| Literature DB >> 28304341 |
Marly Amorim Palavras1,2, Phillipa Hay3,4, Celso Alves Dos Santos Filho5, Angélica Claudino6.
Abstract
Recurrent binge eating episodes, the core feature of Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and Binge Eating Disorder (BED), are frequently comorbid with obesity. Psychological interventions, notably Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), are effective for binge eating reduction in BED or BN but less so for weight loss. Behavioural Weight Loss Therapy (BWLT) shows effectiveness for binge eating reduction and weight loss but the latter appears poorly sustained over time. Our aim was to review evidence for efficacy of psychological therapies for BN/BED associated with overweight or obesity in reducing binge frequency and weight. A systematic search for randomized controlled trials with adult samples who had BN or BED was conducted considering articles in English, French, Spanish and Portuguese with no restrictions for the timeline publication ending in March 2016. A quality appraisal of the trials and meta-analyses comparing BWLT to CBT were done. This review identified 2248 articles for screening and 19 published articles were selected. No trials of BN were identified. This review found CBT was favoured compared to BWLT with regard to short-term binge eating reduction. However, insufficient evidence was found for superiority for BWLT efficacy compared to CBT considering binge eating remission, reduction of binge eating frequency and weight loss. More research is needed to test the efficacy of psychological treatments for BED or BN with co-morbid overweight or obesity, including trials evaluating binge eating remission and weight loss in the long-term.Entities:
Keywords: binge eating; obesity; psychotherapy; weight management
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28304341 PMCID: PMC5372962 DOI: 10.3390/nu9030299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Prisma flow chart of study inclusion.
Features of included randomized controlled trials.
| Trial | Sample | Diagnostic Criteria/Classification System (Instrument) | Intervention | Time Point of Assessments Relative to the Start of the Interventions | End of Treatment Outcomes (Binge Remission/Frequency and BMI/Weight Loss) | Follow-Up of Active Treatments Outcomes (Binge Remission/Frequency and BMI/Weight Loss) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Alfonsson et al. Sweden/2015 [ | BED/DSM-5 (EDE) | 1. Behavioural activation | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge eating frequency. No BMI results. | Only for active treatment – no comparison. | |
| Gorin et al. USA/2003 [ | BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I/P) | 1. Standard cognitive behavioural therapy | Baseline | Comparison between active treatments: no differences in binge eating frequency or BMI. Active treatments compared to wait-list: better results for binge eating frequency and BMI for CBT groups. | Only comparison between active treatments: no differences in binge eating frequency or BMI. | |
| Grilo and Masheb USA/2005 [ | BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I/P+EDE) | 1. CBTgsh | Baseline | CBTgsh had greater results for binge eating frequency compared to BWLgsh and the control. No differences between groups for BMI. | No follow-up. | |
| Grilo et al. USA/2011 [ | BED/DSM-IV (SCIDI/P+ EDE) | 1. CBT | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge remission and binge eating frequency. BWLT and CBT + BWL had significant greater per cent BMI loss than CBT. | No differences between groups in binge remission rates. Binge eating frequency significantly lower in CBT than BWL at both follow-up. At six-month significant BMI loss in BWL than CBT, but not sustained at 12-month. | |
| Grilo et al. USA/2013 [ | Threshold and subthreshold BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I/P + EDE) | 1. Self-help CBT | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge remission, frequency of binge eating or BMI. | No follow-up. | |
| Kristeller et al. USA/2014 [ | Threshold and subthreshold BED/DSM-IV-R (EDE) | 1. Mindfulness-based eating awareness training | Baseline | Comparison between active treatments: no differences in binge eating frequency or BMI. Active treatments compared to wait-list: better results for binge eating frequency and BMI for both active interventions. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Masheb et al. USA/2011 [ | BED/DSM-IV-TR (SCID-I/P+EDE) | 1. CBT + low-energy- density diet | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge remission or BMI. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Munsch et al. Switzerland/2007 [ | BED/DSM-IV-TR (EDE) BED/DSM-IV-TR (EDE-Q) | 1. CBT | Baseline | CBT improved significantly for binge remission and binge eating frequency. However, BWLT was significantly better in weight loss. | No differences between groups in binge remission, binge eating frequency or BMI. Comparing the end of treatment to six-year follow-up, these outcomes significantly worsened. Comparing the baseline to six-year follow-up these measures still improved with medium to large effect sizes. | |
| Ricca et al. Italy/2010 [ | Threshold and subthreshold BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I/P) | 1. Individual CBT | Baseline | No differences between groups in reduction of binge eating episodes and BMI. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Shapiro et al. USA/2007 [ | Threshold and subthreshold BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I/P) | 1. Group CBT | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge eating frequency or BMI. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Wilfley et al. USA/2002 [ | BED/DSM-IV (SCID for DSM-III-R + EDE) | 1. CBT | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge eating frequency or BMI. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Wilson et al. USA/2010 [ | BED/DSM-IV (SCID-I + EDE) | 1. CBTgsh | Baseline | No differences between groups in binge remission and binge eating frequency. BWLT was significantly more effective in BMI reduction than the two other treatments. | 1-year FU: no differences between groups in measures of binge eating and more significant BMI gain for the BWL group compared to CBTgsh group. Two-year FU: IPT and CBTgsh were more effective for remission of binge episodes. No difference for BMI comparing all groups. | |
