| Literature DB >> 27462898 |
Marcelle Barrueco Costa1,2, Tamara Melnik1,2.
Abstract
Eating disorders are psychiatric conditions originated from and perpetuated by individual, family and sociocultural factors. The psychosocial approach to treatment and prevention of relapse is crucial. To present an overview of the scientific evidence on effectiveness of psychosocial interventions in treatment of eating disorders. All systematic reviews published by the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - Cochrane Library on the topic were included. Afterwards, as from the least recent date of these reviews (2001), an additional search was conducted at PubMed with sensitive search strategy and with the same keywords used. A total of 101 primary studies and 30 systematic reviews (5 Cochrane systematic reviews), meta-analysis, guidelines or narrative reviews of literature were included. The main outcomes were: symptomatic remission, body image, cognitive distortion, psychiatric comorbidity, psychosocial functioning and patient satisfaction. The cognitive behavioral approach was the most effective treatment, especially for bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder and the night eating syndrome. For anorexia nervosa, the family approach showed greater effectiveness. Other effective approaches were interpersonal psychotherapy, dialectic behavioral therapy, support therapy and self-help manuals. Moreover, there was an increasing number of preventive and promotional approaches that addressed individual, family and social risk factors, being promising for the development of positive self-image and self-efficacy. Further studies are required to evaluate the impact of multidisciplinary approaches on all eating disorders, as well as the cost-effectiveness of some effective modalities, such as the cognitive behavioral therapy. RESUMO Transtornos alimentares são doenças psiquiátricas originadas de e perpetuadas por fatores individuais, familiares e socioculturais. A abordagem psicossocial é essencial para o tratamento e a prevenção de recaídas. Apresentar uma visão geral das evidências científicas sobre a efetividade das intervenções psicossociais no tratamento de transtornos alimentares. Foram incluídas todas as revisões sistemáticas publicadas no Banco de Dados de Revisões Sistemáticas da Cochrane Library. Posteriormente, a partir da data menos recente destas revisões (2001), realizou-se uma busca adicional no PubMed, com estratégia de busca sensibilizada e com os mesmos descritores utilizados antes. No total, foram incluídos 101 estudos primários e 30 revisões sistemáticas (5 revisões sistemáticas da Cochrane), metanálises, diretrizes ou revisões narrativas da literatura. Os principais desfechos foram remissão de sintomas, imagem corporal, distorção cognitiva, comorbidade psiquiátrica, funcionamento psicossocial e satisfação do paciente. A abordagem cognitivo-comportamental foi o tratamento mais efetivo, principalmente para bulimia nervosa, transtorno da compulsão alimentar periódica e síndrome do comer noturno. Para anorexia nervosa, a abordagem familiar demonstrou maior efetividade. Outras abordagens efetivas foram psicoterapia interpessoal, terapia comportamental dialética, terapia de apoio e manuais de autoajuda. Além disso, houve um número crescente de abordagens preventivas e promocionais que contemplaram fatores de risco individuais, familiares e sociais, sendo promissoras para o desenvolvimento da autoimagem positiva e autoeficácia. São necessários mais estudos que avaliem o impacto de abordagens multidisciplinares em todos transtornos alimentares, além da relação custo-efetividade de algumas modalidades efetivas, como a terapia cognitivo-comportamental.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27462898 PMCID: PMC4943360 DOI: 10.1590/S1679-45082016RW3120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Cochrane systematic reviews for treatment of eating disorders
| Systematic review | Update | Number of studies | Number of participants | Studies |
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| Anorexia nervosa | ||||
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| Family therapy for those diagnosed with anorexia nervosa. Fisher et al.(6) | July 31, 2008 | 13 | 638 | Hall, 1987; Russell, 1987; Crisp, 1991; le Grange, 1992; Robin, 1999; Eisler, 2000; Espina, 2000; Geist, 2000; Dare, 2001; Whitney unpublished, 2001; Ball, 2004; Lock, 2005; Rausch, 2006 |
| Individual psychotherapy in the outpatient treatment of adults with anorexia nervosa. Hay et al.(7) | Feb 11, 2008 | 7 | 261 | Channon, 1989; Treasure, 1995; Serfaty, 1999; Bachar, 1999; Dare, 2001; Bergh, 2002; McIntosh, 2005 |
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| Bulimia nervosa | ||||
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| Antidepressants | Aug 12, 2001 | 7 | 343 | Mitchell, 1990; Fichter, 1991; Agras, 1992; Leitenberg, 1994; Russell, 1995b; Goldbloom, 1996; Walsh, 1997 |
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| Bulimia nervosa/binging | ||||
