News

For adolescent bulimia patients, family-based treatment is more effective


 

References

Family-based treatment was generally more effective than cognitive-behavioral therapy was at treating adolescent bulimia nervosa, according to Daniel Le Grange, Ph.D., of the University of California, San Francisco, and his associates.

At the end of treatment, family-based treatment (FBT) had a significantly higher bulimia abstinence rate at 39% over cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) at only 20%. This gap was maintained at the 6-month follow-up, with abstinence rates of 44% and 25%, respectively. After 12 months, the difference in abstinence rates was 49% and 32%, respectively, and was no longer statistically significant, according to the investigators.

Hospitalizations were much more common in the CBT group at 21%, compared with only 2% in the FBT group.

“It appears that, similarly to their adolescent peers with anorexia nervosa, adolescents with bulimia nervosa can benefit from an approach that actively involves their families in the treatment process,” the investigators said.

Find the full study in the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2015.08.008).

lfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Screen for depression in adolescents, USPSTF recommends
MDedge Internal Medicine
One in 20 students using e-cigarettes for cannabis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prescription opioid overdoses targeted in new CDC program
MDedge Internal Medicine
Integrated care overcomes HCV treatment barriers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Uncorking the negative emotions of IBS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Jamestown Canyon virus detected in humans in Minnesota
MDedge Internal Medicine
Adolescents’ unsupervised time with peers correlated with substance use
MDedge Internal Medicine
Paroxetine found neither safe nor effective for adolescent depression
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA changes clozapine requirements over neutropenia concerns
MDedge Internal Medicine
Positivity a core trait of successful aging
MDedge Internal Medicine