| Literature DB >> 31084617 |
Angélica M Claudino1, Kathleen M Pike2, Phillipa Hay3, Jared W Keeley4, Spencer C Evans5, Tahilia J Rebello6, Rachel Bryant-Waugh7, Yunfei Dai8, Min Zhao8, Chihiro Matsumoto9, Cecile Rausch Herscovici10, Blanca Mellor-Marsá11, Anne-Claire Stona12, Cary S Kogan13, Howard F Andrews14, Palmiero Monteleone15,16, David Joseph Pilon17, Cornelia Thiels18, Pratap Sharan19, Samir Al-Adawi20, Geoffrey M Reed21,22.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD) is used globally by 194 WHO member nations. It is used for assigning clinical diagnoses, providing the framework for reporting public health data, and to inform the organization and reimbursement of health services. Guided by overarching principles of increasing clinical utility and global applicability, the 11th revision of the ICD proposes major changes that incorporate empirical advances since the previous revision in 1992. To test recommended changes in the Mental, Behavioral, and Neurodevelopmental Disorders chapter, multiple vignette-based case-controlled field studies have been conducted which examine clinicians' ability to accurately and consistently use the new guidelines and assess their overall clinical utility. This manuscript reports on the results from the study of the proposed ICD-11 guidelines for feeding and eating disorders (FEDs).Entities:
Keywords: Anorexia nervosa; Avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder; Binge eating disorder; Bulimia nervosa; Clinical utility; Diagnosis and classification; Eating disorders; Feeding disorders; ICD-11; International classification of diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31084617 PMCID: PMC6515596 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1327-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Proposed ICD-11 diagnostic guidelines (essential features only) for feeding and eating disorders after revisions based on the study result
| Anorexia nervosa | |
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| Bulimia nervosa | |
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| Binge eating disorder | |
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| Avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder | |
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| Pica | |
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| Rumination-regurgitation disorder | |
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Case vignettes with their accurate diagnoses according to either the ICD-10 or ICD-11 diagnostic guidelines
| Vignette number | Key features of case vignette | Accurate diagnosis according to the ICD-10 guidelines | Accurate diagnosis according to the ICD-11 guidelines |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1A | Past history of AN with amenorrhea | No diagnosis/atypical anorexia nervosa | Anorexia nervosa |
| 1B | Same as 1A, but weight restored for more than 1 year | No diagnosis | No diagnosis |
| 1C | All key features of AN present for more than 1 month (i.e., limited food intake, and a clear fear of gaining weight or body image distortion) | Anorexia nervosa | Anorexia nervosa |
| 2A | Restricting food (avoidance of certain types of foods due to their sensorial characteristics, not because they were high calorie foods) and is consequently underweight | Other ED/ED unspecified/atypical AN/feeding disorder of infancy or childhood | ARFID |
| 2B | Unusual eating habits but not diagnostic | No diagnosis | No diagnosis |
| 2C | Food restriction due to subjective somatic discomfort (does not limit specific kinds of foods, per se, just the amount) | Atypical anorexia nervosa/other ED/ED unspecified | ARFID |
| 3A | Binge eating objectively large | Bulimia nervosa | Bulimia nervosa |
