NES的几率显著更高。这可能是因为本研究没有使用经过验证的工具评估抑郁或焦虑,而是采用了对当前感知到的焦虑和/或抑郁的广泛自我报告经历。其他研究也更多地在临床人群中进行,而临床人群的心理健康合并症发生率可能高于本普通人群样本(马斯卡特洛等人,《澳大利亚和新西兰精神病学杂志》56:120 - 136,2022年)。
据我们所知,这是第一项在具有代表性的成年普通人群中研究夜间进食(NE)、夜间进食综合征(NES)与暴饮暴食、清除行为、严格节食以及一般焦虑或一般抑郁之间关系的研究。有暴饮暴食史且MHRQoL和PHRQoL较差的人出现NE的可能性更高。除了PHRQoL外,这些因素与NES的关联相同。诊断方案的修订可能需要在界定饮食失调综合征之间的界限时考虑这些发现。由于NES中暴饮暴食的定义比其他饮食失调更广泛,因此在估计饮食失调的人群患病率和负担时,探索所有形式的暴饮暴食非常重要。