Obesity Binge Eating Disorder

A five-year study by McLean Hospital found that binge-eating disorder persists longer than previously thought, with significant percentages of individuals still affected after 2.5 and 5 years. This challenges earlier research suggesting quicker remission and highlights the importance of continued intervention and improved treatment strategies.

McLean Hospital researchers show that binge-eating disorder lasts longer than expected and relapse is common, with many still affected years after diagnosis.

In the United States, binge-eating disorder is the most prevalent eating disorder. However, previous studies have presented conflicting views of the disorder’s duration and the likelihood of relapse.

A new five-year study led by investigators from McLean Hospital, part of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, revealed that 61% of individuals continued to experience symptoms of binge-eating disorder 2.5 years after being diagnosed, and 45% still exhibited symptoms after five years. These findings challenge earlier prospective studies that suggested quicker recovery times, the researchers noted.

Key Findings and Implications

“The big takeaway is that binge-eating disorder does improve with time, but for many people it lasts years,” said first author Kristin Javaras, DPhil, PhD, assistant psychologist in the Division of Women’s Mental Health at McLean. “As a clinician, oftentimes the clients I work with report many, many years of binge-eating disorder, which felt very discordant with studies that suggested that it was a transient disorder. It’s very important to understand how long binge-eating disorder lasts and how likely people are to relapse so that we can better provide better care.”

The results were published May 28 in Psychological Medicine, published by Cambridge University Press.

Disorder Characteristics and Study Methodology

Binge-eating disorder, which is estimated to impact somewhere between 1 percent and 3 percent of U.S. adults, is characterized by episodes during which people feel a loss of control over their eating. The average age of onset is 25 years.

While previous retrospective studies, which rely on people’s sometimes-faulty memories, have reported that binge-eating disorder lasts seven to sixteen years on average, prospective studies tracking individuals with the disorder over time have suggested that many individuals with the disorder enter remission within a much smaller timeframe—from one to two years.

However, the researchers noted that most previous prospective studies had limitations, including a small sample size (

Long-Term Trends and Treatment Insights

To better understand the time-course of binge-eating disorder, the researchers followed 137 adult community members with the disorder for five years. Participants, who ranged in age from 19 to 74 and had an average BMI of 36, were assessed for binge-eating disorder at the beginning of the study and re-examined 2.5 and 5 years later.

After five years, most of the study participants still experienced binge-eating episodes, though many showed improvements. After 2.5 years, 61 percent of participants still met the full criteria for binge-eating disorder at the time the study was conducted, and a further 23 percent experienced clinically significant symptoms, although they were below the threshold for binge-eating disorder. After 5 years, 46 percent of participants met the full criteria and a further 33 percent experienced clinically significant but sub-threshold symptoms. Notably, 35 percent of the individuals who were in remission at the 2.5-year follow-up had relapsed to either full or sub-threshold binge-eating disorder at the 5-year follow-up. The criteria for diagnosing binge-eating disorder have changed since the study was conducted, and Javaras notes that under the new guidelines, an even larger percentage of the study’s participants would have been diagnosed with the disorder at the 2.5 and 5-year follow-ups.

Javaras added that because participants in the study were community members who may or may not have been receiving treatment, rather than patients enrolled in a treatment program, the study’s results are more representative of binge-eating disorder’s natural time-course. When comparing this community sample to those in treatment studies, treatment appeared to lead to faster remission, suggesting that people with binge-eating disorders will benefit from intervention. There are major inequities in who receives treatment for eating disorders, according to Javaras.

Though there was variation amongst participants in the likelihood of remission and how long it took, the researchers were unable to find any strong clinical or demographic predictors for duration of the disorder.

“This suggests that no one is much less or more likely to get better than anyone else,” said Javaras.

Research Directions and Future Treatment

Since the study’s conclusion, the researchers have been investigating and developing treatment options for binge-eating disorder, and examining screening methods to better identify individuals who would benefit from treatment.

“We are studying binge-eating disorder with neuroimaging to get a better understanding of the neurobiology involved, which could help enhance or develop new treatments,” said Javaras. “We are also examining ways to catch people earlier, because many don’t even realize they have binge-eating disorder, and there is a major need for increased awareness and screening so that intervention can begin earlier.”

Reference: “The natural course of binge-eating disorder: findings from a prospective, community-based study of adults” by Kristin N. Javaras, Victoria F. Franco, Boyu Ren, Cynthia M. Bulik, Scott J. Crow, Susan L. McElroy, Harrison G. Pope and James I. Hudson, 28 May 2024, Psychological Medicine.
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291724000977

Authorship: The corresponding author of the study was Kristin N. Javaras, DPhil PhD (McLean). Additional co-authors included Victoria F. Franco, MS(McLean), Boyu Ren, PhD(McLean) Cynthia M Bulik, PhD (UNC), Scott J. Crow, MD (UMN), Susan L. McElroy, MD (UCCOM); Harrison G. Pope, Jr MD, MPH (McLean), James I. Hudson, MD, ScD (McLean)

Disclosures: KNJ owned equity shares in Sanofi and Centene Corporation, and served on Clinical Advisory Board for Beanbag health, and received research funding from the NIDDK. JIH received grant support from Boehringer-Ingelheim and Idorsia. A full list of author disclosures can be found in the manuscript.

Funding: The family study and longitudinal study were supported in part by an investigator-initiated grant from Ortho-McNeil Janssen Scientific Affairs. Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute Of Diabetes And Digestive And Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number K23DK120517. Additional funding came from an NARSAD Young Investigator Grant from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, NIMH grants (R56-MH129437, R01-MH120170, R01-MH119084, R01-MH118278, and R01MH124871), and a Swedish Research Council grant (538-2013-88641).



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