| 3B | Same symptoms and behaviors as 3A except binge eating subjectively large (perceived to be large by the individual) | Atypical bulimia nervosa/other ED/ED unspecified | Bulimia nervosa |
| 3C | Similar to 3A except is obese (BMI 31) | Bulimia nervosa | Bulimia nervosa |
| 4A | All criteria for binge eating disorder | Overeating associated with other psychological disturbances/atypical bulimia nervosa/other ED/ED unspecified | Binge eating disorder |
| 4B | Overeating with no loss of control or marked distress | No diagnosis | No diagnosis |
| 4C | Similar to 4A but obese (BMI 34) | Overeating associated with other psychological disturbances/atypical bulimia nervosa/other ED/ ED unspecified | Binge eating disorder |
AN anorexia nervosa, BMI body mass index, ED eating disorder, ARFID avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder
Core scientific questions, rationale, vignette comparison and results
| Core scientific question | Rationale | Vignette comparison | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Does the proposed addition of ARFID in the ICD-11 result in individuals with ARFID being more accurately distinguished from AN, and does the proposed addition of ARFID to ICD-11 reduce the number of individuals diagnosed with residual eating disorders (atypical, other specified, and unspecified)? | The proposal to include ARFID in ICD-11 raised the research question as to whether ARFID when it is associated with underweight status can be accurately distinguished from AN using proposed ICD-11 guidelines | Vignette 1C: AN vs Vignette 2A: ARFID | ICD-11 AN DX: 96.6% accuracy |
| 2. Can clinicians distinguish between ARFID and no eating pathology based on the proposed ICD-11 guidelines? | The addition of a “new” diagnosis always raises the question of whether the proposed disorder can be properly distinguished from no disorder. The core research question addressed by this comparison was whether clinicians could better distinguish between ARFID and cases that should not be assigned a diagnosis based on the proposed ICD-11 guidelines as compared to the range of eating disorder residual categories in ICD-10. | Vignette 2A: ARFID vs Vignette 2B: No DX | ICD-11 ARFID DX: 88.5% accuracy |
| 3. Some individuals present with atypical reasons for restricting eating, such as feeling uncomfortable when full. In such cases, can clinicians accurately distinguish between AN and ARFID based on the proposed ICD-11 guidelines? | The diagnostic guidelines for a new disorder must sufficiently differentiate it from other existing disorders. We tested whether the proposed inclusion of ARFID can be clearly distinguished from AN when the rationale for restricting intake is atypical (e.g., restricting eating because of stomach fullness or bloating. | Vignette 1C: AN vs Vignette 2C: ARFID | ICD-11 AN DX: 96.7% accuracy |
| 4. ICD-11 proposes that a diagnosis of AN be retained until an individual has at least one year of stabilized sufficient weight gain and cessation of behaviors aimed at promoting weight loss. Does this rule improve diagnostic accuracy for AN over the course of recovery? | ICD-10 does not provide clear diagnostic guidance for recently weight restored individuals with AN, which results in substantial variability in whether an AN diagnosis is applied to cases that still exhibit significant symptoms but have gained weight to within a relevant weight reference (e.g., based on BMI or population quartile). ICD-11 proposes that the diagnosis of AN continue to be applied until the individual has achieved attitudinal and weight recovery for 1 year without the support of continuing care. | Vignette 1A: AN (with recovery not yet independently sustained for 1 year) vs Vignette 1B: no DX (AN with recovery independently sustained over 1 year) | ICD-11 AN DX: 84.6% accuracy for 1A |
