AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how different types of impulsivity, particularly negative urgency and food-specific impulsivity, impact treatment outcomes for binge eating disorder over a 20-week period in a small group of participants.
  • Those with higher negative urgency had slower and less effective treatment responses, while those with increased food-related impulsivity showed more severe eating issues that persisted after treatment.
  • The findings suggest the need for tailored treatment approaches for individuals with higher impulsivity, highlighting the importance of further research with larger samples to explore these relationships more deeply.

Article Abstract

Multiple dimensions of impulsivity (e.g., affect-driven impulsivity, impulsive inhibition - both general and food-specific, and impulsive decision-making) are associated with binge eating pathology cross-sectionally, yet the literature on whether impulsivity predicts treatment outcome is limited. The present pilot study explored impulsivity-related predictors of 20-week outcome in a small open trial (n = 17) of a novel treatment for binge eating disorder. Overall, dimensions of impulsivity related to emotions (i.e., negative urgency) and food cues emerged as predictors of treatment outcomes (i.e., binge eating frequency and global eating pathology as measured by the Eating Disorders Examination), while more general measures of impulsivity were statistically unrelated to global eating pathology or binge frequency. Specifically, those with higher levels of negative urgency at baseline experienced slower and less pronounced benefit from treatment, and those with higher food-specific impulsivity had more severe global eating pathology at baseline that was consistent at post-treatment and follow-up. These preliminary findings suggest that patients high in negative urgency and with poor response inhibition to food cues may benefit from augmentation of existing treatments to achieve optimal outcomes. Future research will benefit from replication with a larger sample, parsing out the role of different dimensions of impulsivity in treatment outcome for eating disorders, and identifying how treatment can be improved to accommodate higher levels of baseline impulsivity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4980181PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2016.05.026DOI Listing

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