Severe Obesity and Eating Habits (OSCAR)
- Conditions
- Eating DisordersSevere Obesity
- Registration Number
- NCT04588610
- Lead Sponsor
- Centre Hospitalier Arras
- Brief Summary
In anorexia nervosa,the eating disorder (ED) is the cause of thinness. In severe obesity, the overweight is a symptom. This symptom, however, is only the consequence of possibly deregulated eating behavior. The literature, focusus a specified ED of DSM-V: Binge Eating Disorder (BED) or Binge Eating, whom estimated prevalence in the severely obese population varies from 1.4 to 49% depending on the studies. The other ED, called unspecified ED (or EDNOS for Eating Disorder Non Otherwise Specified in the English literature), are much less known.
The main objective of this study is to assess the prevalence rate of unspecified ED (EDNOS or "non-BED ED") in subjects with severe obesity (BMI\> 35) consulting for medical or surgical management in a General Hospital Center CSO (Specialized Obesity Center) using an adapted version of the QEWP-R, called the QEWP-RA.
- Detailed Description
When it comes to weight problems, no one today disputes with anorexia nervosa that thinness is only a symptom. Thinness is the consequence of a multifactorial food restriction, in other words the consequence of an Eating Behavior Disorder (ED). The diagnosis of anorexia nervosa is made relative to the presence of diagnostic criteria listed in the DSM-V (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual V). Everyone recognizes the need for multidisciplinary care that is not limited to the prescription of re-nutrition. Imposing an increase in energy intake has never been enough to cure patients with anorexia. The multidisciplinary support offered to these subjects also seeks to understand and treat the biopsychosocial determinants that perpetuate the mechanisms of food restriction and most of the therapeutic support is based on a psychotherapeutic, individual and / or family approach. The excess weight of subjects with severe obesity (Body Mass Index\> 35) suffers from a lower etiopathogenic consideration. In obese people, excess weight is, too often, considered more as the problem to be treated than as the consequence of a more complex problem. Thus, the main therapeutic means still currently used are based on simplistic thermodynamic fundamentals and are based on an imposed food restriction (diet) or even undergone (bariatric surgery procedures).
The main objective of this study is to assess the prevalence rate of unspecified ED (EDNOS or "non-BED ED") in subjects with severe obesity (BMI\> 35) consulting for medical or surgical management in a General Hospital Center CSO (Specialized Obesity Center) using an adapted version of the QEWP-R, called the QEWP-RA (questionnaire on eating and weight pattern-revised and modified).
The primary endpoint will be the prevalence rate of ED not specified in the QEWP-RA.
Prospective, single-center, non-interventional study involving the human person (Category 3 of the Jardé law).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 150
- Age ≥ 18 years old and <or = at 65 years old;
- With severe obesity (BMI> 35);
- First consultation at the Arras Hospital Nutrition Unit.
Non inclusion Criteria:
- Patients who have already undergone a nutrition consultation at Arras hospital;
- Oligophrenic patients;
- Patients under guardianship;
- Patients who cannot read or write;
- Participation in an interventional study modifying his eating behavior;
- Person deprived of liberty;
- Person under tutorship or curatorship;
- Refusal to participate in the study;
- Opposition to data processing;
- Patient not affiliated to the social security scheme
Exclusion criteria :
none
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method prevalence rate of unspecified ED (EDNOS or "non-BED") in subjects with severe obesity (BMI> 35) consulting for medical or surgical management in a hospital. CSO general hospital center (Specialized Obesity Center). 1 jour The main objective of this study is to assess the prevalence rate of unspecified ED (EDNOS or "non-BED ED") in subjects with severe obesity (BMI\> 35) consulting for medical or surgical management in a General Hospital Center CSO (Specialized Obesity Center) using an adapted version of the QEWP-R, called the QEWP-RA.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method To compare the psychopathological profiles of "BED" subjects and "EDNOS" subjects (comparison of averages (Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADS), Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (DEBQ),Emotional Eating Scale(EES)). 1 jour * The HADS consists of two parts: (a) 7 questions for screening for depression, and (b) 7 questions for screening for anxiety disorders. Each question receives a score between 0 and 3. The score for each part is obtained by adding the items that make up the part. The higher the score, the greater the severity of the corresponding symptoms.
* The DEBQ is a 33-item self-report questionnaire to assess three distinct eating behaviors in adults: (1) emotional eating, (2) external eating, and (3) restrained eating. Items on the DEBQ range from 1 (never) to 5 (very often), with higher scores indicating greater endorsement of the eating behavior.
* The EES Self-reported frequency of emotional eating is measured with the 25-item EES. Each item is scored on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (no desire to eat) to 5 (overwhelming desire to eat). Total scores range from 25-125. Higher scores indicate more emotional eating.The EES Scale yields 3 subscales: anger/ Frustration, anxiety and depression.To compare emotional eating profiles of "BED" subjects and "EDNOS" subjects (Comparison of emotional eating profiles (Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADS), Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (DEBQ), Emotional Eating Scale(EES))). 1 jour * The HADS consists of two parts: (a) 7 questions for screening for depression, and (b) 7 questions for screening for anxiety disorders. Each question receives a score between 0 and 3. The score for each part is obtained by adding the items that make up the part. The higher the score, the greater the severity of the corresponding symptoms.
* The DEBQ is a 33-item self-report questionnaire to assess three distinct eating behaviors in adults: (1) emotional eating, (2) external eating, and (3) restrained eating. Items on the DEBQ range from 1 (never) to 5 (very often), with higher scores indicating greater endorsement of the eating behavior.
* The EES Self-reported frequency of emotional eating is measured with the 25-item EES. Each item is scored on a 5-point scale ranging from 1 (no desire to eat) to 5 (overwhelming desire to eat). Total scores range from 25-125. Higher scores indicate more emotional eating.The EES Scale yields 3 subscales: anger/ Frustration, anxiety and depression.To compare the prevalence rate of "BED" subjects obtained from 3 different questionnaires (Questionnaire on Eating and Weight Pattern-R (QEWP-R), Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire (EDE-Q) and the Binge Eating Scale (BES)). 1 jour * The QEWP-R (used to diagnose Binge Eating Disorder / Purging Bulimia Nervosa / Nonpurging Bulimia Nervosa)
* The EDE-Q : 28 item self-report questionnaire. It concerns behaviors over a 28-day time period and retains the scoring system of 0-6: 0 = behaviour was absent and 6 = behaviour was present daily or to an extreme degree
* The BES is composed of 16 items corresponding to groups of sentences including one to be selected from 3 to 4 propositions, which best describe how one feels. For each item, the subject has to choose the formulation that best corresponds to his current situation, which results in a score varying between 0 and 3 or between 0 and 2 for each item. Half of the items measure eating behaviours and the other half assess feelings or cognitions occurring during compulsive episodes. It gives a total score (from 0 to 46) that reflects the severity of the BED. A score greater than or equal to 18 indicates significant bulimic hyperphagia.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Arras General Hospital
🇫🇷Arras, France