학술논문

Comparing randomized controlled trials of outpatient family‐based or inpatient multimodal treatment followed by outpatient care in youth with anorexia nervosa: Differences in populations, metrics, and outcomes
Document Type
article
Source
European Eating Disorders Review. 30(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Pediatric
Nutrition
Comparative Effectiveness Research
Serious Mental Illness
Anorexia
Eating Disorders
Mental Health
Brain Disorders
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Adolescent
Ambulatory Care
Anorexia Nervosa
Combined Modality Therapy
Family Therapy
Humans
Inpatients
Outpatients
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Treatment Outcome
adolescent
eating disorders
hospitalisation
review
setting
weight gain
Psychology
Clinical Psychology
Clinical sciences
Nutrition and dietetics
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveVarious approaches exist to treat youth with anorexia nervosa (AN). Family-based treatment (FBT) has never been compared to long inpatient, multimodal treatment (IMT) in a randomized controlled trial (RCT). The aim of this study was to compare data on body weight trajectories, change in eating disorder psychopathology, hospital days and treatment costs in RCTs delivering FBT or IMT.MethodReview of RCTs published between 2010 and 2020 in youth with AN, delivering FBT or IMT.ResultsFour RCTs delivering FBT (United States, n = 2; Australia, n = 2), one RCT delivering Family Therapy for AN (United Kingdom) and two RCTs delivering IMT (France, n = 1; Germany, n = 1) were identified from previous meta-analyses. The comparison of studies was limited by (1) significant differences in patient baseline characteristics including pretreated versus non-pretreated patients, (2) use of different psychometric and weight measures and (3) different initial velocity of weight recovery. Minimal baseline and outcome reporting standards for body weight metrics and nature/dose of interventions allowing international comparison are needed and suggestions to developing these standards are presented.DiscussionAn RCT should investigate, whether FBT is a viable alternative to IMT, leading to comparable weight and psychopathology improvement with less inpatient time and costs.