Ta strona została przetłumaczona automatycznie i dokładność tłumaczenia nie jest gwarantowana. Proszę odnieść się do angielska wersja za tekst źródłowy.

Sleep Quality and Biomarkers in Adolescent Girls With Anorexia Nervosa

8 czerwca 2026 zaktualizowane przez: University of Split, School of Medicine

Sleep Architecture, Inflammatory and Hormonal Biomarkers, Psychopathology, and Quality of Life in Adolescent Girls With Anorexia Nervosa: A Prospective Cohort Study

The purpose of this observational study is to systematically evaluate how a 12-month multimodal psychiatric treatment program affects sleep quality, inflammatory and hormonal biomarkers, eating disorder psychopathology, and health-related quality of life in adolescent girls (aged 10-18 years) diagnosed with anorexia nervosa.

The main questions it aims to answer are:

  • Do adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa have measurable changes in sleep patterns (total sleep time, sleep efficiency, REM sleep, deep sleep) compared to age- and sex-matched published values, and do these improve after 12 months of psychiatric treatment?
  • Are specific body markers (like NLR, CRP, vitamin D, and lipid profile) linked to how severe sleep problems, eating disorder symptoms, and treatment results are in this group?
  • To assess these outcomes, researchers will compare participants' baseline measurements to their own 12-month follow-up measurements to determine whether multimodal psychiatric treatment produces clinically meaningful improvements in sleep architecture, biomarker profiles, psychopathology, psychological flexibility, and quality of life.

Participants will:

  • Take-home sleep recordings with a wireless device (NOX A1) in their usual environment at the start and after 12 months of treatment.
  • Complete validated self-report questionnaires assessing sleep quality (PSQI), daytime sleepiness (ESS-CHAD for children and adolescents), eating disorder symptoms (EDE-Q), depression, anxiety, and stress (DASS-21), psychological flexibility (AFQ-Y8), and health-related quality of life (KIDSCREEN-52) at baseline and 12-month follow-up.
  • Give blood samples at the start and after 12 months for testing of inflammation markers, hormone levels, lipids, and anthropometric measurements.
  • Take part in a Day Hospital Program at the Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Split (KBC Split), Croatia, which includes Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, individual counselling, family work, and medication if needed.

Przegląd badań

Szczegółowy opis

Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a severe psychiatric disorder defined by restrictive food intake, significant weight loss, distorted body image, and an intense fear of weight gain, resulting in a three times higher mortality rate among individuals with AN than in the general population. The peak incidence occurs at 14 years of age, with a prevalence of approximately 1.7% among adolescent girls. While early intervention during adolescence is associated with improved outcomes, chronic illness persisting into adulthood often results in recovery rates of only 20-30%.

Sleep disturbances are a clinically significant yet systematically underinvestigated aspect of AN. Almost 50% of individuals with AN report sleep difficulties, irrespective of disorder subtype. A 2024 meta-analysis demonstrated that patients with AN exhibit changes in sleep architecture resulting in significantly shorter total sleep time (TST), reduced sleep efficiency (SE), prolonged wake after sleep onset (WASO), increased N1 non-REM sleep, and reduced REM sleep compared to healthy controls, and especially reduced slow-wave sleep (SWS). Reduced quality of sleep is associated with poorer treatment compliance, increased therapy discontinuation, and a reduced probability of recovery. Notably, weight restoration alone does not regularly normalize sleep architecture, indicating that sleep disturbances require targeted clinical attention independent of nutritional rehabilitation.

The mechanisms underlying sleep disturbances in AN remain unclear. Malnutrition induces hormonal alterations, including elevated ghrelin and orexin-A, decreased leptin, and increased cortisol, that, combined, promote wakefulness and disrupt circadian rhythms. AN is uniquely associated with a morning chronotype, in contrast to most other psychiatric conditions, which are linked to eveningness; this distinction has recently been confirmed by Mendelian randomization studies. Comorbid depression and anxiety, which are highly prevalent in AN, further induce sleep difficulties via overlapping neurobiological pathways.

The majority of current literature has focused on adult populations. Adolescent-specific data remain limited and methodologically inconsistent, with most studies relying on questionnaire-based measures or laboratory polysomnography, both of which are subject to first-night effects.

