| Literature DB >> 27804994 |
S Guillaume1,2, I Jaussent2, L Maimoun3,4, A Ryst1, M Seneque1,2, L Villain1, D Hamroun5, P Lefebvre6, E Renard6,7,8, Ph Courtet1,2.
Abstract
Patients with eating disorders (EDs) frequently report a history of childhood trauma (CT). We investigated whether certain subtypes of CT are associated with more severe features of EDs, independently of psychiatric comorbidity, and whether they act additively. One hundred and ninety-two patients with DSM-V-defined EDs were consecutively recruited. Five clinical characteristics were assessed: restraint, eating, shape and weight concerns on the EDE-Q, and daily functioning. CT was assessed by the childhood traumatism questionnaire. The clinical features were associated with at least one CT subtype (emotional, sexual or physical abuse, emotional neglect). Multivariate analyses adjusted for lifetime comorbid psychiatric disorders revealed that emotional abuse independently predicted higher eating, shape and weight concerns and lower daily functioning, whereas sexual and physical abuse independently predicted higher eating concern. A dose-effect relationship characterised the number of CT subtypes and the severity of the clinical features, suggesting a consistent and partly independent association between CT and more severe clinical and functional characteristics in EDs. Emotional abuse seems to have the most specific impact on ED symptoms. Last, not all CT subtypes have the same impact but they do act additively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27804994 PMCID: PMC5090200 DOI: 10.1038/srep35761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Demographic, clinical and trauma features of patients according to eating disorder type: anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), or binge-eating disorder (BED).
| Anorexia nervosaN = 102 | Bulimia nervosaN = 64 | Binge-eating disorderN = 26 | Global p | Post-hoc analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median [Min-Max] | Median [Min-Max] | Median [Min-Max] | ||||||
| Age of patient, | 22.63 [15.50–65.83] | 26.38 [17.08–63.08] | 30.75 [18.58–58.58] | 0.02 | AN < BED | |||
| Duration of the disease, | 2.83 [0.08–40.00] | 5.75 [0.42–45.83] | 5.79 [0.33–20.75] | 0.05 | ||||
| Current BMI, | 16.03 [10.04–20.14] | 21.72 [17.35–28.52] | 35.05 [16.38–50.99] | <0.0001 | AN < BN < BED | |||
| Lowest lifetime BMI | 14.80 [9.55–17.71] | 18.07 [12.02–25.28] | 22.53 [10.91–45.04] | <0.0001 | AN < BN < BED | |||
| Age at the first consultation, | 18.00 [10.00–65.00] | 19.00 [10.00–63.00] | 22.00 [13.00–52.00] | 0.25 | ||||
| Functioning Assessment Short Test | ||||||||
| Total score | 18.00 [2.00–61.00] | 21.50 [4.00–54.00] | 24.00 [9.00–48.00] | 0.50 | ||||
| Eating Disorders Examination Questionnaire | ||||||||
| Restraint | 2.80 [0.00–6.00] | 3.60 [0.00–6.00] | 1.00 [0.00–4.60] | 0.0004 | AN, BN < BED | |||
| Eating concern | 2.60 [0.00–6.00] | 4.00 [0.40–6.00] | 3.80 [1.20–6.00] | 0.0002 | AN < BN, BED | |||
| Weight concern | 3.20 [0.00–6.00] | 4.80 [1.20–6.00] | 4.80 [3.20–6.00] | <0.0001 | AN < BN, BED | |||
