Study links celiac disease to anorexia nervosa
Last Updated: 2017-04-03
By Lisa Rapaport
(Reuters Health) - Women with celiac disease may be more likely to also be diagnosed with the eating disorder anorexia nervosa, researchers suggest.
In a nationwide study, a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa was more likely both before a celiac disease diagnosis, and afterward.
âBefore this study, there have been published a few small case reports of patients with celiac disease developing eating disturbances after their celiac disease diagnosis,â said lead study author Dr. Karl Marild, a researcher at the University of Colorado in Aurora.
âThis, however, is the first large study to show an association between celiac disease and anorexia nervosa,â Marild said by email.
The researchers examined data collected from 1987 through 2009 on almost 18,000 Swedish women diagnosed with celiac disease and roughly 89,000 women around the same age who didnât have the autoimmune disorder.
After a celiac disease diagnosis, women were 46 percent more likely to be diagnosed with anorexia nervosa, researchers report in Pediatrics, April 3. After an anorexia diagnosis, women had twice the odds of a later diagnosis of celiac disease.
More specifically, each year during the study period, a new diagnosis of anorexia nervosa was made in about 0.03 percent in women with a diagnosis of celiac disease, compared to about 0.02 percent in women without celiac disease.
Also, the researchers report, nearly 0.2 percent of women with celiac disease had been previously diagnosed with anorexia nervosa, compared to only about 0.1 percent of women in the study who didnât have celiac disease.
The study wasnât a controlled experiment designed to prove that celiac disease causes anorexia, or that the reverse is true, the authors note.
Itâs possible that at least some patients were initially misdiagnosed with one disease when they had the other disorder, the researchers point out. At least some of the overlap in diagnoses of both conditions might be explained by âsurveillance bias,â or the fact that women being closely monitored due to one issue with eating might be more likely to be evaluated for another food-related health problem.
In addition, dietary restrictions prescribed for celiac disease might trigger an obsessive eating pattern that leads to anorexia, Marild said.
The potential for misdiagnosis may be particularly important in treating teens, Dr. Neville Golden, an adolescent medicine researcher at Stanford Childrenâs Health in California writes in an accompanying editorial.
âBoth celiac disease and anorexia nervosa may have similar symptoms: abdominal discomfort after eating, a feeling of fullness, changes in bowel habits and weight loss,â Golden said by email. âSo the correct diagnosis may not always be clear.â
With either diagnosis, itâs important that patients see a specialist, said Alice Bast, chief executive officer of Beyond Celiac, a patient advocacy organization.
âThe higher level of scrutiny by informed healthcare providers may unearth problems that might fly under the radar otherwise,â Bast, who wasnât involved in the study, said by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2nU0w64
Pediatrics 2017.
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