To date, no published study has combined objective home-based sleep measurement with comprehensive longitudinal biomarker assessment specifically in early-to-mid-adolescent girls with AN. The increasing frequency of pre-menarchal presentations in clinical practice further indicates the necessity for pediatric-focused evidence. In addition to sleep, peripheral biomarkers in AN remain incompletely characterized in adolescents. Data from adult cohorts indicate elevated inflammatory cytokine levels, low-grade systemic inflammation, altered thyroid and prolactin function, dyslipidemia, and reduced 25-hydroxyvitamin D. The neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), a readily available marker of physiological stress and systemic inflammation, is dysregulated in adult AN. However, the applicability to the adolescent population and their evolution over time with treatment remain insufficiently investigated.

This study identifies two primary gaps: the absence of objective home-based sleep data and the lack of longitudinal biomarker trajectories specifically in adolescent girls with AN undergoing structured psychiatric treatment.

The study will be conducted at the Day Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Split (KBC Split), Croatia. Participants will be consecutive female patients aged 10-18 years diagnosed with anorexia nervosa (ICD-10: F50.0, F50.1, F50.9) referred to and treated by a child and adolescent psychiatrist at KBC Split.

At enrollment, a detailed history will be collected, including developmental, family, and menstrual history (menarche status and menstrual irregularities), and social background. Parental heteroanamnestic data will be collected separately. Physical examination will include vital signs (heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature) and anthropometric measures (body weight, height, BMI).

All assessments are conducted at two time points:

T0 - Baseline (study enrollment, prior to or at initiation of Day Hospital treatment) T1 - 12-month follow-up (after one year of structured multimodal treatment)

At both time points, participants will undergo:

OBJECTIVE SLEEP ASSESSMENT Home polysomnography using the NOX A1 portable wireless device (Nox Medical). The NOX A1 is a full-channel ambulatory polysomnographic system that eliminates the discomfort associated with traditional in-laboratory PSG and enables sleep recording under naturalistic home conditions. The device records electroencephalography (EEG), electrooculography (EOG), chin electromyography (EMG), electrocardiography (ECG), respiratory effort (thoracic and abdominal bands), nasal airflow, pulse oximetry, body position, and actigraphy. Sleep staging will follow AASM 2023 scoring criteria. Participants will self-apply the device at home following standardized written and verbal instructions. Derived variables: TST (minutes), SE (%), SOL (minutes), WASO (minutes), N1%, N2%, N3% (SWS), REM%, REM latency (minutes), arousal index.

SUBJECTIVE SLEEP AND SLEEPINESS ASSESSMENT Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) - 19-item self-report assessing sleep quality over the previous month; global score >5 indicates clinically poor sleep quality.

Epworth Sleepiness Scale for children and adolescents (ESS-CHAD) - 8-item self-report measure of daytime sleepiness; score >10 indicates excessive daytime sleepiness; participant version completed by the adolescent; ESS-CHAD for parent/caregiver version completed independently by parent or legal guardian (Croatian validated version) Sleep habits questionnaire - structured assessment of sleep timing, duration, screen use, and sleep behavior

EATING DISORDER PSYCHOPATHOLOGY Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q) - 28-item self-report; global score and four subscales (Restraint, Eating Concern, Shape Concern, Weight Concern); higher scores indicate greater eating disorder psychopathology EMOTIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT Depression Anxiety Stress Scale - 21 items (DASS-21) - self-report measure of depression, anxiety, and stress symptom frequency and severity over the preceding week; Subscale scores doubled per standard scoring to yield scores comparable to the full DASS-42 Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth - 8 items (AFQ-Y8) - self-report measure of psychological inflexibility, experiential avoidance, and cognitive fusion in children and adolescents

QUALITY OF LIFE KIDSCREEN-52 - 52-item health-related quality of life instrument for children and adolescents (10 dimensions: physical well-being, psychological well-being, moods and emotions, self-perception, autonomy, parent relations, social support and peers, school environment, social acceptance, financial resources); both participant self-report version and parent proxy version were completed independently

LABORATORY BIOMARKER ASSESSMENT Blood samples collected under standardized fasting conditions (minimum 8-hour fast) at both time points: Inflammatory markers: complete blood count with differential, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and C-reactive protein (CRP, mg/L).

