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Eating Disorders in Patients With IBD

27. května 2026 aktualizováno: Fabiana Castiglione, Federico II University

Prevalence of Eating Disorders in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) may influence eating habits and lead some patients to adopt restrictive dietary behaviours to control gastrointestinal symptoms. In some cases, these behaviours may become maladaptive and resemble eating disorders, including avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID).

This observational cross-sectional study assesses the prevalence of eating disorder risk and ARFID risk among adult patients with IBD. Participants complete validated questionnaires evaluating eating behaviours, nutritional status, and IBD-related disability. Clinical and demographic data are also collected.

Přehled studie

Detailní popis

Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, are chronic relapsing conditions characterized by persistent inflammatory activity, unpredictable disease course, and recurrent gastrointestinal symptoms. These factors may substantially influence patients' dietary habits. Many patients with IBD modify or restrict their diet in an attempt to prevent symptom exacerbation or disease flares. Although dietary restriction may represent an adaptive behaviour during active disease, it may persist over time and become maladaptive.

Restrictive eating behaviours in IBD may overlap with eating disorders, including avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID). ARFID is characterized by restrictive food intake that is not primarily driven by body image concerns, but rather by mechanisms such as fear of adverse gastrointestinal consequences, low appetite or reduced interest in eating, and avoidance of specific foods. In patients with IBD, these behaviours may contribute to nutritional impairment, psychological distress, and disability.

This observational cross-sectional study assesses the prevalence of eating disorder risk and ARFID risk among adult patients with a confirmed diagnosis of IBD. Consecutive eligible patients are enrolled during routine outpatient visits. Demographic and clinical data are collected at enrolment, including disease type, age at diagnosis, disease duration, disease phenotype, previous treatments, previous surgery, extraintestinal manifestations, current therapy, laboratory markers, and disease activity.

Eating disorder risk is assessed using the Eating Attitudes Test-26 (EAT-26). ARFID risk is evaluated using the Nine-Item Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screen (NIAS-9), including its subdomains related to picky eating, low appetite or limited interest in eating, and fear of adverse consequences. Nutritional status is assessed using the Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA). IBD-related disability is evaluated using the IBD-Disk and a modified IBD-Disk including a diet-related item.

Clinical disease activity is assessed using validated disease-specific indices, including the partial Mayo score for ulcerative colitis and the Harvey-Bradshaw Index for Crohn's disease. Endoscopic activity, when available, is evaluated using the Mayo Endoscopic Subscore for ulcerative colitis and the Simple Endoscopic Score for Crohn's Disease for Crohn's disease. The study also evaluates associations between altered eating behaviours, disease activity, malnutrition risk, dietary impairment, and IBD-related disability.

The study aims to improve the identification of patients with IBD who are at risk of maladaptive restrictive eating behaviours and who may benefit from structured nutritional or psychological assessment as part of routine IBD care. The uploaded study describes the same core design elements: adult IBD patients enrolled during routine outpatient visits, ARFID risk assessed with NIAS-9, eating disorder risk with EAT-26, nutritional status with PG-SGA, and disability with IBD-Disk/mDISK. 

Typ studie

Pozorovací

Zápis (Aktuální)

355

Kontakty a umístění

Tato část poskytuje kontaktní údaje pro ty, kteří studii provádějí, a informace o tom, kde se tato studie provádí.

Studijní místa

      • Naples, Itálie, 80131
        • University of Naples Federico II

Kritéria účasti

Výzkumníci hledají lidi, kteří odpovídají určitému popisu, kterému se říká kritéria způsobilosti. Některé příklady těchto kritérií jsou celkový zdravotní stav osoby nebo předchozí léčba.

Kritéria způsobilosti

Věk způsobilý ke studiu

  • Dospělý
  • Starší dospělý

Přijímá zdravé dobrovolníky

Ne

Metoda odběru vzorků

Ukázka pravděpodobnosti

Studijní populace

Adult patients with a confirmed diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease, including Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, enrolled during routine outpatient visits at participating IBD centres. Participants complete validated questionnaires assessing eating behaviours, nutritional status, and IBD-related disability, with concurrent collection of clinical and demographic data.

