For Teens With Bulimia, Family-Based Therapy Works Best

Recovery from the eating disorder is faster if adolescents receive a treatment that enlists their parents, according to a new study

For Release: September 18, 2015

The best therapy for teenagers with bulimia is different than the one for adults, according to the first large study to provide a head-to-head comparison of two well-regarded treatments for adolescents with the eating disorder.

Conducted by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and the University of Chicago, the study also shows that teens’ families can play a big role in helping them recover from bulimia.

The findings were published online Sept. 17 in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

“We have very little information about how best to address bulimia in adolescents, and have been depending on what we know about the efficacy of treatment in adults,” said co-lead author James Lock, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford. But teens with bulimia have different needs and less-entrenched illness than adults, he added  

At the end of six months of treatment, adolescents who received family-based therapy were more likely to have stopped their abnormal eating behaviors than those who received the standard treatment for adults, the study found. The difference between therapies persisted six months after treatment ended.

Binging and purging

Bulimia nervosa is characterized by repeated cycles of secretive binging on large amounts of food, followed by purging the body of calories via vomiting, laxative use or excessive exercise. It is linked with both physical and psychological harm, including feelings of poor self-image, shame and guilt, and medical problems such as dehydration, tooth and gum disease, and irregular heartbeat or heart failure.

The study included 130 participants, ages 12-18, who met clinical definitions of full or partial bulimia nervosa. They were randomly assigned to receive six months of therapy with one of three treatments: Family-based therapy, in which the parents and patient worked together to interrupt abnormal eating behaviors; cognitive behavioral therapy, which focused on changing abnormal thoughts about food, eating and body image, with a lesser emphasis on behavioral change; and supportive psychotherapy, which was included to help generate hypotheses for future studies but was not used by researchers in the main analysis of the results. Family-based therapy has been shown to be the most effective treatment for teenagers with anorexia nervosa, while cognitive behavioral therapy is considered the most effective treatment for adults with bulimia.

At the end of treatment, 39 percent of participants treated with family-based therapy had abstained from both binging and purging for at least four weeks, compared with 20 percent of participants receiving cognitive behavioral therapy. Six months after treatment ended, both groups continued to improve, but the gap between treatments remained: 44 percent of family-based therapy patients and 25 percent of cognitive behavioral therapy patients were abstaining from binging and purging. A year after treatment ended, the gap had narrowed and was no longer statistically significant, although the researchers are not sure if this is because the two treatments are similarly effective at that time or because some patients did not return for evaluation at the one-year point.

Treatment strategy may depend on child

Although the research did not test why family-based therapy worked better for teens, the finding is not surprising, said Lock, who directs the Comprehensive Eating Disorders Program at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. “The strategy for cognitive behavioral therapy requires a fair amount of abstract reasoning, motivation and persistence that often has not reached full capacity in teens,” he said, adding that doctors may need to decide on a case-by-case basis whether a teen would benefit from one treatment versus the other. “The cognitive and developmental context is very different for teens than for adult patients,” he said.

And it’s normal for teenagers to need their parents’ assistance in navigating difficult situations, he added. “The big take-home message is that families can really help their kids with bulimia nervosa.”

Lock shared lead authorship of the study with Daniel LeGrange, MD, who was at the University of Chicago when the research was conducted and is now professor of psychiatry at the University of California-San Francisco.

Other Stanford-affiliated authors are Stewart Agras, MD, professor emeritus of psychiatry; Susan Bryson, senior scientific programmer; and Booil Jo, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (grants R01MH079979 and R01MH079980).

Stanford’s Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences also supported the work.

Agras and Lock receive royalties from Oxford University Press for contributions to a textbook about eating disorders. Lock also receives royalties from Guildford Press for books he has written about family-based treatment for anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, and payments from the Training Institute for Child and Adolescent Eating Disorders, where he is a faculty member who trains other clinicians in evidence-based treatment methods for eating disorders.

Authors

Erin Digitale
(650) 724-9175
digitale@stanford.edu

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