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Bulimia Nervosa: Working Toward Better Definitions of
Remission and Relapse
Reprinted
from Eating Disorders Review
By
Mary K. Stein
September/October 2005
Volume 16, Number 5
©2000
Gürze Books
Find out more about Bulimia from one of the helpful links below
What is bulimia
Why do people become bulimic
How to help someone who has bulimia
Medication for bulimia
Impacts of bulimia on pregnancy
Predicting the onset of bulimia
Bulimia Nervosa: Working toward better definitions of remission and relapse
Pictures of bulimia
Relapse
rates in bulimia nervosa (BN) range from 30% to 63%.
The definition of remission in BN also is broad, spanning
2 to 8 weeks of abstinence from binge eating and purging.
The least-stringent definitions of remission and relapse
overlap, with 1 episode per week for 4 weeks qualifying
as remission in some studies, but as relapse in others.
Establishing a better definition of remission is particularly
important because residual symptoms have been associated
with an increased risk of relapse.
A
study to better define remission and relapse in BN
In an attempt to better define remission and relapse
in patients with BN, Marion Olmsted, PhD, Allan S. Kaplan,
MD, and Wendi Rockert, MEd designed a study to compare
the relapse rates obtained when definitions of remission
and relapse were systematically varied (Int J Eat Disord
2005;38:1). In their uncontrolled, naturalistic, prospective
follow- up study, 54 women were recruited one month
after completing treatment and were asked to attend
follow-up interviews every 3 months for up to 19 months.
All the women had completed one of the treatment programs
at the Toronto General Hospital Eating Disorders program
and met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, 3rd revision (DSM-IIIR) criteria for BN.
All subjects weighed at least 85% of matched population
mean weight.
In
an attempt to better define remission and relapse in
patients with BN, Marion Olmsted, PhD, Allan S. Kaplan,
MD, and Wendi Rockert, MEd designed a study to compare
the relapse rates obtained when definitions of remission
and relapse were systematically varied (Int J Eat Disord
2005;38:1). In their uncontrolled, naturalistic, prospective
follow- up study, 54 women were recruited one month
after completing treatment and were asked to attend
follow-up interviews every 3 months for up to 19 months.
All the women had completed one of the treatment programs
at the Toronto General Hospital Eating Disorders program
and met Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, 3rd revision (DSM-IIIR) criteria for BN.
All subjects weighed at least 85% of matched population
mean weight.
At
each follow-up visit, eating disorders symptoms were
assessed and the women completed a calendar for each
of the preceding 3 months, indicating significant social
or vocational events and/or mood states to help them
recall possible bulimic episodes. The researchers used
four definitions of remission, 0, 1, 2, or 3 episodes
of binge eating or vomiting in the month after the end
of treatment.
Relapse
rates depended on definitions
The
relapse rates varied widely depending on the definitions
for remission and relapse. By 19 months of follow-up,
the lowest relapse rate, 21%, occurred among patients
who were abstinent at baseline, with relapse defined
as at least twice-weekly symptoms for 3 months. The
highest relapse rate, 55%, occurred among patients who
had the most symptoms at baselineup to 3 episodes--and
those who had the least strict definition of relapse.
At 19 months, relapse rates ranged from a low of 21%
to a high of 55%. Adopting consistent definitions is
a prerequisite to more informative and useful comparisons
across studies, they reported. For example, the authors
noted that in two previous retrospective studies they
conducted on independent samples of patients, relapse
rates were 29% and 31%. The comparable relapse rate
is 40% in their current study.
Suggested
definitions
The authors recommend that partial remission be defined
as low-level symptoms (a maximum of 2 episodes per month)
over a 2-month period, and that relapse be defined as
meeting the full diagnostic criteria for BN (such as
an average of 2 symptom episodes per week for 3 months),
as described in the DSM-IV.
Dr.
Olmsted and colleagues believe that future research
could benefit from shared definitions of relapse and
remission. Also, establishing such a reference point
related to the primary behavioral criteria for BN might
help clarify relapse, including quality of eating, weight-focused
self-esteem, social functioning and the incidence of
relapse from BN into other eating disorders.
Additional Resources:
Reasons most weight-loss programs don't stand a chance
Recognizing and Responding to Binge Eating in Children
Regaining Weight in a Healthy Way
Revising the Diagnosis of Anorexia Nervosa Will Improve Patient Care
Saving Your Teeth: First, Reconsider When to Brush
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