Co-existing mental and somatic conditions in Swedish children with the avoidant restrictive food intake disorder phenotype

Marie-Louis Wronski, Ralf Kuja-Halkola, Elin Hedlund, Miriam I. Martini, Paul Lichtenstein, Sebastian Lundstroem, Henrik Larsson, Mark J. Taylor, Nadia Micali, Cynthia M. Bulik, Lisa Dinkler
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Abstract

Background: Avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) is a feeding and eating disorder, characterized by limited variety and/or quantity of food intake impacting physical health and psychosocial functioning. Children with ARFID often present with a range of psychiatric and somatic symptoms, and therefore consult various pediatric subspecialties; large-scale studies mapping comorbidities are however lacking. To characterize health care needs of people with ARFID, we systematically investigated ARFID-related mental and somatic conditions in 616 children with ARFID and >30,000 children without ARFID. Methods: In a Swedish twin cohort, we identified the ARFID phenotype in 6-12-year-old children based on parent-reports and register data. From >1,000 diagnostic ICD-codes, we specified mental and somatic conditions within/across ICD-chapters, number of distinct per-person diagnoses, and inpatient treatment days between birth and 18th birthday (90 outcomes). Hazard ratios (HR) and incidence rate ratios (IRR) were calculated. Findings: Relative risks of neurodevelopmental, gastrointestinal, endocrine/metabolic, respiratory, neurological, and allergic disorders were substantially increased in ARFID (e.g., autism HR[CI95%]=9.7[7.5-12.5], intellectual disability 10.3[7.6-13.9], gastroesophageal reflux disease 6.7[4.6-9.9], pituitary conditions 5.6[2.7-11.3], chronic lower respiratory diseases 4.9[2.4-10.1], epilepsy 5.8[4.1-8.2]). ARFID was not associated with elevated risks of autoimmune illnesses and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Children with ARFID had a significantly higher number of distinct mental diagnoses (IRR[CI95%]=4.7[4.0-5.4]) and longer duration of hospitalizations (IRR[CI95%]=5.5[1.7-17.6]) compared with children without ARFID. Children with ARFID were diagnosed earlier with a mental condition than children without ARFID. No sex-specific differences emerged. Interpretation: This study yields the broadest and most detailed evidence of co-existing mental and somatic conditions in the largest sample of children with ARFID to date. Findings suggest a complex pattern of health needs in youth with ARFID, underscoring the critical importance of attention to the illness across all pediatric specialties. Funding: Fredrik and Ingrid Thurings Foundation, Mental Health Foundation.
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患有回避型限制性食物摄入障碍表型的瑞典儿童同时存在的精神和躯体疾病
背景:回避性限制性食物摄入障碍(ARFID)是一种进食和饮食障碍,其特点是食物摄入的种类和/或数量有限,影响身体健康和社会心理功能。患有 ARFID 的儿童通常伴有一系列精神和躯体症状,因此需要到儿科各专科就诊;但目前还缺乏对合并症进行调查的大规模研究。为了了解ARFID患者的医疗保健需求,我们对616名ARFID儿童和3万名无ARFID儿童的ARFID相关精神和躯体疾病进行了系统调查:在瑞典的一个双胞胎队列中,我们根据父母的报告和登记数据确定了 6-12 岁儿童的 ARFID 表型。从 1000 个 ICD 诊断代码中,我们确定了 ICD 章内/章间的精神和躯体疾病、每人不同诊断的数量以及出生至 18 岁生日期间的住院治疗天数(90 项结果)。计算了危险比(HR)和发病率比(IRR)。研究结果ARFID患者罹患神经发育、胃肠道、内分泌/代谢、呼吸系统、神经系统和过敏性疾病的相对风险大幅增加(例如:自闭症的HR[CI95%]和过敏性疾病的HR[CI95%])、自闭症 HR[CI95%]=9.7[7.5-12.5], 智力残疾 10.3[7.6-13.9], 胃食管反流病 6.7[4.6-9.9], 垂体疾病 5.6[2.7-11.3], 慢性下呼吸道疾病 4.9[2.4-10.1], 癫痫 5.8[4.1-8.2])。ARFID与自身免疫性疾病和强迫症的风险升高无关。与无ARFID的儿童相比,患有ARFID的儿童被诊断患有不同精神疾病的次数明显较多(IRR[CI95%]=4.7[4.0-5.4]),住院时间也较长(IRR[CI95%]=5.5[1.7-17.6])。与无ARFID儿童相比,ARFID儿童被诊断出患有精神疾病的时间更早。无性别差异。解释:这项研究提供了迄今为止最大的 ARFID 儿童样本中精神和躯体疾病并存的最广泛、最详细的证据。研究结果表明,患有ARFID的青少年的健康需求模式非常复杂,强调了所有儿科专科关注这种疾病的重要性:Fredrik and Ingrid Thurings 基金会、心理健康基金会。
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