Comorbidity of Anxiety Disorders With Anorexia and Bulimia Nervosa

Comorbidity of Anxiety Disorders With Anorexia and Bulimia Nervosa

 

Walter H. Kaye, M.D. Cynthia M. Bulik, Ph.D. Laura Thornton, Ph.D. Nicole Barbarich, B.S. Kim Masters, B.S.

Article

Price Foundation Collaborative Group

Objective: A large and well-character- ized sample of individuals with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa from the Price Foundation collaborative genetics study was used to determine the fre- quency of anxiety disorders and to under- stand how anxiety disorders are related to state of eating disorder illness and age at onset.

Method: Ninety-seven individuals with anorexia nervosa, 282 with bulimia ner- vosa, and 293 with anorexia nervosa and bulimia were given the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders and standardized measures of anxiety, perfec- tionism, and obsessionality. Their ratings on these measures were compared with those of a nonclinical group of women in the community.

Results: The rates of most anxiety disor- ders were similar in all three subtypes of eating disorders. About two-thirds of the individuals with eating disorders had one or more lifetime anxiety disorder; the most common were obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) (N=277 [41%]) and so- cial phobia (N=134 [20%]). A majority of the participants reported the onset of OCD, social phobia, specific phobia, and generalized anxiety disorder in child- hood, before they developed an eating disorder. People with a history of an eat- ing disorder who were not currently ill and never had a lifetime anxiety disorder diagnosis still tended to be anxious, per- fectionistic, and harm avoidant. The pres- ence of either an anxiety disorder or an eating disorder tended to exacerbate these symptoms.

Conclusions: The prevalence of anxiety disorders in general and OCD in particular was much higher in people with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa than in a nonclinical group of women in the com- munity. Anxiety disorders commonly had their onset in childhood before the onset of an eating disorder, supporting the pos- sibility they are a vulnerability factor for developing anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa.

 

 

Clinical and epidemiological studies have consis- tently shown that the majority of people with anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa experience one or more anxi- ety disorders (1–3). Studies using trained interviewers and standardized diagnostic instruments in clinical samples have found that obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), social phobia, and specific phobia are the most common anxiety disorders in individuals with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. Other anxiety disorders, such as post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and generalized anxiety disorder, appear to be less common; however, they were not routinely assessed in all studies.

Several studies have shown that, in most cases, the on- set of anxiety disorders precedes the onset of anorexia ner- vosa or bulimia nervosa (4–6). Silberg and Bulik (7), using twins, identified a common genetic factor that influences liability to anxiety, depression, and eating disorder symp- toms. This pattern of onset may simply reflect the natural course of the two disorders (i.e., the average age at onset of some anxiety disorders is younger than the average age at onset of anorexia nervosa), but it may also indicate that childhood anxiety represents one important  genetically mediated pathway toward the development of anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.

Despite this wealth of data, many questions regarding the nature of the relation between comorbid eating disor- ders and anxiety disorders remain unanswered (1). Most clinical studies have investigated relatively small groups of subjects with eating disorders and have lacked sufficient statistical power to characterize comorbidity patterns of the more uncommon anxiety disorders. In addition, few studies have been sufficiently large to subtype subjects with eating disorders accurately into clearly defined groups with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or both anorexia and bulimia. To our knowledge, no study has compared patterns of comorbidity of anxiety disorders across these three well-defined diagnostic subcategories.

The Price Foundation has supported a multicenter, in- ternational collaborative study of the genetics of eating disorders. This study has included a collection of affected pairs consisting of probands with bulimia nervosa who have relatives with bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa, or a broad-spectrum eating disorder (8). The Price Foundation sample is sufficiently large and rigorously diagnosed to enable separation of participants into clearly defined eat- ing disorder diagnostic subcategories.