Hormonal and nutritional markers: free thyroxine (fT4), free triiodothyronine (fT3), prolactin, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OH-D).

Metabolic markers: total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides TREATMENT DOCUMENTATION

For each participant, the following will be systematically recorded throughout the 12-month treatment period:

  • Pharmacotherapy: agent, dose, duration, and any modifications
  • Psychotherapy: modality, number of sessions attended, adherence
  • Physical and psychiatric status at each clinical contact
  • Adverse events and side effects
  • Treatment discontinuation and reasons TREATMENT PROGRAMME

All participants are enrolled in the structured Day Hospital Program for Children and Adolescents at the Department of Psychiatry, KBC Split. The program comprises:

  1. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) combined with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) - group and individual format targeting cognitive distortions, body image, emotions, and values-based behavior change
  2. Supportive individual psychotherapy - addressing motivation for recovery, self-esteem, and interpersonal functioning
  3. Family-based work and parent sessions - psychoeducation, family communication, and caregiver support
  4. Psychoeducational interventions - nutrition, body development, sleep hygiene, and emotion regulation
  5. Pharmacotherapy - prescribed where clinically indicated by the treating child and adolescent psychiatrist; type, dose, and duration recorded as covariates

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS PLAN

All statistical analyses will be performed using IBM SPSS Statistics (version 29.0 or later) and R (version 4.3.0 or later). A two-tailed significance level of p < 0.05 will be applied throughout. Given the exploratory and hypothesis-generating nature of this study, both uncorrected and Bonferroni-corrected p-values will be reported for multiple comparisons. Continuous variables: mean ± standard deviation (SD) for normally distributed data; median and interquartile range (IQR) for non-normally distributed data. Normality will be assessed using the Shapiro-Wilk test. Categorical variables: frequencies and percentages.

WITHIN-SUBJECT CHANGE (T0 TO T1) Paired-samples t-test (parametric) or Wilcoxon signed-rank test (non-parametric) will be used to assess the change in continuous outcome measures from baseline to 12 months follow-up. Effect sizes will be reported as Cohen's d (parametric) or rank-biserial correlation r (non-parametric). Spearman's rank correlation will be used to examine associations among sleep parameters, biomarker levels, psychopathological scores, and quality-of-life measures at both time points and for change scores (ΔT1-T0). Multivariable linear regression will be applied to identify independent predictors of: (1) sleep architecture parameters at baseline; (2) change in EDE-Q global score at 12 months. Covariates will include age, BMI z-score, illness duration, depression score (DASS-21), and pharmacotherapy status. The assumptions of linearity, independence, homoscedasticity, and the absence of multicollinearity will be verified prior to modeling. Longitudinal changes in biomarker panels will be examined using repeated-measures analysis or mixed-effects models, as applicable, with pharmacotherapy as a between-subject factor.

SAMPLE SIZE CONSIDERATIONS This is a single-center prospective cohort study with consecutive enrollment. A formal a priori power calculation is limited by the absence of comparable pediatric polysomnographic data in AN. Based on estimated annual referral rates at the KBC Split Day Hospital Program. A sample of 30-50 eligible participants is anticipated over the enrollment period. The study is, therefore, appropriately characterized as exploratory and hypothesis-generating, with findings intended to inform the design of adequately powered future multi-center studies. The study will be conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and applicable Croatian and European Union regulations on clinical research and data protection (GDPR).

Ethical approval will be obtained from the Ethics Committee of the University Hospital of Split (KBC Split) and the Ethics Committee of the University of Split School of Medicine prior to enrollment of any participant. Written informed consent will be obtained from each participant's parent or legal guardian. Written assent will be obtained from each participant. Participation is voluntary, and withdrawal at any time will not affect the quality of clinical care provided. All data will be pseudonymized and stored in accordance with institutional data protection protocols.

Typ studiów

Obserwacyjny

Zapisy (Szacowany)

25

Kryteria uczestnictwa

Badacze szukają osób, które pasują do określonego opisu, zwanego kryteriami kwalifikacyjnymi. Niektóre przykłady tych kryteriów to ogólny stan zdrowia danej osoby lub wcześniejsze leczenie.

