Twelve-year course and outcome of bulimia nervosa

Author:

FICHTER MANFRED M.,QUADFLIEG NORBERT

Abstract

Background. Since little is known about the long-term course and outcome of bulimia nervosa, the authors designed a 12-year prospective longitudinal study with five cross-sectional assessments based on a large sample of consecutively treated females with bulimia nervosa (purging type) (BN-P).Method. One hundred and ninety-six females with BN-P were assessed (1) at the beginning of treatment, (2) at the end of treatment, (3) at 2-year follow-up, (4) at 6-year follow-up, and (5) at 12-year follow-up. In self-ratings as well as expert ratings based on interviews we assessed specific eating-disorder and general psychopathology.Results. The general pattern of results over time showed substantial improvement during treatment, slight (in most cases non-significant) decline during the first two years after the end of treatment, and further improvement and stabilization until 12-year follow-up. At that point the majority of patients (70·1%) showed no major DSM-IV eating disorder, 13·2% had eating disorders not otherwise specified, 10·1% had BN-P and 2% had died. Very few had undergone transition to anorexia nervosa or binge-eating disorders. Logistic regression analyses showed that psychiatric co-morbidity was the best and most stable predictor for eating-disorder outcome at 2, 6 and 12 years.Conclusions. Course and outcome of BN-P was generally more favourable than for anorexia nervosa.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology

Cited by 125 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Eating Disorders;International Encyclopedia of Public Health;2025

2. Course of Bulimia Nervosa and Binge-Eating Disorder;Handbook of Eating Disorders and Obesity;2024

3. Managing the common problem of co‐occurring mental health conditions in eating disorders: A commentary on Wade et al. (2023);International Journal of Eating Disorders;2023-09-04

4. Eating Disorder Symptoms, Affect-Regulation Drinking Motives and Drinking-Related Outcomes;Emerging Adulthood;2023-05-31

5. Outcome of Bulimia Nervosa;Eating Disorders;2023

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