The goals of the present study were to 1) calculate the fre- quency of all types of anxiety disorders in a large, well-char- acterized eating disorder sample; 2) understand how anxi- ety disorders are related to factors such as state of eating disorder illness and age at onset; and 3) compare tempera- ment in subjects with eating disorders by lifetime anxiety disorders to determine whether personality phenotypes oc- cur when anxiety disorders are controlled. We hope that these data will assist in identifying likely behavioral en- dophenotypes in our attempts to identify the genetic un- derpinnings of anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.

 

Method

Collaborative Arrangements

This study was supported through funding provided by the Price Foundation under the principal direction of Walter H. Kaye of the University of Pittsburgh and Wade Berrettini of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania (see reference 8 for details). This initiative was developed through a cooperative arrangement among the Price Foundation, the University of Pittsburgh, and other aca- demic sites in North America and Europe. The sites of collabora- tive arrangement, selected on the basis of experience in the as- sessment of eating disorders and geographical distribution, included the University of Pittsburgh, Cornell University, Univer- sity of California at Los Angeles, University of Toronto, University of Munich, University of Pisa, University of North Dakota, Univer- sity of Minnesota, and Harvard University. Each site obtained in- stitutional review board approval separately from its own institu- tion’s  human  subjects committee.

Phenotypic Assessment

Probands met the following criteria: 1) DSM-IV lifetime diag- nosis of bulimia nervosa, purging type; 2) age between 13 and 65 years; and 3) primarily of European descent. A current or lifetime history of anorexia nervosa was acceptable (some subjects had both bulimia nervosa and anorexia nervosa). (For further details see reference 8.)

Affected relatives were biologically related to the proband, were 13 to 65 years old, and had at least one of the following life- time eating disorder diagnoses: 1) DSM-IV bulimia nervosa, purg- ing type or nonpurging type; 2) DSM-IV anorexia nervosa, restricting type or binge eating/purging type (criteria were modi- fied for this study to include individuals with and without amen- orrhea); 3) or a subclinical eating disorder, defined as an eating disorder not otherwise specified. Affected relatives were excluded if they were a monozygotic twin of the proband, a biological par- ent with an eating disorder (unless there was another affected family member with whom the parent could be paired), or diag- nosed with binge-eating disorder as their only lifetime eating dis- order diagnosis.

Subjects were considered to be recovered if, for the last 12 months, they maintained normal weight and did not diet, restrict food intake, fast, binge-eat, purge, or exercise excessively. Cogni- tive components of an eating disorder, such as body image distor- tion and preoccupations with weight and shape, were not in- cluded in our definition because, for many individuals, these aspects persist, though often abated, long after weight restoration and cessation of eating disorder behaviors. Subjects were consid- ered to be currently ill if they either met all diagnostic criteria or partial criteria for any eating disorder during the last 12  months.

Comparison Women From the Community

A comparison group of 694 healthy women were recruited by local advertisement and matched with the eating disorder sub- jects based on site, age range (except no comparison subjects un- der 18 years were included), ethnicity, and highest educational level completed. They were 18–65 years old, primarily of Euro- pean ancestry, and at normal weight (lifetime body mass index range=19–28). Comparison women were excluded if they had medical, psychiatric, or alcohol or drug disorders or a first-degree relative with an eating disorder. Psychiatric and substance exclu- sions were defined by the presence of any “likely” axis I disorder  as assessed by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) Screen Patient Questionnaire—Extended (9). Also ex- cluded were women with a history of any substantial dieting, eat- ing disorder behaviors, or excessive concerns with weight or shape, as defined by a score of 20 or higher on the Eating Attitudes Test-26 (10). Comparison women completed the same battery of self-report personality and symptom measures as probands and provided blood samples for genetic  analysis.

Assessment Instruments

Assessment instruments are described in greater detail else- where (8). Eating disorder symptom profiles and diagnoses of probands and affected relatives were determined by using a mod- ified version of the Structured Interview for Anorexic and Bulimic Disorders (11) and an expanded version of module H of the SCID (12). Lifetime major axis I anxiety disorder diagnoses were ob- tained by using the SCID; the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (13) was administered in conjunction with the OCD section of the SCID. Anxiety disorder diagnoses were made according to DSM-IV criteria. We classified individuals who were one symp- tom short of the threshold diagnosis for anxiety disorders to have probable diagnoses. Both individuals with threshold  diagnoses and those with probable diagnoses were included. The defini- tions for probable anxiety disorder are available on request (from Dr. Kaye). Participants completed the State-Trait Anxiety Inven- tory (14), the Frost Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale  (15), and the Temperament and Character Inventory  (16).