Kryteria kwalifikacji

Wiek uprawniający do nauki

  • Dziecko
  • Dorosły

Akceptuje zdrowych ochotników

Nie

Metoda próbkowania

Próbka bez prawdopodobieństwa

Badana populacja

Female patients aged 10-18 years with a first-time diagnosis of anorexia nervosa (ICD-10: F50.0, F50.1, F50.9) enrolled consecutively at the Day Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Split (KBC Split), Croatia. Participants must be medically stable for Day Hospital treatment and able to complete home polysomnography and self-report questionnaires in Croatian. Excluded are patients with intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, psychotic or bipolar disorder, substance use disorder, chronic somatic illness affecting inflammatory markers, or prior AN diagnosis.

Opis

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Female sex assigned at birth
  2. Age between 10 and 18 years (inclusive) at the time of study enrollment
  3. First-time diagnosis of anorexia nervosa according to ICD-10 criteria at the time of enrollment, including:

    • Anorexia nervosa (F50.0)
    • Atypical anorexia nervosa (F50.1)
    • Eating disorder, unspecified (F50.9) with predominant restrictive or anorexic presentation
  4. Currently under the care of a child and adolescent psychiatrist at the Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Split (KBC Split), Croatia
  5. Enrolled in or eligible for the Day Hospital Program for Children and Adolescents at the Department of Psychiatry, KBC Split
  6. Ability to read and understand Croatian language sufficiently to complete self-report questionnaires
  7. Parent or legal guardian willing and able to provide written informed consent prior to any study procedure
  8. Participant willing and able to provide written assent prior to any study procedure
  9. Participant and parent/guardian willing to undergo all study procedures at both time points, including:

    • Home polysomnography (NOX A1) at baseline and 12-month follow-up
    • Completion of all self-report questionnaires at baseline and 12-month follow-up
    • Fasting blood sampling at baseline and 12-month follow-up

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Age younger than 10 years or older than 18 years at the time of enrollment
  2. Male sex assigned at birth
  3. Previous diagnosis of anorexia nervosa prior to current enrollment (i.e., recurrent or relapsing AN - this study enrolls first-diagnosis cases only)
  4. Anorexia nervosa currently in clinical remission at the time of enrollment
  5. Comorbid psychiatric diagnosis of any of the following:

    • Intellectual disability (any severity, ICD-10: F70-F79)
    • Autism spectrum disorder (ICD-10: F84)
    • Schizophrenia spectrum or other psychotic disorder (ICD-10: F20-F29)
    • Bipolar affective disorder, any type (ICD-10: F31)
    • Substance use disorder, any substance (ICD-10: F10-F19)
  6. Severe or chronic somatic illness documented in medical history, including but not limited to:

    • Central nervous system disorders (epilepsy, acquired brain injury, neurodegenerative disease, ICD-10: G00-G99)
    • Chronic inflammatory or autoimmune disease (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis)
    • Primary endocrine disorder independent of AN (e.g., primary hypothyroidism, type 1 or type 2 diabetes mellitus, congenital adrenal hyperplasia)
    • Active or history of malignancy
    • Chronic renal or hepatic disease
  7. Use of any medication known to significantly alter sleep architecture or inflammatory biomarker levels that was initiated prior to study enrollment and is unrelated to the study treatment program, including:

    • Benzodiazepines or z-drugs (zopiclone, zolpidem)
    • Antipsychotic medications
    • Systemic corticosteroids
    • Immunosuppressive agents
    • Melatonin or melatonin receptor agonists Medications initiated as part of the Day Hospital treatment program after enrollment will be documented and included as covariates in statistical analyses and do not constitute an exclusion criterion.
  8. Presence of an active somatic condition at the time of enrollment requiring acute inpatient medical treatment (e.g., severe electrolyte imbalance requiring intravenous correction, acute cardiac arrhythmia) that would preclude safe participation in the Day Hospital Program
  9. Physical or cognitive inability to cooperate with home polysomnography device placement or self-report questionnaire completion, as judged by the treating child and adolescent psychiatrist
  10. Simultaneous participation in another interventional clinical trial that could influence sleep parameters, nutritional status, inflammatory markers, or psychiatric outcomes.
  11. Absence of written informed consent from parent or legal guardian, or absence of written assent from the participant

Plan studiów

Ta sekcja zawiera szczegółowe informacje na temat planu badania, w tym sposób zaprojektowania badania i jego pomiary.

