Pharmacotherapy of bulimia nervosa with fluoxetine: assessment of clinically significant attitudinal change.
OBJECTIVE: The authors used an individual change model to examine the clinically significant effect of pharmacotherapy with fluoxetine on the attitudes and beliefs characteristic of bulimia nervosa. METHOD: Three hundred eighty-two women meeting DSM-III-R criteria for bulimia nervosa participated in a multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial of placebo, 20 mg of fluoxetine, and 60 mg of fluoxetine for 8 weeks. Behavioral change was assessed with self-monitored measures of binge eating and purging, and psychological change was measured with the self-rating Eating Disorder Inventory and the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. A specific statistical method was used to determine clinically significant change in psychological measures. RESULTS: On the majority of psychological measures, more of the subjects receiving active drug than those receiving placebo showed clinically significant change. Behavioral improvement was significantly associated with the likelihood of demonstrating clinically significant psychological change. The observed effect of pharmacotherapy on attitudinal change was not related to the presence of depression at baseline. These results compare favorably with other interventions for bulimia nervosa. CONCLUSIONS: Measures of change in treatment studies should reflect clinical as well as statistical significance. In the short-term, treatment of bulimia nervosa with fluoxetine appears to produce clinically significant attitudinal and behavioral changes.[1]References
- Pharmacotherapy of bulimia nervosa with fluoxetine: assessment of clinically significant attitudinal change. Goldbloom, D.S., Olmsted, M.P. The American journal of psychiatry. (1993) [Pubmed]
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