An 8-year longitudinal study of the natural history of threshold, subthreshold, and partial eating disorders from a community sample of adolescents

Eric Stice, C Nathan Marti, Heather Shaw, Maryanne Jaconis, Eric Stice, C Nathan Marti, Heather Shaw, Maryanne Jaconis

Abstract

The authors examined the natural history of threshold, subthreshold, and partial eating disorders in a community sample of 496 adolescent girls who completed annual diagnostic interviews over an 8-year period. Lifetime prevalence by age 20 years was 0.6% and 0.6% for threshold and subthreshold anorexia nervosa (AN), 1.6% and 6.1% for threshold and subthreshold bulimia nervosa (BN), 1.0% and 4.6% for threshold and subthreshold binge-eating disorder (BED), and 4.4% for purging disorder (PD). Overall, 12% of adolescents experienced some form of eating disorder. Subthreshold BN and BED and threshold PD were associated with elevated treatment, impairment, and distress. Peak age of onset was 17-18 years for BN and BED and 18-20 years for PD. Average episode duration in months was 3.9 for BN and BED and 5.1 for PD. One-year recovery rates ranged from 91% to 96%. Relapse rates were 41% for BN, 33% for BED, and 5% for PD. For BN and BED, subthreshold cases often progressed to threshold cases and diagnostic crossover was most likely for these disorders. Results suggest that subthreshold eating disorders are more prevalent than threshold eating disorders and are associated with marked impairment.

Figures

Figure 1. Non-cumulative hazard functions of bulimia…
Figure 1. Non-cumulative hazard functions of bulimia nervosa, binge-eating disorder, and purging disorder onset by age
Note: The Y axis depicts the non-cumulative hazard rate for each disorder, which reflects the annual risk for onset of the condition (annual incidence). The 95% Confidence Intervals for the annual incidence data are shown.

Source: PubMed

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