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| Psychological treatments for bulimia nervosa and binging. Hay et al.(9) | May 31, 2007 | 48 | 3,054 | Kirkley, 1985; Ordman, 1985; Wilson, 1986; Fairburn, 1986; Lee, 1986; Laessle, 1987; Freeman, 1988; Leitenberg, 1988; Bossert, 1989; Agras, 1989; Telch, 1990; Laessle, 1991; Fairburn, 1991; Wilson, 1991; Wolf, 1992; Griffiths, 1993; Garner, 1993; Wilfley, 1993; Thackwray, 1993; Agras, 1994; Cooper, 1995; Porzelius, 1995; Treasure, 1996; Walsh, 1997; Bulik, 1998; Peterson, 1998; Esplen, 1998; Carter, 1998; Bachar, 1999; Agras, 2000; Loeb, 2000; Nauta, 2000; Safer, 2001; Hsu, 2001; Kenardy, 2001; Telch, 2001; Wilfley, 2002; Sundgot-Borgen, 2002; Palmer, 2002; Durand, 2003; Ghaderi, 2003; Gorin, 2003; Carter, 2003; Bailer, 2003; Banasiak, 2005; Burton, 2006; Ljotsson, 2007; Munsch, 2007 |
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| Eating disorders | ||||
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| Self-help and guided self-help for eating disorders. Perkins et al.(10) | May 23, 2006 | 15 | 1,191 | Huon, 1985; Treasure, 1996; Thiels, 1998; Carter, 1998; Loeb, 2000; Mitchell, 2001; Palmer, 2002; Carter, 2003; Ghaderi, 2003; Durand, 2003; Walsh, 2004; Bailer, 2004; Grilo, 2005a; Grilo, 2005b; Banasiak, 2005 |
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| Total | 90 | 5,487 | ||
Results of searches
| Type | The Cochrane Library | PubMed (Since 2001) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary studies | 0 | 101 | 101* |
| Systematic reviews, meta-analysis, guidelines or literature reviews | 5 | 25 | 30 |
* Six of these 101 studies were also included in the Cochrane systematic reviews (Dare, 2001; Bergh, 2002; Lock, 2005; Mc Intosh, 2005; Rausch, 2006; Munsch, 2007).
Table of findings
| Primary studies | |||
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| Anorexia nervosa | Bulimia nervosa | Binge eating disorder | Eating disorders |
| 19 | 21 | 26 | 35 |
| Total | 101 | ||
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| 5 (2 CDSR) | 4 (2 CDSR) | 3 | 18 (1 CDSR) |
| Total | 30 | ||
CDSR: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.
What works on psychosocial interventions for eating disorders
| Anorexia nervosa |
| Maudsley model of family therapy for adolescents |
| Bulimia nervosa |
| CBT-BN for adults |
| Interpersonal psychotherapy |
| CBT-based self-help |
| CBT + fluoxetine |
| Eating disorders |
| CBT-based self-help |
| Enhanced cognitive behavior therapy/transdi agnostic CBT (CBT-E) |
| Binge eating disorder |
| CBT-BED for adults |
| CBT-based self-help |
| Interpersonal psychotherapy |
| Dialectical behavior therapy DBT-BED |
CBT-BN: cognitive behavioral therapy for bulimia nervosa; CBT: cognitive behavioral therapy; CBT-E: enhanced cognitive behavior therapy; DBT-BED: dialectical behavior therapy for binge eating disorder.
What may work on psychosocial interventions for eating disorders
| Anorexia nervosa |
| Family therapy for adolescents |
| Supportive psychoterapy |
| CBT for relapse prevention in adults |
| CBT-E for hospitalized adults |
| Focal psychoanalysis for adults |
| CBT + fluoxetine |
| Bulimia nervosa |
| Internet-based CBT |
| Manual-based CBT via telemedicine |
| Stepped care + CBT |
| Emotional and social mind training group |
| Eating disorders |
| Internet-delivered program for weight loss and eating disorders attitudes/behaviors in adolescents |
| Readiness and motivation therapy |
| CBT for weight management and eating disorders in children and adolescents |
| Interventions for treatment and prevention of body image and eating problems |
| Cognitive dissonance-based interventions |
| Psychoeducational training program in affection regulation |
| Dialectical behaviour therapy for concurrent eating disorders and substance abuse disorders |
| Short stepwise CBT for low self-esteem |
| Media literacy programs |
| Identity intervention programme to build new positive self-schemes |
| Children’s picture book to promote positive body image in young children |
| Mindfulness-based interventions |
| Binge eating disorder |
| Self-help based CBT |
| CBT delivery for overweight individuals with BED |
| Brief motivational interventions + self-help |
| Behavioural weight loss treatment |
| Combined treatments (CBT + medications – fluoxetine, topiramate, sertraline, orlistat) |
CBT: Cognitive behavioral therapy; CBT-E: enhanced cognitive behavior therapy; BED: binge eating disorder.
Insufficient evidence of psychosocial interventions in eating disorders
| Anorexia nervosa |
| Maudsley Model of Family Therapy for adults |
| Exposure therapy intervention focused on meal consumption |
| Bulimia nervosa |
| Appetite-focused dialectical behavior therapy |
| Eating disorder |
| Multidisciplinary care for all eating disorders in primary care |
| Longitudinal effects of media exposure of eating disorders symptoms |
| Binge eating disorder |
| Abstinence from binge eating and permanent weight loss |