Jak projektuje się badanie?

Szczegóły projektu

Kohorty i interwencje

Grupa / Kohorta
Interwencja / Leczenie
Adolescent Girls with Newly Diagnosed Anorexia Nervosa University Hospital of Split Day Hospital
A single cohort of 25 female participants aged 10-18 years at the time of first diagnosis of anorexia nervosa (ICD-10: F50.0, F50.1, F50.9), enrolled consecutively at the Day Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Split (KBC Split), Croatia. All participants underwent identical baseline assessments (T0) at diagnosis and repeat assessments at 12-month follow-up (T1) following a structured multimodal treatment program.

Serial venous blood sampling conducted under standardized fasting conditions (minimum 8-hour fast) at baseline (T0) and 12-month follow-up (T1) for assessment of the following parameters:

Inflammatory markers:

  • Complete blood count with differential
  • Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR)
  • C-reactive protein (CRP, mg/L)

Hormonal and nutritional markers:

  • Free thyroxine (fT4), free triiodothyronine (fT3)
  • Prolactin
  • 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OH-D)

Metabolic markers:

  • Total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides (mmol/L)

Structured Day Hospital treatment program delivered over 12 months at the Department of Psychiatry comprising:

  1. Psychological intervention: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) combined with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), delivered in individual and group format, targeting cognitive distortions, body image disturbance, emotional regulation, and values-based behavioral change
  2. Supportive individual psychotherapy addressing motivation for recovery, self-esteem, and interpersonal functioning
  3. Family-based work and parent sessions including psychoeducation, family communication strategies and caregiver support
  4. Pharmacotherapy where clinically indicated by the treating child and adolescent psychiatrist; agent, dose, duration and modifications recorded systematically as covariates

Treatment adherence, session attendance, adverse events, and changes in status are documented at each clinical contact throughout the 12-month.

Ambulatory, wireless polysomnographic recording performed by the participant in their natural home environment using the NOX A1 portable device (Nox Medical, Iceland). The device records electroencephalography (EEG), electrooculography (EOG), chin electromyography (EMG), electrocardiography (ECG), respiratory effort , nasal airflow, pulse oximetry, body position, and actigraphy. Sleep staging is performed according to AASM 2023 scoring rules. Participants self-apply the device at home following standardized written and verbal instructions provided by the research team, eliminating first-night laboratory effects associated with traditional in-laboratory polysomnography. Derived sleep variables: total sleep time (TST, minutes), sleep efficiency (SE), sleep onset latency (SOL, minutes), wake after sleep onset (WASO, minutes), N1%, N2%, N3% slow-wave sleep (SWS), REM sleep %, REM latency (minutes), and arousal index. Measurements were conducted at baseline (T0) and 12-month follow-up (T1).

Co mierzy badanie?

Podstawowe miary wyniku

Miara wyniku
Opis środka
Ramy czasowe
Change in Objective Sleep Architecture Assessed by Home Polysomnography (NOX A1)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)

Change from baseline in polysomnographically derived sleep parameters measured by the portable wireless NOX A1 device in the participant's home environment. Sleep staging performed according to AASM 2023 scoring criteria.

Change from baseline in sleep efficiency (SE, %) as the primary polysomnographic outcome, measured by the portable wireless NOX A1 device in the participant's home environment.

SE is defined as the ratio of total sleep time to time in bed, expressed as a percentage. This is the single primary reported value for this outcome measure.

Additional polysomnographic parameters (total sleep time in minutes, sleep onset latency in minutes, wake after sleep onset in minutes, N1/N2/N3/REM sleep percentages, REM latency in minutes, arousal index in events/hour) will be reported as pre-specified secondary descriptive analyses, each in its respective unit of measure, and are not aggregated into a composite score.

Unit of Measure: Percentage (%)

Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)
Change in Subjective Sleep Quality Assessed by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)

Change from baseline in the Global PSQI Score as the single primary reported value. The Global PSQI Score is calculated as the sum of seven component scores and ranges from 0 to 21, with higher scores indicating worse sleep quality. A score greater than 5 indicates poor sleep quality.

The seven component scores (subjective sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep disturbances, use of sleep medication, and daytime dysfunction) share the same unit of measure (score on a scale, range 0-3 per component) and will be reported as supplementary descriptive analyses.

