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Central coherence and set-shifting between nonunderweight eating disorders and anorexia nervosa: A systematic review and meta-analysis

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS
卷 54, 期 3, 页码 229-243

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eat.23430

关键词

anorexia nervosa; binge‐ eating disorder; bulimia nervosa; central coherence; cognitive remediation therapy; executive functioning; nonunderweight eating disorders; set‐ shifting

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This systematic review and meta-analysis compared central coherence and set-shifting inefficiencies between different types of eating disorder patients, finding that individuals with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa showed significantly poorer performance compared to healthy controls, while those with binge-eating disorder did not exhibit significant differences. Therefore, individuals with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa may benefit from adjunctive interventions such as cognitive remediation therapy to address these inefficiencies.
Objective This systematic review and meta-analysis compared previously documented inefficiencies in central coherence and set-shifting between people with nonunderweight eating disorders (bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorder) and people with anorexia nervosa. Method We performed random-effects meta-analyses on 16 studies (1,112 participants) for central coherence and 38 studies (3,505 participants) for set-shifting. Random effects meta-regressions were used to test whether the effect sizes for people with nonunderweight eating disorders were significantly different from the effect sizes for people with anorexia nervosa. Results People with anorexia nervosa (Hedge's g = -0.53, 95% CIs: -0.80, -0.27, p < .001) and bulimia nervosa (Hedge's g = -0.70, 95% CIs: -1.14, -0.25, p = .002), but not binge-eating disorder, had significantly poorer central coherence than healthy controls. Similarly, people with anorexia nervosa (Hedge's g = -0.38, 95% CIs: -0.50, -0.26, p < .001) and bulimia nervosa (Hedge's g = -0.55, 95% CIs: -0.81, -0.29, p < .001), but not binge-eating disorder, had significantly poorer set-shifting than healthy controls. The effect sizes for people with nonunderweight eating disorders did not significantly differ from those for people with anorexia nervosa. Discussion Our meta-analysis was underpowered to make definitive judgments about people with binge-eating disorder. However, we found that people with bulimia nervosa clearly have central coherence and set-shifting inefficiencies which do not significantly differ from those observed in people with anorexia nervosa. Clinically, this suggests that people with bulimia nervosa might benefit from adjunctive approaches to address these inefficiencies, such as cognitive remediation therapy.

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