| 5. Is the proposal to include subjective binge eating in ICD-11 BN clinically useful and effective in reducing residual eating disorder diagnoses? | The ICD-11 recommendation to allow subjective binge eating to fulfill a part of the diagnostic requirements for both BN and BED was based on extant data suggesting that the threshold for an objective binge episode is arbitrary and clinical reports indicating that binge size does not predict distress or impairment. | Vignette 3A: BN (with objective binge eating) vs Vignette 3B: BN (with subjective binge eating) | ICD-11 Objective BN DX: 84.3% accuracy |
| 6. Do the proposed guidelines for ICD-11 enable clinicians to accurately distinguish between BN and BED? | This question is prompted by the inclusion of the new category of BED in ICD-11. | Vignette 3A: BN vs Vignette 4A: BED | ICD-11 BN DX: 90.2% accuracy |
| 7. Are the proposed ICD-11 guidelines for BED clinically useful in distinguishing BED from no disorder? | Similar to Question 2, given the addition of BED to the ICD-11, the question arises whether the proposed disorder of BED can be properly distinguished from no disorder. | Vignette 4A: BED vs Vignette 4B: No DX | ICD-11 BED DX: 82.4% accuracy |
| 8. Do the proposed ICD-11 guidelines provide sufficient clinical guidelines to distinguish BN and BED regardless of weight status? | This comparison examined the impact of weight status on the diagnosis of BN and BED. According to both the proposed ICD-11 guidelines and the ICD-10 guidelines, weight status should not impact diagnosis of BN and BED. However, given that the majority of individuals who present with BED for clinical care are also overweight, this question is designed to assess whether clinicians are able to accurately distinguish between BN and BED regardless of weight status. | Vignette 3A: BN normal weight vs Vignettes 3C: BN with obesity | ICD-11 BN DX with obesity: 88.5% accurate |
Note: AN anorexia nervosa, ARFID avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder, BN bulimia nervosa, BED binge eating disorder, DX diagnosis. *Accurate DX in ICD-10: atypical anorexia nervosa, feeding disorder of infancy or childhood, other eating disorder or eating disorder unspecified; **accurate DX in ICD-10: atypical anorexia nervosa, other eating disorder or eating disorder unspecified; ***accurate DX in ICD-10: atypical bulimia nervosa, other eating disorder or eating disorder unspecified; ****accurate DX in ICD-10: atypical BN, overeating associated with other psychological disturbances, other eating disorder, or eating disorder unspecified. ϮVignette 1B = 53.1% still diagnosed AN in ICD-11; ϮϮbecause of the different diagnostic labels included in ICD-11 versus ICD-10, it is not possible to have a direct, diagnosis by diagnosis comparison of the two systems, and disorders were grouped into anorexia nervosa, another diagnosis, or no diagnosis for this comparison
Participant demographics (N = 2288)
| Language group | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | English | Spanish | Japanese | French | Chinese | |
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| 1061 (46%) | 315 (14%) | 340 (15%) | 219 (10%) | 353 (15%) | |
| WHO global region | ||||||
| Africa | 64 (2.8%) | 50 (4.7%) | 0 | 0 | 14 (6.4%) | 0 |
| USA and Canada | 229 (10.0%) | 221 (20.8%) | 1 (0.3%) | 0 | 7 (3.2%) | 0 |
| Latin America/Caribbean | 276 (12.1%) | 43 (4.1%) | 226 (71.8%) | 0 | 7 (3.2%) | 0 |
| Eastern Mediterranean | 52 (2.3%) | 46 (4.3%) | 0 | 0 | 6 (2.7%) | 0 |
| Europe | 755 (33.0%) | 484 (45.6%) | 86 (27.3%) | 0 | 185 (84.5%) | 0 |
| Southeast Asia | 144 (6.3%) | 144 (13.6%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Western Pacific—Asia | 695 (30.3%) | 5 (0.5%) | 0 | 337 (99.1%) | 0 | 353 (100%) |
