4.7 Article

Body Mass Index Specifiers in Anorexia Nervosa: Anything below the Extreme?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030542

Keywords

eating disorders; anxiety; depression; body image; outcome; hospitalization

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This study examines the validity of BMI specifiers in inpatients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and their contribution to predicting hospitalization outcomes. The findings suggest that current BMI classifications may not be valid indicators for severe inpatients with AN and that extremely low BMI subgroups do not represent a clinically distinct group.
The validity of body mass index (BMI) specifiers for anorexia nervosa (AN) has been questioned, but their applicability to inpatients with extremely low BMIs and their prognostic validity are currently unknown. Therefore, we designed this study: (a) to test current BMI specifiers in severe inpatients; (b) to explore a very extreme specifier (VE-AN; BMI <= 13.5); and (c) to verify inpatients' hospitalization outcome according to BMI severity. We enrolled 168 inpatients with AN completing the following: Eating disorder Examination-Questionnaire, Eating Disorder Inventory-2, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Beck Depression Inventory, Body Shape Questionnaire, and EQ-5D-VAS. According to the current BMI classification, those with a BMI < 15 versus those with non-extreme AN (NE-AN, BMI >= 15) differed on all measures but the quality of life with those with NE-AN reporting more impaired scores on all measures. Adopting an exploratory classification comparing VE-AN, extreme AN (E-AN, BMI = 13.6-14.99), and NE-AN, no differences emerged between VE-AN and E-AN, while those with NE-AN reported significantly more impaired scores on all variables while the quality of life again did not differ across groups. Hospitalization outcome improved for all groups, independently of BMI. Groups differed concerning the length of stay that mirrored BMI severity and impacted also hospitalization outcomes. Taken together, our data support the lack of validity of current BMI specifiers in AN, even in the acute setting. Moreover, the exploratory subgroup of patients with BMI <= 13.5 did not delineate a clinically different group.

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