4.2 Article

Early onset anorexia nervosa: Multidisciplinary hospital intervention in a 1-year follow-up study

Journal

EARLY INTERVENTION IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eip.13392

Keywords

adolescence; childhood; early onset anorexia nervosa; eating disorders; multidisciplinary hospital treatment

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aims to provide naturalistic data on early onset anorexia nervosa (EOAN) and found that EOAN patients received specific interventions and achieved better outcomes at discharge and follow-up compared to adolescent-onset AN (AOAN) patients.
BackgroundEarly onset anorexia nervosa (EOAN) is a subclassification of AN, defined by an onset before 14 years, and characterized by specific demographic, neuropsychological, and clinical features. The present study aims to provide naturalistic data on a wide sample with EOAN, focusing on psychopathological and nutritional changes occurring in the context of a multidisciplinary hospital intervention, as well as the rate of rehospitalizations during a 1-year follow-up. MethodObservational, naturalistic study adopting standardized criteria for EOAN (onset before 14 years). EOAN were compared to adolescent-onset AN (AOAN) patients (onset after 14 years) by demographic, clinical, psycho and treatment variables. Psychopathology was assessed at admission (T0) and discharge (T1) with self-administered psychiatric scales for children and adolescents (SAFA) subtests for Eating Disorders, Anxiety, Depression, Somatic symptoms, and Obsessions. Then, potential differences of T0-T1 changes in psychopathological and nutritional variables were assessed. Finally, rates of re-hospitalizations at 1-year post-discharge follow-up were assessed with Kaplan-Meier analyses. ResultsTwo-hundred thirty-eight AN individuals (EOAN = 85) were enrolled. When compared to AOAN, EOAN participants were more frequently males (X2 = 5.360, p = .021), more frequently received nasogastric-tube feeding (X2 = 10.313, p = .001), and risperidone (X2 = 19.463, p < .001), obtained a greater T0-T1 improvement in body-mass index percentage (F[1.229] = 15.104, p < .001, eta 2 = 0.030), with higher 1-year freedom from re-hospitalization (hazard ratio, 0.47; Log-rank: X2 = 4.758, p = .029). ConclusionIn this study, describing the broadest EOAN sample available in literature so far, EOAN patients received specific interventions and obtained better outcomes at discharge and follow-up when compared to AOAN. Longitudinal, matched studies are required.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available