| Shape concern | 3.75 [0.00–6.00] | 5.38 [0.63–6.00] | 5.25 [3.75–6.00] | <0.0001 | AN < BN, BED | |||
| n | % | n | % | n | % | |||
| Educational attainment level (≥12 years) | 63 | 70.00 | 49 | 84.48 | 18 | 85.71 | 0.08 | |
| Previous hospitalisation for EDs, Yes | 49 | 49.00 | 19 | 31.67 | 5 | 19.23 | 0.009 | BED < AN |
| Lifetime history of psychiatric disorder | ||||||||
| Major depressive disorder | 61 | 64.89 | 48 | 80.00 | 17 | 68.00 | 0.14 | |
| Bipolar disorder | 10 | 10.87 | 14 | 23.73 | 6 | 24.00 | 0.08 | |
| Anxiety disorder | 44 | 46.81 | 36 | 60.00 | 12 | 48.00 | 0.26 | |
| Suicide attempt | 14 | 13.73 | 20 | 32.79 | 4 | 15.38 | 0.01 | AN < BN |
| Alcohol/substance dependence or abuse | 4 | 4.30 | 9 | 15.25 | 0 | 0.00 | NA | |
| Childhood Trauma Questionnaire | ||||||||
| Emotional abuse, moderate/severe | 27 | 26.47 | 32 | 50.00 | 8 | 30.77 | 0.009 | AN < BN |
| Physical abuse, moderate/severe | 8 | 7.84 | 13 | 20.31 | 1 | 3.85 | 0.03 | — |
| Sexual abuse, moderate/severe | 17 | 16.67 | 19 | 29.69 | 5 | 19.23 | 0.14 | |
| Emotional neglect, moderate/severe | 28 | 27.45 | 32 | 50.00 | 9 | 34.62 | 0.01 | AN < BN |
| Physical neglect, moderate/severe | 25 | 24.51 | 20 | 31.25 | 8 | 30.77 | 0.59 | |
| Number of moderate/severe abuses | 0.02 | AN < BN | ||||||
| 0 | 54 | 52.94 | 15 | 23.44 | 11 | 42.31 | ||
| 1 | 18 | 17.65 | 17 | 26.56 | 6 | 23.08 | ||
| 2 | 14 | 13.73 | 12 | 18.75 | 5 | 19.23 | ||
| ≥3 | 16 | 15.69 | 20 | 31.25 | 4 | 15.38 | ||
Childhood trauma and clinical features: Model 0: Crude association; Model 1: Adjustment for age, major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, substance use disorder, lifetime history of suicide attempts and diagnostic type.
| Restraint ≥4 (n = 61) vs < 4 (n = 117) OR [95%CI] | Eating concern ≥ 4 (n = 65) vs < 4 (n = 112) OR [95%CI] | Weight concern ≥ 5 (n = 61) vs < 5 (n = 114) OR [95%CI] | Shape concern ≥ 5.38 (n = 59) vs < 5.38 (n = 117) OR [95%CI] | Daily functioning ≥ 28 (n = 40) vs < 28 (n = 79) OR [95%CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sexual abuse | Model 0 | 1.49 [0.71; 3.10] | ||||
| Model 1 | 2.05 [0.84; 5.03] | 1.04 [0.42; 2.57] | 1.79 [0.71; 4.47] | 3.19 [1.08; 9.43] | ||
| Physical abuse | Model 0 | 2.04 [0.80; 5.21] | 1.57 [0.50; 4.87] | |||
| Model 1 | 2.03 [0.64; 5.03] | 2.59 [0.85; 7.87] | 1.25 [0.39; 3.99] | 2.45 [0.76; 7.90] | 1.82 [0.45; 7.40] | |
| Emotional abuse | Model 0 | |||||
| Model 1 | 1.57 [0.71; 3.47] | |||||
| Emotional neglect | Model 0 | 1.24 [0.66; 2.34] | 1.74 [0.93; 3.25] | 1.70 [0.90; 3.21] | 1.34 [0.62; 2.89] | |
| Model 1 | 1.39 [0.58; 3.25] | 1.43 [0.64; 3.21] | 1.17 [0.50; 2.75] | 1.74 [0.73; 4.17] | 2.04 [0.75; 5.56] | |
| Physical neglect | Model 0 | 1.79 [0.91; 3.52] | 0.96 [0.48; 1.89] | 1.12 [0.56; 2.23] | 1.49 [0.75; 2.94] | 1.66 [0.74; 3.73] |
| Model 1 | 1.98 [0.85; 4.57] | 0.75 [0.33; 1.67] | 0.94 [0.41; 2.17] | 1.27 [0.54; 3.00] | 1.70 [0.67; 4.32] |
*p value < 0.05, **p value < 0.01, **p value < 0.001.
Figure 1Crude dose-effects of the childhood trauma subtypes on clinical characteristics.