| Literature DB >> 30700054 |
Gaby Resmark1, Stephan Herpertz2, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann3, Almut Zeeck4.
Abstract
Anorexia nervosa is the most severe eating disorder; it has a protracted course of illness and the highest mortality rate among all psychiatric illnesses. It is characterised by a restriction of energy intake followed by substantial weight loss, which can culminate in cachexia and related medical consequences. Anorexia nervosa is associated with high personal and economic costs for sufferers, their relatives and society. Evidence-based practice guidelines aim to support all groups involved in the care of patients with anorexia nervosa by providing them with scientifically sound recommendations regarding diagnosis and treatment. The German S3-guideline for eating disorders has been recently revised. In this paper, the new guideline is presented and changes, in comparison with the original guideline published in 2011, are discussed. Further, the German guideline is compared to current international evidence-based guidelines for eating disorders. Many of the treatment recommendations made in the revised German guideline are consistent with existing international treatment guidelines. Although the available evidence has significantly improved in quality and amount since the original German guideline publication in 2011, further research investigating eating disorders in general, and specifically anorexia nervosa, is still needed.Entities:
Keywords: anorexia nervosa; evidenced-based; guidelines; treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 30700054 PMCID: PMC6406277 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8020153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
German guideline—changes in treatment recommendations for AN.
| Original guideline recommendations 2010 [ | Guideline-revision recommendations 2019 [ |
|---|---|
| General recommendations | |
| No recommendation concerning co-morbid conditions | (Evidence level IV; Clinical consensus point: good clinical practice): Co-morbid conditions should be systematically assessed and taken into consideration when treating patients with AN. |
| Treatment setting | |
| (Evidence level IV; 0): Inpatient treatment should take place in facilities able to offer a specialised multimodal treatment program. | (Evidence level IV; A): Same recommendation as original guideline, recommendation grading updated to A. |
| No recommendation concerning a stabilisation phase | (Evidence level IV; B): In order toreduce the probability of relapse, the final stage of inpatient therapy should aim to ensure that patients at least maintain their weight for a certain period and are prepared for the transition to an outpatient setting. |
| No specific recommendation concerning day hospital treatment for children and adolescents | (Evidence level Ib; A): A transfer to day hospital treatment after short-term inpatient treatment with sufficient physical stabilisation should be considered for children and adolescents, provided eating disorder-specific day hospital treatment can be carried out by the same treatment team, and close involvement of the relatives is ensured (evidence level Ib; A). |
| Psychotherapy | |
| (Evidence level II; B): Patients with AN are highly ambivalent towards change. Addressing ambivalence and motivation to change is a central task and should be maintained throughout the whole treatment process. | (Evidence level Ia; A): Same recommendation as original guideline, recommendation grading updated to A. |
| (Evidence level II; B): The outpatient treatment of first choice for AN should be evidence-based psychotherapy. | (Evidence level Ib; B): Outpatient treatment of first choice for patients with AN should be evidence-based psychotherapy (FBT for children and adolescents; FPT, CBT-E, MANTRA or SSCM for adults), administered by practitioners experienced with eating disorders. |
| Nutritional management | |
| (Evidence level: not rated; statement): For orientation during the first days of treatment, the initial food intake (for enteral nutrition) of highly underweight patients can be quantified at approx. 30–40 kcal/kg. | (Evidence level IIa; statement): In patients with mild to moderate AN, an initial low caloric energy supply with gradual increase is not required for safe weight gain (avoidance of refeeding syndrome)—provided that medical monitoring is ensured. |
| No recommendation, but formulation of statements. For example, The basal metabolic rate is initially low and increases significantly with the onset of weight gain. The formulas for calculating basal metabolic rate obtained from normal and overweight people are not suitable for use with AN. | (Evidence level IV; Clinical consensus point: good clinical practice ): The energy supply for the expected weight gain is highly variable and should be individually tailored to the patients as well as to the treatment phase and be continuously monitored. |
| Pharmacotherapy | |
| (Evidence level Ib; B): Neuroleptics are not suitable for achieving weight gain in AN. | (Evidence level Ia; A): Same recommendations as original guideline, recommendation grading regarding neuroleptics updated to A. |
| (Evidence level IIa; B): If thinking is considerably restricted to weight phobia and eating and if hyperactivity is not controllable, an attempt to use low-dose neuroleptics (especially olanzapine) may be justified in individual cases. | Same recommendation as original guideline, with altered recommendation levels: |
FBT, Family-Based Treatment; FPT, Focal Psychodynamic Therapy; CBT-E, Enhanced Cognitive Behaviour Therapy; MANTRA, Maudsley Model of Anorexia Nervosa Treatment for Adults; SSCM, Specialist Supportive Clinical Management.
International guidelines’ key recommendations regarding psychotherapy for AN.
| Recommendation | AUS [ | BC [ | DEN [ | FR [ | GER [ | NETH [ | SP [ | UK [ | US [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| For adults: | |||||||||
| Psychotherapy in general | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Not as efficient in severely malnourished patients | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | ✓ | N.R. | ✓ | N.R. | N.R. | ✓ |
| Specific psychological interventions | ✓ | ✓ | N.R. | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| CBT/CBT-E | + | + | N.R. | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Psychodynamic Therapy | N.R. | + | N.R. | + | + | N.R. | + | N.R. | + |
| FPT | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | + | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. |
| MANTRA | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | + | + | N.R. | + | N.R. |
| SSCM | + | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | + | + | N.R. | + | N.R |
| IPT | N.R. | + | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | N.R. | + | N.R. | + |
| For children and adolescents: | |||||||||
| Involvement of parents/near caregivers | + | + | + | + | + | + | + 1 | + | + |
| Family therapy | FBT or other forms of family therapy | FBT | FBT or other forms of family therapy | Family therapy | FBT or other forms of family therapy | FBT? | Family therapy (systemic or not) | FT-AN | FBT or other forms of family therapy |
✓ recommendation given; + explicit recommendation in favour; N.R., no recommendation reported; AUS, Australia and New Zealand; BC, British Columbia; DEN, Denmark; FR, France; GER, Germany; NETH, The Netherlands; SP, Spain; UK, United Kingdom; US, United States; CBT(-E), (Enhanced) Cognitive Behaviour Therapy; FPT, Focal Psychodynamic Therapy; MANTRA, Maudsley Model of Anorexia Nervosa Treatment for Adults; SSCM, Specialist Supportive Clinical Management; IPT, Interpersonal Therapy; FBT, Family-Based Treatment/Therapy; FT-AN, AN-focused Family Therapy; 1 and siblings; ?, ambiguous evidence.