Evidence-Based Reviews

Beating obesity: Help patients control binge eating disorder and night eating syndrome

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These two eating disorders often can be treated successfully without referral to specialized centers.


 

References

Say “eating disorders,” and young, thin, Caucasian women with anorexia or bulimia nervosa come to mind. Psychiatry outpatients, however, are more likely to have binge eating disorder (BED) or night eating syndrome (NES) and to be middle-aged, obese, male, or African-American.

Like anorexia and bulimia, BED and NES cause distress, impairment, and medical morbidity. But BED and NES are different because you can manage many patients without referring them to eating disorder treatment centers. You can improve patients’ function and quality of life by:

  • correcting eating disorder behaviors and thoughts
  • identifying and managing psychiatric comorbidity
  • identifying and treating associated medical problems (usually obesity complications such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and dyslipidemia)
  • helping them achieve and maintain a healthy (but realistic) body weight.

Characteristics of BED and NES

BED and NES are coded as eating disorder, not otherwise specified in DSM-IV-TR, and their diagnostic criteria are provisional. Research criteria for BED are listed in Appendix B of DSM-IV (Box 1); diagnostic criteria for NES are being developed (Box 2).

Box1

Provisional DSM-IV-TR criteria for binge eating disorder
  1. Recurrent episodes of binge eating. An episode of binge eating is characterized by both of the following:
    1. Eating, in a discrete period of time (eg, within any 2-hour period), an amount of food that is definitely larger than most people would eat in a similar period of time under similar circumstances
    2. A sense of lack of control over eating during the episode (eg, a feeling that one cannot stop eating or control what or how much one is eating)
  2. The binge-eating episodes are associated with three (or more) of the following:
    1. Eating much more rapidly than normal
    2. Eating until feeling uncomfortably full
    3. Eating large amounts of food when not feeling physically hungry
    4. Eating alone because of being embarrassed by how much one is eating
    5. Feeling disgusted with oneself, depressed, or very guilty after overeating
  3. Marked distress regarding binge eating is present.
  4. The binge eating occurs, on average, at least 2 days a week for 6 months.
  5. Binge eating is not associated with the regular use of inappropriate compensatory behaviors (eg, purging, fasting, excessive exercise) and does not occur exclusively during the course of anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa.

Source: American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 4th ed, text rev. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association; 2000.

Box2

Provisional criteria for night eating syndrome
  • Morning anorexia, even if the patient eats breakfast
  • Evening hyperphagia, in which ≥50% of daily energy intake is consumed after the evening meal
  • Awakening at least once a night and eating snacks
  • Duration of at least 3 months
  • Patient does not meet criteria for bulimia nervosa or binge eating disorder

Source: Birketvedt GS, Florholmen J, Sundsfjord J, et al. Behavioral and neuroendocrine characteristics of the night-eating syndrome. JAMA 1999;282:657-63.

Prevalence. How common are these eating disorders? Two small studies examined BED and NES prevalence in outpatient psychiatric populations. A European study found 4% of 234 psychiatry clinic patients met criteria for BED,1 whereas 12% in 399 patients in two U.S. clinics met criteria for NES (with possibly higher rates in patients who took atypical antipsychotics).2

Demographics. Men experience BED and NES nearly as often as women, and distribution among women is similar across age groups.3 Binge eating may be more common among African-Americans than Caucasians.4

Obesity. One-half or more of persons with BED or NES are obese, with body mass index (BMI) ≥30.5,6 Obesity prevalence increases over time—from 22% at baseline to 39% 5 years later in one study of BED.7

Psychiatric comorbidity. Overweight or obesity increase the risk for early mortality and impaired quality of life.8 Persons with obesity plus BED have poorer physical and psychosocial function and lower quality of life than do obese persons without BED.9

Structured clinical interviews of 128 obese subjects found higher rates of psychiatric disorders in those with BED. Obesity with comorbid binge eating increased lifetime relative risk:

  • >6-fold for major depression
  • >8-fold for panic disorder
  • >13-fold for borderline personality disorder, compared with obesity alone.10

Similarly, overweight patients with NES have more depression, lower self-esteem, and more difficulty losing weight than those without NES.11 They meet criteria significantly more often for major depressive disorder, anxiety disorders, and substance use disorders.12 Most NES patients view their nocturnal eating as shameful,13 and distress and guilt are among the diagnostic criteria for BED.

Fortunately, successful treatment of BED or NES almost always improves comorbid medical and psychiatric conditions as well. Ongoing treatment is critical for sustaining weight loss.14

Diagnosis and evaluation

Start by asking overweight patients if they binge eat or do most of their eating at night. Follow up with questions to assess whether they meet provisional diagnostic criteria for BED or NES and to rule out other disorders in the differential diagnosis (Box 3). These include bulimia and sleep-related eating disorder, which is generally regarded as a parasomnia.

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