Unit of Measure: Score on a scale (0-21)

Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)
Change in Eating Disorder Psychopathology Assessed by the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)

Change from baseline in EDE-Q global score and four subscale scores:

  • Restraint
  • Eating Concern
  • Shape Concern
  • Weight Concern

Each item rated on a 7-point forced-choice scale (0-6). Global score calculated as mean of four subscale scores. Higher scores indicate greater eating disorder psychopathology.

Baseline (T0 - at first diagnosis) and 12 months (T1 - following completion of multimodal treatment program)

Miary wyników drugorzędnych

Miara wyniku
Opis środka
Ramy czasowe
Change in Daytime Sleepiness Assessed by the Epworth Sleepiness Scale - Participant Version (ESS)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in ESS total score completed by the adolescent participant.

Score range: 0-24 Clinical threshold: score >10 indicates excessive daytime sleepiness Higher scores indicate greater daytime sleepiness.

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Daytime Sleepiness Assessed by the Epworth Sleepiness Scale - Parent/Caregiver Version (ESS-Parent)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change from baseline in ESS total score completed independently by the parent or legal guardian of the participant, using the Croatian validated parent and caregiver version of the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. Score range: 0-24 Clinical threshold: score >10 indicates excessive daytime sleepiness as observed by parent/caregiver.
Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Assessed by the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale - 21 Items (DASS-21)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in three DASS-21 subscale scores:

  • Depression subscale
  • Anxiety subscale
  • Stress subscale Raw subscale scores multiplied by 2 per standard scoring protocol to yield values comparable to the full DASS-42.

Score range per subscale (after doubling): 0-42 Higher scores indicate greater symptom severity.

Severity classification per subscale:

Depression: Normal 0-9 / Mild 10-13 / Moderate 14-20

  • Severe 21-27 / Extremely severe ≥28 Anxiety: Normal 0-7 / Mild 8-9 / Moderate 10-14
  • Severe 15-19 / Extremely severe ≥20 Stress: Normal 0-14 / Mild 15-18 / Moderate 19-25
  • Severe 26-33 / Extremely severe ≥34
Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Psychological Flexibility Assessed by the Avoidance and Fusion Questionnaire for Youth - 8 Items (AFQ-Y8)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in AFQ-Y8 total score reflecting psychological inflexibility, experiential avoidance and cognitive fusion in adolescent participants.

Score range: 0-40 Higher scores indicate greater psychological inflexibility and experiential avoidance.

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Health-Related Quality of Life Assessed by KIDSCREEN-52 - Participant Self-Report Version
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in KIDSCREEN-52 scores across ten dimensions:

  • Physical well-being (5 items)
  • Psychological well-being (6 items)
  • Moods and emotions (7 items)
  • Self-perception (5 items)
  • Autonomy (5 items)
  • Parent relations and home life (6 items)
  • Social support and peers (6 items)
  • School environment (6 items)
  • Social acceptance / bullying (3 items)
  • Financial resources (3 items)

Scores transformed to Rasch-scaled T-scores (mean 50, SD 10 in reference population). Higher scores indicate better quality of life on each dimension.

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Health-Related Quality of Life Assessed by KIDSCREEN-52 - Parent Proxy Version
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in KIDSCREEN-52 parent proxy version scores across the same ten dimensions as the participant self-report version, completed independently by the parent or legal guardian.

Scores transformed to Rasch-scaled T-scores (mean 50, SD 10 in reference population).

Higher scores indicate better quality of life on each dimension as perceived by parent/caregiver.

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Systemic Inflammatory Markers - Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte Ratio (NLR) and C-Reactive Protein (CRP)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in two markers of systemic inflammation, each reported as a separate value in its respective unit of measure:

Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) - derived from complete blood count with differential; marker of physiological stress and low-grade systemic inflammation. Reported as a dimensionless ratio.

C-reactive protein (CRP) - acute-phase inflammatory protein. Reported in mg/L. These two assessments differ in their units of measure and will not be aggregated into a single composite value. Each will be reported individually at baseline and follow-up.

Blood samples collected under standardized fasting conditions (minimum 8-hour fast).

