Home > The follow-up of eating disorders from adolescence to early adulthood: a systematic review.

Filipponi, Caterina and Visentini, Chiara and Filippini, Tommaso and Cutino, Anna and Ferri, Paola and Rovesti, Sergio and Latella, Emanuela and Di Lorenzo, Rosaria (2022) The follow-up of eating disorders from adolescence to early adulthood: a systematic review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19, (23), 16237. doi: 10.3390/ijerph192316237.

External website: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/19/23/16237

Eating disorders (EDs) are common among children and adolescents and are characterized by excessive concerns for physical appearance, distorted body image, and fear of gaining weight. The purpose of this review is to evaluate the follow-up of EDs from adolescence to adulthood, analyzing persistence, relapses, and associated comorbidities. We searched scientific articles in PubMed, PsycInfo, Scopus, and Embase through two research strings, one for quantitative outcomes (recovery/persistence, relapse, and remission) and one for the other outcomes (psychiatric and medical comorbidities, substance use, and social-relational complications). From a total of 8043 retrieved articles, we selected 503 papers after exclusion of duplicates and title/abstract screening. After a full-text evaluation, we included 16 studies eligible for this review. We performed a meta-analysis describing the quantitative results, and we created a narrative synthesis for the qualitative outcomes.

Results: Our results confirm that EDs can persist in early adulthood in 40.7% of cases with a relapse percentage of 24.5%. Individuals with an ED more frequently present with an empathy deficit and comorbid anxiety and depressive disorders. EDs are chronic and complex disorders, more frequent in females. In most cases, EDs reduce the autonomy of individuals who present many difficulties in affirming their independence from parental family.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Review, Article
Drug Type
Behavioural addiction
Intervention Type
Screening / Assessment
Date
4 December 2022
Identification #
doi: 10.3390/ijerph192316237
Publisher
MDPI
Volume
19
Number
23
EndNote

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