4.6 Article

Premenarchal anorexia nervosa: clinical features, psychopharmacological interventions, and rehospitalization analysis in a 1-year follow-up, controlled study

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 182, Issue 6, Pages 2855-2864

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00431-023-04960-y

Keywords

Premenarchal; Prepubertal; Menarche; Anorexia nervosa; Eating disorders; Childhood

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examines premenarchal anorexia nervosa (AN) patients and compares them to postmenarchal AN patients. The study found differences between premenarchal and postmenarchal patients in terms of depression levels, luteinizing hormone levels, and antidepressant treatment. The study also identified predictive factors for rehospitalization at 1-year follow-up.
Premenarchal anorexia nervosa (AN) represents a specific subtype of AN, defined by an onset before the menarche in females, involving unique endocrine and prognostic features. The scarce data on this condition lack case-control and follow-up studies. This is a case-control, observational, naturalistic study, involving participants with premenarchal AN (premenarchal girls presenting to the study center newly diagnosed with AN) treated with a multidisciplinary hospital intervention, compared to postmenarchal AN individuals on clinical, endocrine, psychopathological, and treatment variables. The rate of rehospitalizations on a 1-year follow-up after discharge and respective prognostic factors were assessed with a Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox regression model. The sample included 234 AN participants (43, 18.4% with premenarchal and 191, 81.6% with postmenarchal AN). When compared to postmenarchal, premenarchal AN individuals presented with lower depressive scores (Self-Administered Psychiatric Scales for Children and Adolescents (SAFA)) (U = 1387.0, p = 0.010) and lower luteinizing hormone (LH) levels (U = 3056.0, p = 0.009) and were less frequently treated with antidepressants (X-2 = 5.927, p = 0.015). A significant predictive model of the risk of rehospitalization (X-2 = 19.192, p = 0.004) identified a higher age at admission (B = 0.522, p = 0.020) and a day-hospital (vs inpatient) treatment (B = 3957, p = 0.007) as predictive factors for rehospitalization at 1-year, independent from the menarchal status.Conclusion: This study reports the clinical and treatment characteristics of premenarchal AN in one of the largest samples available in the current literature. Specific clinical features and prognostic factors for rehospitalization at 1-year follow-up were identified. Future studies should longitudinally investigate treatment-dependent modifications in endocrine and psychopathological measures in this population.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available