Unit of Measure: NLR: ratio (dimensionless); CRP: mg/L

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Hormonal Biomarkers (fT3, fT4)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in free triiodothyronine (fT3) and free thyroxine (fT4). Both analytes are expressed in the same unit of measure (pmol/L) and will be reported as separate values within this outcome measure.

Unit of Measure: pmol/L

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Hormonal Biomarker-Prolactin
Ramy czasowe: Time Frame: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in serum prolactin concentration as a marker of hypothalamic-pituitary axis function.

Unit of Measure: mIU/L

Time Frame: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Vitamin D Status (25OH-D)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in:

  • 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OH-D, nmol/L) - primary circulating storage form

Clinical deficiency threshold:

25OH-D < 50 nmol/L (insufficiency < 75 nmol/L)

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Lipid Profile (Total Cholesterol, LDL, HDL, Triglycerides)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in:

  • Total cholesterol (mmol/L)
  • LDL cholesterol (mmol/L)
  • HDL cholesterol (mmol/L)
  • Triglycerides (mmol/L)

Blood samples collected under standardized fasting conditions (minimum 8-hour fast).

Persistently elevated lipid levels despite partial weight restoration have been documented in AN across age groups. All four lipid parameters (total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides) are expressed in the same unit of measure (mmol/L) and will be reported as separate values constituting the lipid profile.

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)
Change in Nutritional and Anthropometric Status (BMI z-score)
Ramy czasowe: Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Change from baseline in BMI z-score for age and sex as the primary reported anthropometric value, calculated using WHO 2007 reference standards for adolescents aged 10-18 years. BMI z-score is the standard primary anthropometric outcome in paediatric populations as it accounts for age- and sex-related variation in body composition during adolescent development.

Body weight (kg), height (cm), and BMI (kg/m²) are collected as the measurements required to derive the BMI z-score and will be reported as supporting descriptive values.

Unit of Measure: z-score (SD units)

Baseline (T0) and 12 months (T1)

Współpracownicy i badacze

Tutaj znajdziesz osoby i organizacje zaangażowane w to badanie.

Daty zapisu na studia

Daty te śledzą postęp w przesyłaniu rekordów badań i podsumowań wyników do ClinicalTrials.gov. Zapisy badań i zgłoszone wyniki są przeglądane przez National Library of Medicine (NLM), aby upewnić się, że spełniają określone standardy kontroli jakości, zanim zostaną opublikowane na publicznej stronie internetowej.

Główne daty studiów

Rozpoczęcie studiów (Szacowany)

30 maja 2026

Zakończenie podstawowe (Szacowany)

30 maja 2028

Ukończenie studiów (Szacowany)

31 grudnia 2029

Daty rejestracji na studia

Pierwszy przesłany

20 maja 2026

Pierwszy przesłany, który spełnia kryteria kontroli jakości

8 czerwca 2026

Pierwszy wysłany (Rzeczywisty)

12 czerwca 2026

Aktualizacje rekordów badań

Ostatnia wysłana aktualizacja (Rzeczywisty)

12 czerwca 2026

Ostatnia przesłana aktualizacja, która spełniała kryteria kontroli jakości

8 czerwca 2026

Ostatnia weryfikacja

1 maja 2026

Więcej informacji

Terminy związane z tym badaniem

Plan dla danych uczestnika indywidualnego (IPD)

Planujesz udostępniać dane poszczególnych uczestników (IPD)?

NIE

Opis planu IPD

Individual participant data will not be shared because the study involves sensitive adolescent related clinical, psychological and metabolic data, and current approvals cover analysis only within the research team. De-identified aggregate data my be shared in publications or upon reasonable request.

Informacje o lekach i urządzeniach, dokumenty badawcze

Bada produkt leczniczy regulowany przez amerykańską FDA

Nie

Bada produkt urządzenia regulowany przez amerykańską FDA

Nie

Te informacje zostały pobrane bezpośrednio ze strony internetowej clinicaltrials.gov bez żadnych zmian. Jeśli chcesz zmienić, usunąć lub zaktualizować dane swojego badania, skontaktuj się z register@clinicaltrials.gov. Gdy tylko zmiana zostanie wprowadzona na stronie clinicaltrials.gov, zostanie ona automatycznie zaktualizowana również na naszej stronie internetowej .

Badania kliniczne na Jadłowstręt psychiczny

Subskrybuj