重度肥胖儿童和青少年对行为治疗的反应。

Pernilla Danielsson, Jan Kowalski, Örjan Ekblom, Claude Marcus
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引用次数: 245

摘要

目的:探讨肥胖程度是否能预测长期行为治疗的疗效,并探讨其与年龄的相互作用。设计:一项为期三年的纵向观察研究。肥胖儿童被分为3个年龄组(6-9岁、10-13岁和14-16岁)和2个组(中度肥胖,体重指数[BMI]-标准差[SD]评分[或z评分]为1.6)。设定:瑞典斯德哥尔摩国家儿童肥胖中心。参与者:在1998年至2006年期间开始治疗的6至16岁儿童。干预:肥胖的行为治疗。主要观察指标:治疗3年期间BMI-SD评分变化;BMI-SD评分降低0.5个单位或更多被定义为具有临床意义。结果:共有643例患儿符合纳入标准,其中女性患儿占49%。在最年轻的中度肥胖儿童中,44%的人的BMI-SD评分有临床显著降低(平均降低-0.4 [95% CI, -0.55至-0.32])。对于年龄较大的中度肥胖儿童,治疗效果较差。20%的10 - 13岁儿童和8%的14 - 16岁儿童的BMI-SD得分降低了0.5个单位或更多;58%的严重肥胖幼儿的BMI-SD评分出现临床显著降低(平均降低-0.7 [95% CI, -0.80至-0.54])。重度肥胖青少年3年后BMI-SD平均评分无变化,2%出现临床显著体重减轻。发现年龄是BMI-SD评分降低的一个预测因子(优势比,0.68单位/年[95% CI, 0.60-0.77单位/年])。结论:行为治疗对重度肥胖儿童是成功的,但对重度肥胖青少年几乎没有效果。
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Response of severely obese children and adolescents to behavioral treatment.

Objectives: To investigate whether the degree of obesity predicts the efficacy of long-term behavioral treatment and to explore any interaction with age.

Design: A 3-year longitudinal observational study. Obese children were divided into 3 age groups (6-9, 10-13, and 14-16 years) and also into 2 groups (moderately obese, with a body mass index [BMI]-standard deviation [SD] score [or z score] of 1.6 to <3.5, and severely obese, with a BMI-SD score of ≥3.5).

Setting: National Childhood Obesity Center, Stockholm, Sweden.

Participants: Children 6 to 16 years of age who started treatment between 1998 and 2006.

Intervention: Behavioral treatment of obesity.

Main outcome measure: Change in BMI-SD score during 3 years of treatment; a reduction in BMI-SD score of 0.5 units or more was defined as clinically significant.

Results: A total of 643 children (49% female children) met the inclusion criteria. Among the youngest moderately obese children, 44% had a clinically significant reduction in BMI-SD score (mean reduction, -0.4 [95% CI, -0.55 to -0.32]). Treatment was less effective for the older moderately obese children. Twenty percent of children who were 10 to 13 years of age and 8% of children who were 14 to 16 years of age had a reduction in BMI-SD score of 0.5 units or more; 58% of the severely obese young children showed a clinically significant reduction in BMI-SD score (mean reduction, -0.7 [95% CI, -0.80 to -0.54]). The severely obese adolescents showed no change in mean BMI-SD score after 3 years, and 2% experienced clinically significant weight loss. Age was found to be a predictor of a reduction in BMI-SD score (odds ratio, 0.68 units per year [95% CI, 0.60-0.77 units per year]).

Conclusions: Behavioral treatment was successful for severely obese children but had almost no effect on severely obese adolescents.

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