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Differentiating anorexia nervosa and atypical anorexia nervosa with absolute weight cut-offs results in a skewed distribution for premorbid weight among youth.

Abigail MatthewsJessica A LinGrace JheTriinu PetersLeslie A SimJohannes Hebebrand
Published in: The International journal of eating disorders (2024)
Anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN are considered distinct conditions in youth, with differential diagnosis hinging upon a presenting weight status of 'underweight' (i.e., BMI percentile for age-and-sex (BMI%) < 5th). In our study, youth with premorbid 'overweight/obesity' (BMI% ≥ 85th) disproportionately remained above this threshold, despite similar weight loss. Coupled with prior evidence for commensurate characteristics and sequelae in both diagnoses, we propose that DSM-5 differentiation of AN and atypical AN inadvertently reinforces weight stigma and may contribute to treatment disparities in atypical AN.
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