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UnknownNCT04037215

Exploration of the Mechanisms of Vulnerability of Anorexia Nervosa at an Early Age : Study of the Cognitive Treatment of Food Stimuli and Body Image

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In order to explore the cognitive treatment of patients with early onset anorexia nervosa (AM) in front of images of silhouettes and food, we will use the eye-tracking method. While we hypothesize a judgment disorder in these patients, the exploration of implicit cognitive treatment without desirability bias is essential. Eye-tracking is a method of recording the eye path that provides qualitative and quantitative information on the visual exploration of subjects. The visual pathway depends on how the subject's attention is directed to a given stimulus, but also on certain cognitive traits (e.g., excessive attention to details) or symptoms (e.g., avoidance of caloric food images or attraction to thin images). It is therefore a non-invasive exploration tool, which provides information on how patients look at food images and silhouettes. This project will describe the cognitive treatment of dietary stimuli and body image in young patients with early onset AM. It could identify a biomarker of AM in the pediatric population and improve the diagnosis of the disease. A better diagnosis of AM in patients under 15 years of age is essential and will improve medical care and develop personalized medicine.

Detailed description

Monocentric, prospective cohort, case-control type study. The population concerned is composed of patients with early onset anorexia nervosa (AM) and control subjects (two groups). The objectives of this study are to: Describe the cognitive treatment of early-onset AM patients with specific stimuli of the disorder (eating and body images) compared to age- and sex-matched control subjects: * children controls not achieved with normal body mass index(BMI); * children with unbalanced insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes, therefore subject to a strict diet that requires good nutritional knowledge and no weight judgment disorders. Describe the links between cognitive treatment and clinical phenotype in patients with early onset AM, in particular severity of eating behaviour trouble symptomatology (TCA), psychiatric and somatic comorbidities, neuropsychological profile. 30 patients with early-onset AM. Two groups of control subjects (matched for age and gender): 30 subjects from the general population with a normal Body Mass Index (BMI) and 30 subjects with chronic somatic pathology (type 1 diabetes) without weight variation (good knowledge of dietary caloric values without impaired judgment about the caloric value of foods and representation of the body image of self and others) A total of 90 participantsPatients and controls without eating disorders will be recruited at Robert Debré Hospital, after signature of the authorization by the holder(s) of parental authority present at the time of hospitalization All patients treated in the department benefit from extensive phenotypic exploration, carried out in routine care. For controls, phenotypic exploration will require a half-day evaluation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERSTUDY OF THE COGNITIVE TREATMENT OF DIETARY STIMULI AND BODY IMAGEDescribe the cognitive treatment of patients with early onset anorexia nervosa in response to specific stimuli of the disorder (eating and body images), compared to age- and sex-matched control subjects: * children controls not achieved with normal BMI; * children with unbalanced insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes, therefore subject to a strict diet that requires good nutritional knowledge and no weight judgment disorders.

Timeline

Start date
2019-11-19
Primary completion
2022-12-19
Completion
2022-12-19
First posted
2019-07-30
Last updated
2021-10-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04037215. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.