Statistical Methods

All statistical analyses were completed by using SAS 8.0 (SAS/ STAT software, version 8. SAS Institute, Cary, N.C.). Logistic re- gression with the generalized estimating equation, which pro- vides a chi-square value for testing significance, was used to cor- rect for nonindependence of the sample caused by inclusion of family members and was applied to the data to compare rates of the different anxiety disorders across eating disorder subtypes. This same type of analysis was used to compare differences in patterns of onset of anxiety and eating disorders across the three eating disorder subgroups. In addition, a Poisson regression with a generalized estimating equation correction was completed to determine if there were differences in the number of anxiety dis- orders (defined as none, one, or more than one) among the eating disorder subgroups.

We used a two-step process to compare differences between currently ill and recovered participants with eating disorders who did or did not have a lifetime diagnosis of an anxiety disorder on different personality and anxiety scales. First, a linear regression was completed on each of the variables in question  with  body mass index and age as the regressors. The residuals from these analyses were then used to complete the regressions with the generalized estimating equation corrections to test for differ- ences between the groups. The comparison women were then compared with subjects in the four eating disorder groups de- fined by eating disorder recovery status (recovered versus cur- rently ill) and lifetime diagnosis of any anxiety disorder (present  or absent) by using analysis of variance with  generalized estimat-

 

 

 

Results

Prevalence of Anxiety Disorders

A total of 741 individuals with eating disorders were given the SCID; 97 had anorexia nervosa, 282 had bulimia nervosa, 293 had both anorexia and bulimia, and 69 had  an eating disorder not otherwise specified). Because of the small number of individuals with an eating disorder not otherwise specified and the diagnostic heterogeneity in- herent in that subcategory, they were excluded from anal- ysis, leaving a total of 672 participants. The vast majority  of individuals in each group were women (94 [96.9%] of the subjects with anorexia nervosa, 278 [98.6%] of those with bulimia nervosa, and 290 [99.0%] of those with anor- exia and bulimia ). Age did not differ across the three diagnostic groups; however, body mass index was significantly lower for individuals in the group with anorexia nervosa and the group with anorexia and bulimia than for the group with bulimia nervosa. Of the entire sample, 427 (63.5%) were diagnosed with at least one lifetime anxiety disorder (Table 1). The most common anxiety  disorder was OCD, which occurred in approximately 40% of indi- viduals, followed by social phobia (20%); other anxiety dis- orders were  somewhat  less common.

Prevalence of Anxiety Disorders by Eating Disorder Subtype

The prevalence of OCD, panic disorder, social phobia, specific phobia, agoraphobia, and generalized anxiety dis- order did not differ significantly across the three eating disorder subtypes (Table 1). PTSD was significantly less common among individuals with anorexia nervosa than among those with bulimia nervosa and those with both anorexia and bulimia. A nonsignificantly greater number of individuals with anorexia nervosa than those with bu- limia with or without anorexia had no lifetime anxiety dis- orders (c2=4.96, df=2, p=0.08) (data not included).

 

Age at Onset

Age at onset of the eating disorder was available for all participants. The age at onset of anxiety disorder was available for between 78% (specific phobia) and 98% (PTSD) of the individuals who had an anxiety disorder. If an individual stated that the anxiety disorder was present during childhood “as long as she or he could remember,” we set the age at onset as 5 years old, assuming childhood recollections were limited before this age. For each eating disorder subtype, we determined whether the age at onset of the anxiety disorder was before or either concurrent with or subsequent to the onset of the eating disorder (Ta- ble 2). Eating disorder onset was defined as the age at which all of the symptoms necessary to make the diagno- sis were present concurrently. Because there were no sig- nificant differences in patterns of onset of anxiety or eat- ing disorder for any eating disorder subtype, the groups were combined. When all eating disorder subtypes were considered together, the onset of OCD, social phobia, spe- cific phobia, and generalized anxiety disorder usually pre- ceded the onset of the eating disorder. In contrast, PTSD, panic disorder, and agoraphobia most often developed af- ter the onset of the eating disorder.

