Prevalence and correlates of binge eating in seasonal affective disorder
Introduction
Winter seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a subtype of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) characterized by annual onset of symptoms beginning in the fall-winter months, with full remission occurring in spring (American Psychiatric Association (APA), 2013). Atypical vegetative symptoms of depression, including hyperphagia (i.e. increased appetite and food consumption) and carbohydrate craving during depressive episodes, are more common in SAD than non-seasonal depression (Rosenthal et al., 1984, Rosenthal et al., 1987). Moreover, the severity of atypical symptoms like hyperphagia may exceed simply overeating, with some data suggesting that hyperphagia during winter depressive episodes may occur in discrete binge eating episodes (Levitan et al., 2004), during which large amounts of food are consumed accompanied by a sense of loss of control over eating during the episode (APA, 2013). Specifically, Levitan et al. (2004) reported that 24.4% of women with SAD met criteria for sub-threshold binge eating behavior. Thus, it is possible that hyperphagia in SAD may not only include elevated rates of binge eating, but may also meet the diagnostic threshold for binge eating disorder (BED). Studies have documented elevated rates of BED in other mood disorder populations (e.g. Bipolar Disorder; Wildes et al., 2008, McElroy et al., 2011), and it is clear that BED is associated with a high degree of psychiatric comorbidity (Grilo et al., 2008, Javaras et al., 2008, Grucza et al., 2007, Hudson et al., 2007). However, previous studies have not reported the percentage of individuals meeting full diagnostic criteria for BED in both men and women with SAD. Further, the demographic and clinical correlates of binge eating symptomatology and threshold BED in SAD have yet to be characterized. Doing so will help to identify those individuals vulnerable to comorbid BED and SAD, and may inform treatment approaches to both disorders.
Several clinical characteristics of SAD may be associated with the risk for binge eating and BED. For instance, previous research has demonstrated that atypical vegetative symptoms predict binge eating and loss of control among individuals with Bipolar Disorder (Wildes et al., 2008), and rates of binge eating are elevated in depressed individuals with atypical symptom presentations (Kendler et al., 1996, Benazzi, 1999, Angst et al., 2002), suggesting that atypical vegetative symptoms and binge eating may also be correlated in SAD. Seasonality, a core feature of SAD, is another potential risk factor for binge eating and BED in SAD. Seasonality is a dimensional measure of the degree to which mood, sleep, appetite, and weight vary seasonally, and is associated with specific vulnerability for atypical vegetative symptoms like hyperphagia (Young et al., 1991; Lam et al., 2001a). SAD, eating disorders, bipolar disorder, and non-seasonal depression are all associated with weight gain in the winter (Hardin et al., 1991), suggesting that eating behavior may vary seasonally among multiple psychiatric populations. Indeed, winter weight gain experienced by individuals with SAD is partially mediated by subclinical binge eating behavior (Levitan et al., 2004). Therefore, it is possible that seasonality may be related to risk for binge eating, as was recently suggested by Davis (2013), and BED.
Prior research exploring the relationship between seasonality and eating disorders has focused on Bulimia Nervosa (BN; Lam et al., 1996). Although the prevalence of BN in SAD has not been reported, there is evidence that SAD is highly comorbid with BN; 35% of individuals with BN met criteria for a presumptive SAD diagnosis in one report (Lam et al., 1996). In addition, individuals with BN experience worsening of mood and weight gain, and an exacerbation of binge eating and purging, during the fall-winter months (Fornari et al., 1994, Blouin et al., 1992). Given that binge eating is a cardinal feature of both BN and BED, there is reason to predict that clinically significant binge eating and SAD may be related. Therefore, the primary aims of this study are to determine the prevalence and correlates of binge eating and BED in a sample of adults with SAD. To this end, two hypotheses will be tested: (1) the percentage of individuals with SAD meeting criteria for binge eating and BED will exceed that expected based population data, and (2), seasonality and atypical symptom severity will predict risk for binge eating and BED among individuals with SAD, but typical symptom severity will not. Finally, given that symptoms of BN show a seasonal pattern, it is possible that binge eating and BED may also become exacerbated in the winter months. As such, this study included the ancillary aim to determine whether mood and BED symptoms worsen during winter in a second sample of individuals with clinical and subclinical BED.
Section snippets
Participants
Two samples, one from Bethesda, MD, USA, (latitude: 38.9847°N) and one from Pittsburgh, PA, USA (latitude: 40.4417°N) were combined to form a single sample of adults with SAD (N=112). Participants were either recruited by researchers at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS; n=64) from Bethesda, MD and the surrounding regions, or by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh (n=48) from the Pittsburgh metro area via flyers, media advertisements, and research registry
Study 1
In the combined SAD sample, participants (N=112) were largely middle-aged (M=41.8, S.D.=13), female (85%), and Caucasian (87%). Self-reported race/ethnicity of non-Caucasian participants included African American (6.3%), Hispanic (1.8%), Asian or Pacific Islander (2.7%), and other (0.9%). Age, ethnicity, and latitude were not associated with any binge eating outcome (Table 2, Table 3, Table 4). Given that there were no males in the SAD sample who met criteria for BED as defined by the
Discussion
The present study demonstrated that over one-quarter (27.4%) of men and women with SAD reported binge eating in the 6 months prior to participation, similar to the percentage reported by Levitan et al. (2004) in their sample of women with SAD. Moreover, the prevalence of BED as defined by the DSM-IV-TR in participants with SAD was 8.9%, comparable to the prevalence of BED in other psychiatric populations (e.g. Wildes et al., 2008, Grilo et al., 2008, Javaras et al., 2008). When the criteria for
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by a competitive intramural Grant project number C072EJ (Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences; Rohan, K. J.), and NIH Grant numbers UL1 RR024153 and UL1TR000005 (University of Pittsburgh, CTSI), and NIH R03 MH096119 01A1 (Roecklein, K.A.). These sponsors had no role in the development of the protocol, execution of the study, data analysis, or manuscript preparation.
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