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Profiling the Dynamic of Binge Eating Disorder (PRODY-BED)

Recruiting
Conditions
Binge-Eating Disorder
Executive Dysfunction
Emotion Regulation
Eating Behavior
Depressive Symptoms
Registration Number
NCT05726721
Lead Sponsor
Aarhus University Hospital
Brief Summary

The goal of this observational study is to explore if different and specific profiles can be identified in adults with binge eating disorder (BED) depending on their additional eating pathology, emotion regulation and executive functions. The main questions it aims to answer are:

* Is there different and specific subgroups of patients with BED according to baseline profiles in emotion regulation, executive function and additional eating pathology (including restriction, chaotic eating, grazing and eating on external cues)?

* Are subgroups of individuals with BED (based on identified profiles) associated with outcome at end of treatment and follow-up?

* What is the trajectories in remission rates of specific symptom dimensions (eating disorder pathology, emotion regulation, executive function, and depressive symptoms) in individuals with BED and is there specific trajectory profiles in these dimensions?

* Is early changes in specific symptom dimensions (eating pathology, emotion regulation, executive function, or depression) associated with outcome of BED? Participants will be asked to fill in questionnaires before treatment as usual, 10 weeks into treatment, at end of treatment and at 6- and 12-month follow-up.

Detailed Description

Binge eating disorder (BED) is a severe eating disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of binge eating, where control over eating is lost and huge amounts of food are eaten within a short period of time. Hence, weight issues are often inevitable and overweight is common, as are social, mental as well as physical problems.

The etiology of binge eating disorder is an interplay of neurobiological and environmental factors. Overall pathological eating, including grazing, external, emotional or restrictive eating, is associated with binge eating, and so is dysregulation in the reward center, impairment of executive functions and emotion regulation. The investigators suggest that it is possible to identify specific profiles driving binge eating, depending on the severity of these dimensions, and that these profiles might predict the outcome of treatment. The investigators also suggest that early change in general eating pattern, emotion regulation, and depressive symptoms is associated with binge eating outcome. These assumptions will be tested in a sample of adults in treatment for BED at one of three sites using questionnaires before, during and after treatment, incl. 6- and 12-month follow-ups.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
180
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age 18+,
  • diagnosed with Binge eating Disorder,
  • and offered treatment at on of the inclusion sites.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe psychiatric comorbidity (e.g. psychosis, severe developmental disorder, severe cogntive impairement)

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Binge eating episodes FU6mAt 6-month follow-up

Number of binge eating episodes

Subgroups of BED-profilesBaseline data

Subgroups of BED-profiles depending on degree and type of additional eating pathology measured by DEBQ (Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire), emotion regulation problems measured by DERS-16 (Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale), and executive problems mesured by BRIEF-A .

Binge eating episodes EoTAt end of therapy up to 30 weeks

Number of binge eating episodes

Binge eating episodes FU12mAt 12-month follow-up

Number of binge eating episodes

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Functional impairmentAt 12-month follow-up

Self-reported functional impairment measured by the total scorer of WSAS, minimum score 0, maximum score 8, higher scores indicating more impairment

Well-beingAt 12-month follow-up

Self-reported well-being measured by the total score of WHO-5, minimum score 0, maximum score 25, with lower scores indicating worst imaginable well-bing

Eating disorder pathologyAt 12-month follow-up

Overall self-reported eating disorder pathology measured by the total score of EDE-Q, minimum score 0, maximum score 6, higher scores indicating eating pathology

Trajectories of binge eatingFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of frequency of binge eating across time measured by self-reported binge eating in Eating Disorder Examination questionnaire (EDE-Q)

Trajectories of restrictive eatingFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of restrictive eating across time measured by the DEBQ restraint eating scale, minum score 1, maximum score 5, higher scores indicating more restricted eating

Trajectories of emotional eatingFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of emotional eating across time measued by the DEBQ emotional eating scale, minimum score 1, maximum score 5, higher scores indicating more emotional eating

Trajectories of eating on external cuesFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of eating on external cues across time measured by the DEBQ external eating scale, minimum score 1, maximum score 5, higher scores indicating more eating on external cues

Trajectories of grazingFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of grazing across time measured by the total score of the Grazing Questionnaire, minimum 0, maximum 28, higher scores indcating greater grazing behavior

Trajectories of emotional regulationFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of emotional regulation across time measured by the total score of DERS-16, minimum score 16, maximum score 80, higher socres indicating greater diffuculties

Trajectories of executive functionFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of executive function across time measured by the BRIEF-A (Behavior rating inventory of Executive Function Adult version) Global Executive Composite T-Scores, minimum score 0, maximum score 90, higher scores indicating executive problems

Trajectories of depressionFrom baseline to 12-month follow-up

Trajectories of depression across time measured by Beck Depression Inventory 2, minimum score 0, maximum score 63, higher scores indicating more depressive symptoms

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

Aarhus University Hospital, Psychiaty

🇩🇰

Aarhus, Central Denmark Region, Denmark

Aalborg University Hospital

🇩🇰

Aalborg, Denmark

Kompetencecenter

🇩🇰

Copenhagen NV, Denmark

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