| Western Pacific—Oceania | 66 (2.9%) | 66 (6.2%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Missing | 8 (0.3%) | 2 (0.2%) | 2 (0.6%) | 3 (0.9%) | 1 (0.5%) | 0 |
| Male:Female | 1277:985 (56:43)% | 557:479 (53:47)% | 153:162 (49:51)% | 255:85 (75:25)% | 122:96 (56:44)% | 190:163 (54:46)% |
| Profession | ||||||
| Medicine | 1367 (59.7%) | 515 (48.5%) | 125 (39.7%) | 270 (79.4%) | 145 (66.2%) | 312 (88.4%) |
| Psychology | 693 (30.3%) | 397 (37.4%) | 161 (51.1%) | 52 (15.3%) | 58 (26.5%) | 25 (7.1%) |
| Counseling | 85 (3.7%) | 68 (6.4%) | 3 (1.0%) | 3 (0.9%) | 2 (0.9%) | 9 (2.5%) |
| Nursing | 49 (2.1%) | 26 (2.5%) | 2 (0.6%) | 6 (1.8%) | 11(5.0%) | 4 (1.1%) |
| Social work | 24 (1.0%) | 17 (1.6%) | 3 (1.0%) | 1 (0.3%) | 0 | 3 (0.8%) |
| Sex therapy | 6 (0.3%) | 6 (0.6%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Speech therapy | 2 (0.1%) | 2 (0.2%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 62 (2.7%) | 30 (2.8%) | 21 (6.7%) | 8 (2.4%) | 3 (1.4%) | 0 |
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| Age | 44.52 (11.08) | 46.22 (10.91) | 45.96 (11.75) | 44.64 (10.26) | 42.62 (12.29) | 39.17 (8.87) |
| Years of experience | 13.77 (10.12) | 14.60 (10.08) | 16.56 (10.58) | 13.31 (9.89) | 13.73 (10.82) | 9.29 (7.95) |
Clinical utility ratings for ICD-11 categories as compared to closest ICD-10 categories
| Diagnostic category | Not at all | Somewhat | Quite | Extremely | *Quite + Extremely | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ease of use | ||||||
| ICD-11 AN | 2 (0.5%) | 62 (14.7%) | 223 (52.8%) | 135 (32.0%) | 358 (84.8%) | |
| ICD-10 AN | 12 (3.5%) | 56 (16.2%) | 170 (49.1%) | 108 (31.2%) | 278 (80.3%) | |
| ICD-11 BN | 6 (1.5%) | 50 (12.3%) | 188 (46.4%) | 161 (39.8%) | 349 (86.2%) | |
| ICD-10 BN | 12 (3.5%) | 82 (24.2%) | 182 (53.7%) | 63 (18.6%) | 245 (72.3%) | |
| ICD-11 BED | 2 (0.6%) | 32 (9.6%) | 184 (55.1%) | 116 (34.7%) | 300 (89.8%) | |
| ICD-10 Overeating | 13 (7.6%) | 47 (27.5%) | 94 (55.0%) | 17 (9.9%) | 111 (64.9%) | |
| ICD-11 ARFID | 8 (2.0%) | 51 (13.0%) | 219 (55.7%) | 115 (29.3%) | 334 (85.0%) | |
| ICD-10 Atypical AN | 5 (4.3%) | 53 (28.6%) | 83 (44.9%) | 44 (23.8%) | 127 (68.7%) | |
| Goodness of fit | ||||||
| ICD-11 AN | 0 (0%) | 53 (12.6%) | 238 (56.4%) | 131 (31.0%) | 369 (87.4%) | |
| ICD-10 AN | 6 (1.7%) | 66 (19.1%) | 177 (51.2%) | 97 (28.0%) | 274 (79.2%) | |
| ICD-11 BN | 6 (1.5%) | 44 (10.9%) | 197 (48.6%) | 158 (39.0%) | 355 (87.6%) | |
| ICD-10 BN | 1 (0.3%) | 95 (28.0%) | 190 (56.0%) | 53 (15.6%) | 243 (71.6%) | |
| ICD-11 BED | 2 (0.6%) | 97 (29.0%) | 175 (52.4%) | 118 (35.3%) | 293 (87.7%) | |
| ICD-10 Overeating | 9 (5.3%) | 52 (30.4%) | 90 (52.6%) | 20 (11.7%) | 110 (64.3%) | |
| ICD-11 ARFID | 3 (0.8%) | 44 (11.2%) | 241 (61.3%) | 105 (26.7%) | 346 (88.0%) | |
| ICD-10 Atypical AN | 2 (1.1%) | 49 (26.5%) | 94 (50.8%) | 40 (21.6%) | 134 (72.4%) | |
| Clarity and understandability | ||||||
| ICD-11 AN | 2 (0.4%) | 46 (10.3%) | 229 (51.2%) | 170 (38.0%) | 399 (89.2%) | |
| ICD-10 AN | 11 (2.8%) | 80 (20.2%) | 194 (49.0%) | 111 (28.0%) | 305 (77.0%) | |
| ICD-11 BN | 4 (1.0%) | 49 (11.7%) | 215 (51.4%) | 150 (35.9%) | 365 (87.3%) | |
| ICD-10 BN | 11 (2.9%) | 92 (24.5%) | 206 (54.9%) | 66 (17.6%) | 272 (72.5%) | |
| ICD-11 BED | 1 (0.3%) | 47 (11.7%) | 213 (53.8%) | 135 (34.1%) | 348 (87.9%) | |
| ICD-10 Overeating | 8 (4.2%) | 53 (28.0%) | 90 (47.6%) | 38 (20.1%) | 128 (67.7%) | |
| ICD-11 ARFID | 8 (1.8%) | 42 (9.6%) | 232 (52.8%) | 157 (35.8%) | 389 (88.6%) | |
| ICD-10 Atypical AN | 3 (1.4%) | 53 (25.6%) | 95 (45.9%) | 56 (27.1%) | 151 (73.0%) | |
AN anorexia nervosa, BN bulimia nervosa, BED binge eating disorder, Overeating overeating associated with other psychological disturbances, ARFID avoidant-restrictive food intake disorder. *Quite + Extremely column provided for comparison only; not included in the statistical analysis