BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: Eating pathologies among bariatric surgery candidates are common and associated with adverse surgical outcomes, including weight regain and low quality of life. However, their assessment is made difficult by the great variety and inconsistent use of standardized measures. OBJ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Beatriz H TESS, Letícia MAXIMIANO-FERREIRA, Denis PAJECKI, Yuan-Pang WANG
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Brasileiro de Estudos e Pesquisas de Gastroenterologia (IBEPEGE) 2019-05-01
Series:Arquivos de Gastroenterologia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-28032019000100055&lng=en&tlng=en
id doaj-036828d9b13d4a689b4f01484a5ca677
record_format Article
spelling doaj-036828d9b13d4a689b4f01484a5ca6772020-11-25T00:08:11ZengInstituto Brasileiro de Estudos e Pesquisas de Gastroenterologia (IBEPEGE)Arquivos de Gastroenterologia1678-42192019-05-01561556010.1590/s0004-2803.201900000-10S0004-28032019000100055BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLSBeatriz H TESSLetícia MAXIMIANO-FERREIRADenis PAJECKIYuan-Pang WANGABSTRACT BACKGROUND: Eating pathologies among bariatric surgery candidates are common and associated with adverse surgical outcomes, including weight regain and low quality of life. However, their assessment is made difficult by the great variety and inconsistent use of standardized measures. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this review was to synthesize current knowledge on the prevalence of binge eating disorder (BED) in presurgical patients and to make a critical appraisal of assessment tools for BED. METHODS: A search was conducted on PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases from January 1994 to March 2017. Data were extracted, tabulated and summarized using a narrative approach. RESULTS: A total of 21 observational studies were reviewed for data extraction and analysis. Prevalence of BED in bariatric populations ranged from 2% to 53%. Considerable variation in patient characteristics and in BED assessment measures was evident among the studies. In addition, several methodological weaknesses were recognized in most of the studies. Ten different psychometric instruments were used to assess BED. Clinical interviews were used in only 12 studies, though this is the preferred tool to diagnose BED. CONCLUSION: Study heterogeneity accounted for the variability of the results from different centers and methodological flaws such as insufficient sample size and selection bias impaired the evidence on the magnitude of BED in surgical settings. For the sake of comparability and generalizability of the findings in future studies, researchers must recruit representative samples of treatment-seeking candidates for bariatric surgery and systematically apply standard instruments for the assessment of BED.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-28032019000100055&lng=en&tlng=enObesidadeCirurgia bariátricaTranstorno de compulsão alimentarAdultoPrevalênciaRevisão
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Beatriz H TESS
Letícia MAXIMIANO-FERREIRA
Denis PAJECKI
Yuan-Pang WANG
spellingShingle Beatriz H TESS
Letícia MAXIMIANO-FERREIRA
Denis PAJECKI
Yuan-Pang WANG
BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
Arquivos de Gastroenterologia
Obesidade
Cirurgia bariátrica
Transtorno de compulsão alimentar
Adulto
Prevalência
Revisão
author_facet Beatriz H TESS
Letícia MAXIMIANO-FERREIRA
Denis PAJECKI
Yuan-Pang WANG
author_sort Beatriz H TESS
title BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
title_short BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
title_full BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
title_fullStr BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
title_full_unstemmed BARIATRIC SURGERY AND BINGE EATING DISORDER: SHOULD SURGEONS CARE ABOUT IT? A LITERATURE REVIEW OF PREVALENCE AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS
title_sort bariatric surgery and binge eating disorder: should surgeons care about it? a literature review of prevalence and assessment tools
publisher Instituto Brasileiro de Estudos e Pesquisas de Gastroenterologia (IBEPEGE)
series Arquivos de Gastroenterologia
issn 1678-4219
publishDate 2019-05-01
description ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: Eating pathologies among bariatric surgery candidates are common and associated with adverse surgical outcomes, including weight regain and low quality of life. However, their assessment is made difficult by the great variety and inconsistent use of standardized measures. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this review was to synthesize current knowledge on the prevalence of binge eating disorder (BED) in presurgical patients and to make a critical appraisal of assessment tools for BED. METHODS: A search was conducted on PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases from January 1994 to March 2017. Data were extracted, tabulated and summarized using a narrative approach. RESULTS: A total of 21 observational studies were reviewed for data extraction and analysis. Prevalence of BED in bariatric populations ranged from 2% to 53%. Considerable variation in patient characteristics and in BED assessment measures was evident among the studies. In addition, several methodological weaknesses were recognized in most of the studies. Ten different psychometric instruments were used to assess BED. Clinical interviews were used in only 12 studies, though this is the preferred tool to diagnose BED. CONCLUSION: Study heterogeneity accounted for the variability of the results from different centers and methodological flaws such as insufficient sample size and selection bias impaired the evidence on the magnitude of BED in surgical settings. For the sake of comparability and generalizability of the findings in future studies, researchers must recruit representative samples of treatment-seeking candidates for bariatric surgery and systematically apply standard instruments for the assessment of BED.
topic Obesidade
Cirurgia bariátrica
Transtorno de compulsão alimentar
Adulto
Prevalência
Revisão
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-28032019000100055&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT beatrizhtess bariatricsurgeryandbingeeatingdisordershouldsurgeonscareaboutitaliteraturereviewofprevalenceandassessmenttools
AT leticiamaximianoferreira bariatricsurgeryandbingeeatingdisordershouldsurgeonscareaboutitaliteraturereviewofprevalenceandassessmenttools
AT denispajecki bariatricsurgeryandbingeeatingdisordershouldsurgeonscareaboutitaliteraturereviewofprevalenceandassessmenttools
AT yuanpangwang bariatricsurgeryandbingeeatingdisordershouldsurgeonscareaboutitaliteraturereviewofprevalenceandassessmenttools
_version_ 1725416397478035456