When the entire sample of individuals with eating disor- ders was considered, 23% had an onset of OCD, 13% had an onset of social phobia, and 10% had an onset of specific phobia in childhood, before the onset of an eating disorder (Table 2). Other anxiety disorders were less common. Overall, 282 (42%) of the entire sample had the onset of one or more anxiety disorders in childhood, before the on- set of an eating disorder.

 

 

 

Relationship of Lifetime Anxiety Disorder and State of Eating Disorder Illness on Self-Report Assessments

Previous studies suggested that being ill with an eating disorder exacerbates anxiety-related symptoms in indi- viduals with eating disorders (18). To determine how the state of the eating disorder was associated with anxiety symptoms, we compared individuals with eating disor- ders stratified by current illness state (currently ill versus symptom free for at least 12 months) (Table 3). In addition, to determine whether anxiety symptoms were present in the absence of an anxiety disorder diagnosis, we stratified participants by the presence versus absence of one or more lifetime anxiety disorder(s). Thus, the four cells for this analysis were characterized by current eating disorder and lifetime history of one or more anxiety  disorders.

The four groups of eating disorder subjects were rela- tively similar in terms of age and weight. Age at the time of study differed significantly across the four groups, but the mean age span of the four groups was less than 5 years (high 20s to low 30s). Current body mass index was higher in the subjects without an anxiety disorder, regardless of state of eating disorder illness. However, body mass index differed by about one unit between groups. The four groups had similar ages at onset of their eating  disorders.

In general, scores for anxiety, harm avoidance, perfec- tionism, and obsessionality tended to be highest in the in- dividuals who had a lifetime anxiety disorder diagnosis and were ill with an eating disorder. Scores tended to be somewhat lower in those who either were currently ill with an eating disorder or had a lifetime anxiety disorder diagnosis. Individuals with eating disorders who had not been symptomatic with an eating disorder in the past 12 months and who never had a lifetime diagnosis of an anx- iety disorder still had scores for anxiety, harm avoidance, and perfectionism that were significantly higher than those of the comparison women in the community. For subjects who were not currently ill with an eating disorder, the ratio of having no anxiety disorder to having an anxiety disorder was 0.74. In comparison, for people ill with an eating disorder, the ratio was 0.52 (c2=3.85, df=1, p=0.05). Although this could reflect some bias in terms of recall, it may also suggest that not having an anxiety disorder has a modest association with recovery.

 

Prevalence of Anxiety Disorders in Subgroups of Individuals With Eating Disorders

Previous studies (1) have found elevated rates of anxiety disorders in individuals with eating disorders. However, these studies have assessed small groups of individuals, and many have used nonstructured or standardized in- struments. Our study, which has three subgroups with rig- orously defined subtypes of eating disorders (anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and anorexia and bulimia), showed that rates of most anxiety disorders were generally similar in these subgroups.

Aside from OCD, the rates of anxiety disorders in our study were usually within the range reported in a review of studies that used similar methods (1). In assessing OCD, we used the SCID and also incorporated information from the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, which re- views a list of the most common obsessions and compul- sions with the participant. The most frequently endorsed symptoms in individuals with eating disorders were symmetry, exactness, and order. It may be that people with eating disorders do not recognize these as OCD symptoms and consequently do not endorse the more general SCID screening probe. Thus, cases of OCD may be missed when the SCID is used alone.