Popis

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Adult patients aged 18 years or older.
  • Confirmed diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease, including Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis.
  • Patients evaluated during routine outpatient IBD visits.
  • Ability to understand and complete the study questionnaires.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Previous diagnosis or known history of eating disorders.
  • Severe unmanaged psychiatric conditions.
  • Pregnancy.
  • Inability to complete the questionnaires or provide reliable study information.

Studijní plán

Tato část poskytuje podrobnosti o studijním plánu, včetně toho, jak je studie navržena a co studie měří.

Jak je studie koncipována?

Detaily designu

Kohorty a intervence

Skupina / kohorta
Adult patients diagnosed with Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Adult patients with a confirmed diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease, including Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, enrolled during routine outpatient visits.

Co je měření studie?

Primární výstupní opatření

Měření výsledku
Popis opatření
Časové okno
Prevalence of avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder risk among adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease
Časové okno: Single time point at enrolment
The primary outcome is the proportion of adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease who screen positive for avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder risk. ARFID risk is assessed using the validated Nine-Item Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screen (NIAS-9), which evaluates restrictive eating behaviours across three domains: picky eating, low appetite or limited interest in eating, and fear of adverse consequences. A NIAS-9 total score of 24 or higher identifies participants at risk for ARFID.
Single time point at enrolment

Sekundární výstupní opatření

Měření výsledku
Popis opatření
Časové okno
Prevalence of eating disorder risk among adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease
Časové okno: Single time point at enrolment
The proportion of adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease who screen positive for eating disorder risk. Eating disorder risk is assessed using the validated Eating Attitudes Test-26 (EAT-26). A total EAT-26 score of 20 or higher identifies participants at risk for eating disorders and indicates the need for further clinical evaluation.
Single time point at enrolment
Association between ARFID risk and malnutrition risk
Časové okno: Single time point at enrolment
The association between avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder risk and malnutrition risk among adult patients with inflammatory bowel disease. ARFID risk is assessed using the Nine-Item Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screen (NIAS-9), while nutritional status is evaluated using the Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA). A PG-SGA (ranging 0-36) score of 6 or higher identifies participants at high risk of malnutrition.
Single time point at enrolment
Association between avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder risk and IBD-related disability
Časové okno: Single time point at enrolment
This outcome assesses the association between avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder risk and inflammatory bowel disease-related disability. ARFID risk is assessed using the Nine-Item Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screen (NIAS-9). IBD-related disability is assessed using the IBD-Disk (score ranging 0-100), a patient-reported instrument evaluating the impact of IBD on symptoms, daily functioning, and psychosocial well-being. Moderate-to-severe disability is defined as an IBD-Disk score of 40 or higher.
Single time point at enrolment

Spolupracovníci a vyšetřovatelé

Zde najdete lidi a organizace zapojené do této studie.

Termíny studijních záznamů

Tato data sledují průběh záznamů studie a předkládání souhrnných výsledků na ClinicalTrials.gov. Záznamy ze studií a hlášené výsledky jsou před zveřejněním na veřejné webové stránce přezkoumány Národní lékařskou knihovnou (NLM), aby se ujistily, že splňují specifické standardy kontroly kvality.

Hlavní termíny studia

Začátek studia (Aktuální)

10. října 2024

Primární dokončení (Aktuální)

1. dubna 2025

Dokončení studie (Aktuální)

1. dubna 2025

Termíny zápisu do studia

První předloženo

19. května 2026

První předloženo, které splnilo kritéria kontroly kvality

27. května 2026

První zveřejněno (Aktuální)

28. května 2026

Aktualizace studijních záznamů

Poslední zveřejněná aktualizace (Aktuální)

28. května 2026

Odeslaná poslední aktualizace, která splnila kritéria kontroly kvality

27. května 2026

Naposledy ověřeno

1. května 2026

Více informací

Termíny související s touto studií

Plán pro data jednotlivých účastníků (IPD)

Plánujete sdílet data jednotlivých účastníků (IPD)?

NE

Popis plánu IPD

Individual participant data will not be shared because the dataset includes sensitive clinical and questionnaire-based information. Aggregate results will be shared through publications and scientific presentations.

Informace o lécích a zařízeních, studijní dokumenty

Studuje lékový produkt regulovaný americkým FDA

Ne

Studuje produkt zařízení regulovaný americkým úřadem FDA

Ne

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