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- Title
Does receiving an eating disorder diagnosis increase the risk of a subsequent alcohol use disorder? A Danish nationwide register‐based cohort study.
- Authors
Mellentin, Angelina Isabella; Skøt, Lotte; Guala, Maria Mercedes; Støving, René Klinkby; Ascone, Leonie; Stenager, Elsebeth; Mejldal, Anna
- Abstract
Background and aim: No large‐scale, longitudinal clinical study has examined whether patients with different types of eating disorders (ED) have an increased risk of a subsequent alcohol use disorder (AUD). This study aimed to assess the ongoing risk of receiving a diagnosis of AUD following a first‐time diagnosis of anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), or unspecified ED (USED). Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Danish nationwide registries, January 1994 to December 2018. Participants: A total of 20 759 ED patients and 83 036 controls were followed from the date of first ED diagnosis (index date) until the date of first AUD diagnosis, death, emigration, or the end of the study. Controls were selected in a 1:4 ratio and matched on month and year of birth, gender and ethnicity. Measurements We obtained data on ED (AN, BN, USED; exposure) and AUD (abuse/dependence; outcome) diagnoses as well as sociodemographics and other psychiatric diagnoses. Time to AUD was generated from the index date. Risk of AUD after the index date was assessed among those without a prior AUD diagnosis while adjusting for sociodemographics and prior psychiatric diagnoses. Findings Compared with controls, an increased relative risk of AUD after the index date was observed in AN patients throughout the study lasting 15 + years (adjusted hazard ratios [HRs] ranging from 2.49 [99% CI = 1.46, 4.25] to 6.83 [2.84, 16.41]), in BN patients during the first year of follow‐up and from 2 years onward (2.72 [1.66, 4.44] to 17.44 [6.01, 50.63]), and in USED patients during the first year and 2–15 years of follow‐up (2.52 [1.54, 4.14] to 14.17 [5.86, 34.27]). In all three groups, estimates were highest during the first year, particularly among BN patients. Conclusions: Patients with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, or unspecified eating disorders appear to have an increased ongoing risk of receiving a diagnosis of alcohol use disorder following their first eating disorder diagnosis compared with controls.
- Subjects
DENMARK; BULIMIA diagnosis; ALCOHOLISM; CONFIDENCE intervals; ALCOHOL-induced disorders; RETROSPECTIVE studies; RISK assessment; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; ANOREXIA nervosa; LONGITUDINAL method; DISEASE risk factors
- Publication
Addiction, 2022, Vol 117, Issue 2, p354
- ISSN
0965-2140
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/add.15639