The prevalence of PTSD was lower in the anorexia nervosa group than in the bulimia nervosa group and the an- orexia and bulimia group. Although not significantly dif- ferent, the prevalence of other anxiety disorders was also lower in the anorexia nervosa group. This could reflect an ascertainment bias: anorexia nervosa participants in this study were selected on the basis of being a relative of a proband with bulimia nervosa or anorexia and bulimia. Preliminary evidence from these studies suggests that overall severity of illness and comorbidity burden may be lower in individuals with anorexia nervosa who are in- cluded as affected relatives than in individuals who were ascertained as an anorexia nervosa proband.

 

 

Discussion

To our knowledge, this study of 672 individuals with an- orexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or anorexia and bulimia nervosa is the largest study to date to evaluate patterns of comorbidity of anxiety disorders and eating disorders and the only study to assess a wide range of anxiety disorders in rigorously defined subgroups of individuals with eating disorders. Overall, we observed that individuals with anor- exia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or anorexia and bulimia had relatively similar rates of all anxiety disorders, with the exception of PTSD, which was approximately three times more frequent in individuals with bulimia nervosa and those with anorexia and bulimia than in those with anorexia nervosa. In this sample, approximately two-thirds of participants with eating disorders reported one or more anxiety disorder in their lifetimes—the most common di- agnoses were OCD (41%) and social phobia (20%). A substantial majority of the participants with eating disorders had the onset of OCD, social phobia, specific phobia, or generalized anxiety disorder in childhood, before the emergence of an eating disorder.

Comparison With Rates of Anxiety Disorders in Women in the Community

Our study found that people with eating disorders had a 64% rate of lifetime anxiety disorders. This is clearly higher than the rates of 30.5% and 12.7%–18.1% for women in the community reported by Kessler et al. (19) and Wittchen and Essau (20), respectively. Similarly, the 41% frequency of OCD in people with eating disorders is much  higher than the frequency found in community samples  (in the low percents) (20, 21). Our study found that 20% of the individuals with eating disorders had social phobia. Kessler et al. (19) reported a rate of 15.5%, and Wittchen and Essau (20) reported a rate of 1%–3.5%. It is less certain whether the rates for other anxiety disorders are higher than the rates for women in the community. That is because the rates for specific phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and agoraphobia often have a wide range in community studies (19, 20).

Onset of Anxiety Disorders Versus Onset of Eating Disorders

Previous studies suggested that early-onset anxiety dis- orders represent a risk factor for the development of an- orexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa in girls (4, 5, 7). More- over, retrospective accounts of premorbid personality in children with anorexia nervosa often underscore perva- sive anxiety as a dominant presentation (22, 23). This study showed that the onset of OCD, social phobia, spe- cific phobia, and generalized anxiety disorder most com- monly preceded the onset of an eating disorder. We calcu- lated that 42% of the people with eating disorders in our total sample had the onset of one or more anxiety disor- ders in childhood. This is substantially higher than the fre- quency of overall anxiety disorders in childhood (4.7% to 17.7%) reported in 1995 (24). Most striking was the high rate of childhood-onset OCD (23%) in the subjects with eating disorders compared with community samples (2% to 3%) (25). This is all the more notable because the age of risk of the onset of OCD in women is often in the 20s. It is less certain whether people with eating disorders had ele- vated rates of childhood-onset social phobia (13% versus 0.6%–5.1% in community samples [24]), or of other anxi- ety disorders compared with community estimates (24).

Relationship of Lifetime Anxiety Disorder and State of Eating Disorder Illness to Current Symptoms

It has been reported (26–29) that people with eating dis- orders have more symptoms of anxiety, harm avoidance, obsessionality, and perfectionism, but it is less clear whether such symptoms are secondary to malnutrition and whether they persist after recovery. In general, we found that scores on measures of these symptoms tended to be most elevated in individuals who had a lifetime diag- nosis of an anxiety disorder and were currently ill with an eating disorder. In comparison, scores tended to be lower in those with only one of these contributory factors. It is important to emphasize, however, that individuals who never had a lifetime anxiety disorder and who had been recovered from an eating disorder for at least 12 months still reported higher levels of anxiety, harm avoidance, and perfectionism than the healthy women in the community. This suggests that anxiety symptoms are traits present in most people with eating disorders, even if they do not meet DSM-IV criteria for anxiety disorders.

