Trajectories and predictive factors of weight recovery in patients with anorexia nervosa completing treatment. A latent class mixed model approach

Author:

Di Lodovico Laura123ORCID,Al Tabchi Amir1,Clarke Julia1,Mancusi Rossella Letizia1,Messeca Dylan1,Duriez Philibert13ORCID,Hanachi Mouna45,Gorwood Philip13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinique des Maladies Mentales et de l’Encéphale GHU Paris Psychiatrie et Neurosciences Hôpital Sainte‐Anne Paris France

2. Univ. Bordeaux INSERM Neurocentre Magendie U1215 Bordeaux France

3. Université Paris Cité INSERM Institut de Psychiatrie et Neuroscience de Paris (IPNP) U1266 Paris France

4. Clinical Nutrition Unit Paul Brousse University Hospital Assistance Publique‐Hôpitaux de Paris (AP‐HP) Villejuif France

5. UMR Micalis Institute INRA Paris Saclay University Jouy‐En‐Josas France

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTreatment of anorexia nervosa (AN) sometimes requires hospitalisation, which is often lengthy, with little ability to predict individual trajectory. Depicting specific profiles of treatment response and their clinical predictors could be beneficial to tailor inpatient management. The aim of this research was to identify clusters of weight recovery during inpatient treatment, and their clinical predictors.MethodsA sample of 181 inpatients who completed a treatment programme for AN was included in a retrospective study. A latent class mixed model approach was used to identify distinct weight‐gain trajectories. Clinical variables were introduced in a multinomial logistic regression model as predictors of the different classes.ResultsA four‐class quadratic model was retained, able to correctly classify 63.7% of the cohort. It encompassed a late‐rising, flattening, moderate trajectory of body mass index (BMI) increase (class 1), a late‐rising, steady, high trajectory (class 2), an early‐rising, flattening, high trajectory (class 3) and an early‐rising, steady, high trajectory (class 4). Significant predictors of belonging to a class were baseline BMI (all classes), illness duration (class 2), and benzodiazepine prescription (class 3).ConclusionPredicting different kinetics of weight recovery based on routinely collected clinical indicators could improve clinician awareness and patient engagement by enabling shared expectations of treatment response.

Publisher

Wiley

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