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| Agras et al. USA/1995 [ | BED/not specified (Structured clinical interview) | 1. CBT 12 weeks followed by 12 weeks of either IPT for non -responders or weight loss therapy for responders to CBT | Baseline | Active treatment compared to wait-list: better results for binge eating frequency and BMI for active intervention. IPT group: binge eating increased and weight increased with IPT not significant. Weight loss therapy: significant weight loss and maintained reduced binge eating. | No follow-up. | |
| Dingemans et al. Netherlands/ 2007 [ | BED/DSM-IV (Instrument not specified) | 1. CBT | Baseline | Significant binge remission and reduction in frequency in binge eating in CBT group. No significant BMI change. | Only for active treatment—no comparison. | |
| Eldredge et al. USA/1997 [ | BED (No other information) | 1. CBT | Baseline | Significant binge remission and reduction in frequency in binge eating in CBT group. No significant BMI change. | No information. | |
| Nauta et al. Netherlands/2000 [ | BED/DSM-IV (Structured interview) | 1. Cognitive treatment | Baseline | At post-treatment 67% binge abstinence with cognitive treatment vs. 44% abstinence with behavioural treatment in obese binge eating participants. Other outcomes not reported separately for binge eating participants. | 86% binge abstinence with cognitive treatment vs. 44% abstinence with behavioural treatment in obese binge eating participants (significant
| |
| Pendleton et al. USA/2002 [ | BED (no other information) | 1. CBT + exercise + maintenance | Baseline | Exercisers had significantly greater reduction in binge frequency and BMI compared to non-exercisers groups. Addition of the maintenance program did not influence on binge eating behaviour but influenced changes in BMI. | Same results found at end of treatment. | |
| Safer et al. USA/2010 [ | BED/DSM-IV (EDE) | 1. Dialectical behaviour therapy adapted for binge eating (DBT-BED) | Baseline | DBT-BED group achieved significant reduction in binge frequency than ACGT group. No differences found between groups for BMI. | No differences between groups in binge eating frequency or BMI. | |
Note: BED: binge eating disorder; BMI: body mass index; BWLgsh: behavioural weight loss – guided self-help; BWLT: behavioural weight loss treatment; CBT: cognitive behavioural therapy; CBTgsh: cognitive-behavioural therapy—guided self-help; EDE: eating disorder examination; EDE-Q: eating disorder examination questionnaire; DSM: diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders; EoT: end of treatment; FU: follow-up; SCID-I/P: Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis Disorders Patient Version; * Unpublished information on participant BMI numbers provided by author; #: Included a priori power analysis; ♀: women, ♂: men.
Quality appraisal of the nineteen included trials.
| Reference | Randomisation and Allocation Concealment | Blinding | Treatment Attrition | Reporting Bias | Overall Risk of Bias (Modal Assessment) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alfonsson et al. # 2015 [ | Adequate randomisation | No blinding | EoT 32% | Used ITT MEM | Unclear |
| Gorin et al. # 2003 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | No blinding | EoT not reported | Used ITT/LOCF | Unclear |
| Grilo and Masheb 2005 [ | Adequate randomisation | No blinding except for participant expectations | EoT 22% | Used ITT/LOCF | Unclear |
| Grilo et al. # 2011 [ | Adequate randomisation | No blinding | EoT 31% | Used ITT/MEM | Unclear |
| Grilo et al. 2013 [ | Adequate randomisation and allocation concealment | Outcome assessment assessor blind | No EoT attrition | Used ITT/MEM | Unclear |
| Kristeller et al. # 2014 [ | Inadequate randomisation | Unclear blinding | Attrition 30% greater in control conditions but not significant | Used ITT/MEM | Unclear |
| Masheb et al.# 2011 [ | Adequate randomisation | Outcome assessment assessor blind | EoT 14% | Used ITT/MEM/LOCF | Low |
| Munsch et al. 2007 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Outcome assessment assessor not blind | EoT 27.5% | Used ITT/LOCF and completer for univariate models | Unclear |
| Ricca et al. # 2010 [ | Adequate randomisation | Outcome assessment assessor blind | EoT 4.9% | Used ITT/LOCF | Unclear |
| Shapiro et al. 2007 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Outcome assessment not blind | EoT 41% | Used ITT/MEM | High |
| Wilfley et al. 2002 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Blinding only for treatment fidelity assessment | EoT 9.9% | Used ITT method unclear and completer analyses | Unclear |
| Wilson et al. # 2010 [ | Adequate randomisation | Outcome assessment assessor blind | EoT 23.1% | Used ITT/MEM | Unclear |
| Agras et al. 1995 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Unclear blinding | EoT 12.8% | Used ITT/LOCF and completer only analysis | Unclear |
| Dingemans et al. 2007 [ | Unclear randomisation | Assessor blind to group | EoT 7% | Used MLA analysis | Unclear |
| Eldredge et al. 1997 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | No blinding | EoT 19% | No ITT reported | High |
| Nauta et al. 2000 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Blind not reported | EoT 13.5% | Used ITT repeated-measures multivariate and univariate analysis of variance | Unclear |
| Pendleton et al. 2002 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | Unclear blinding | EoT attrition | Not used ITT | Unclear |
| Safer et al. 2010 [ | Unclear randomisation and allocation concealment | No blinding reported | EoT 19% but higher 33% in control group and 10% in DBT | Used linear mixed models analysis | Unclear |
Note: DBT: dialectical behaviour therapy; EoT: end of treatment; GEE: generalized estimating equation; BWLgsh: guided self-help behavioural weight loss; ITT: intention-to-treat; LOCF: last observation carried forward; MEM: mixed effect model; MLA: multilevel analysis; #: Included a priori power analysis.
A synthesis of the quality appraisal of the nineteen included trials.
| High Risk | Low Risk | Unclear Risk | |
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Figure 2Behavioural Weight Loss Therapy versus Cognitive Behavioural Therapy-Effects on binge eating frequency at the end of treatment in individuals with binge eating disorder.