 

Limitations

First, we opted to report age at onset as the age at which all criteria for a full DSM eating disorder diagnosis were met, leading to an average age at onset of approximately 18 years. In some cases, individuals may have exhibited sub- threshold eating disorder symptoms at younger ages. Sec- ond, age at onset of anxiety disorder diagnoses was not ob- tained for all individuals, either because they were unable to recall with confidence the age at onset or the question was not adequately assessed by the interviewer. Third, this study is subject to ascertainment bias; that is, our inclu- sion/exclusion criteria for the genetic study may have in- fluenced the types of individuals who were selected for this study. Moreover, the fact that participants came from en- riched pedigrees might have led to higher rates of comor- bidity than would be seen in the community.

With these caveats in mind, these results both replicate previous studies of smaller and less well-characterized samples and extend our understanding of the nature of the relation between eating disorders and anxiety disor- ders and traits. We believe that genetic linkage analyses dependent solely on DSM-based phenotypes are unlikely to yield strong linkage signals for eating disorders; there- fore, we have advocated the search for likely behavioral or temperamental endophenotypes to clarify the pheno- typic definition of eating disorders. The present results underscore the pervasive presence of anxiety in individu- als with eating disorders, even in the absence of frank anxiety disorders, and support further exploration of the biological and hence genetic relation between eating and anxiety pathology.

Received May 27, 2003; revision received Jan. 30, 2004; accepted Feb. 12, 2004. From the Department of Psychiatry, University of Pitts- burgh, and the Price Foundation Collaborative Group. Address re- print requests to Dr. Kaye, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Western Psychiatric Institute & Clinic, 3811 O’Hara St., Suite 600, Iroquois Bldg., Pittsburgh, PA 15213; kayewh@msx.upmc.edu  (e-mail).

Support for the clinical collection of subjects and data analysis pro- vided by the Price Foundation.

The authors thank the staff of the Price Foundation Collaborative Group for their efforts in participant screening and clinical assess- ments, Eva Gerardi, and the participating families for their contribu- tion of time and effort in support of this study.

The Price Foundation Collaborative Group includes Walter H. Kaye, M.D., Laura Thornton, Ph.D., Nicole Barbarich, B.S., Kim Masters, B.S., Katherine Plotnicov, Ph.D., Christine Pollice, M.P.H., and Bernie Dev- lin, Ph.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh; Cynthia

  1. Bulik, Ph.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of North Caro- lina at Chapel Hill; Manfred M. Fichter, M.D., and Norbert Quadflieg, Dipl.Psych., Klinik Roseneck, Hospital for Behavioral Medicine, affili- ated with the University of Munich, Prien, Germany; Katherine A. Halmi, D., New York Presbyterian Hospital, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, White Plains, N.Y.; Allan S. Kaplan, M.D., and D. Blake Woodside, M.D., Program for Eating Disorders, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto; Michael Strober, Ph.D., Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, University of California at Los Angeles; An- drew W. Bergen, Ph.D., Biognosis, U.S., Inc., and Core Genotyping Fa- cility, Advanced Technology Center, National Cancer Institute, Gaith- ersburg, Md.; Scott Crow, M.D., Department of Psychiatry, Universityof Minnesota, Minneapolis; James Mitchell, M.D., Neuropsychiatric Research Institute, Fargo, N.D.; Alessandro Rotondo, M.D., Depart- ment of Psychiatry, Neurobiology, Pharmacology and Biotechnolo- gies, University of Pisa, Italy; Mauro Mauri, M.D., University of Pisa, It- aly; Pamela Keel, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge Mass.; Kelly L. Klump, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing; Lisa R. Lilenfeld, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta; and Wade H. Berrettini, M.D., Center of Neurobiology and Behavior, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

 

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