Eating Disorder Cutoffs Miss Some of Sickest Patients, Stanford/Packard Study Finds

For Release: April 10, 2010

STANFORD, Calif. - Diagnostic cutoffs for anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa may be too strict, a study from the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital has found. Many patients who do not meet full criteria for these diseases are nevertheless quite ill, and the diagnosis they now receive, “Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified,” may delay their ability to get treatment.

“There’s mounting evidence that we should reconsider the EDNOS categorization for young people,” said Rebecka Peebles, MD, the study’s primary author. The EDNOS diagnosis has become a “mosh pit,” lumping dissimilar patients into a single category that gets poor recognition from clinicians and health insurers, she said. “It is a bit misleading to patients — it can make them feel like they don’t have a real eating disorder,” said Peebles, an instructor in pediatrics at Stanford and an adolescent medicine specialist with the Comprehensive Eating Disorders Program at Packard Children’s Hospital.

Anorexia and bulimia affect about 1 percent and between 2 and 5 percent of teen girls, respectively, and both diseases are more common among females than males. Their diagnostic criteria were developed by expert consensus, without the benefit of studies to track patients’ health. An anorexia diagnosis is now based on being at less than 85 percent of the expected body weight, loss of menstrual periods for at least three months and fear of weight gain despite being dangerously thin. Bulimia patients repeatedly binge on large quantities of food, then “purge” calories by vomiting, abusing laxatives or diuretics, or overexercising. Both diseases can cause serious long-term health problems, and severe cases may lead to death.

Peebles’ team conducted the first-ever large study to ask whether adolescents with EDNOS are less ill than those who meet the full diagnostic criteria for anorexia or bulimia. The research, which will be published online April 12 in Pediatrics, examined records from all 1,310 female patients treated for eating disorders at Packard Children’s between January 1997 and April 2008. They verified patients’ diagnoses of anorexia, bulimia or EDNOS, and created categories of “partial anorexia nervosa” and “partial bulimia nervosa” to analyze patients who barely missed cutoffs for these diseases. “Our purpose was to ask if the diagnostic criteria now in use are really separating out the sickest of the sick,” Peebles said. Patients’ conditions were assessed by noting signs of malnutrition — such as low heart rate, low blood pressure, low body temperature, low blood levels of potassium and phosphorus — and long QT interval (an electrocardiogram measurement linked to risk of sudden cardiac death).

Nearly two-thirds of the patients studied had EDNOS. As the researchers suspected, the EDNOS category acted as a catchall; patients with partial anorexia were more similar to those with full-blown anorexia than to other EDNOS patients with partial bulimia, for instance. In addition, 60 percent of EDNOS patients met medical criteria for hospitalization and this group was, on average, sicker than patients diagnosed with full-blown bulimia. The sickest EDNOS patients were those who had dropped more than 25 percent of their body weight before diagnosis. These patients had been overweight and had lost weight too quickly and dangerously in order to end up at what is typically considered a normal weight.

“People were initially just patting them on the back for their weight loss,” Peebles said. “It often took months or years for others to realize that what they were doing didn’t seem healthy.” Despite their normal body weights, this group was in some ways worse off than underweight patients diagnosed with anorexia, she added. “They manifested criteria of severe malnutrition.” In sum, Peebles said, the study suggests that medical criteria for eating disorders should be re-evaluated. Though the current diagnostics cover the right general areas, “we erroneously treat these criteria in a very black-and-white way,” she said. “Many practitioners interpret these to believe that menses has to be lost to get an anorexia diagnosis; bulimics have to binge and purge at least two times a week for three months. These findings illustrate the arbitrary nature of those cutoffs.”

The issue is particularly urgent because many health insurers offer less coverage for EDNOS treatment than for treatment of anorexia or bulimia. And doctors and parents may be falsely reassured if a child is labeled with EDNOS. “I think that when parents walk out of a doctor’s office having heard their kid doesn’t meet criteria for anorexia, they’re relieved,” Peebles said. But they shouldn’t let their guard down: in many cases, the child’s disturbed eating patterns still need treatment. The Stanford collaborators on Peebles’ team were Jenny Wilson, MD, a resident in pediatrics, and James Lock, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and of pediatrics. The study was funded by the Stanford Pediatric Research Fund and the American Heart Association, with additional support from the Stanford Medical Scholars Research Program and the National Institutes of Health.

Authors

Robert Dicks
(650) 497-8364
rdicks@stanfordchildrens.org

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