Prozac Didn't Help Anorexic Women
in Study
(June 13, 2006) --
Prozac is one of the
antidepressants often used to treat
anorexia, but researchers found it didn't stop young women from resuming
their self-starving ways.
In a small study, more than half of the women who got Prozac or dummy
pills dropped out of the experiment, and few who remained in it kept their
weight from dropping into the danger zone. The results underscore the
difficulty in curing the troubling eating disorder.
Taken with previous findings, the results indicate the common practice of
prescribing antidepressants "is unlikely to provide substantial benefit for
most patients with anorexia," the researchers wrote. Their report was in
Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
The study follows a research review in April from the government's Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality, which found that no drug effectively
treats anorexia. That report said a few behavior treatments can help,
including psychotherapy that encourages patients to develop thinking
patterns to counteract their unhealthy eating behavior.
The Prozac results aren't surprising because anorexia "is considered one
of the
most treatment-resistant mental illnesses," said Ellen Astrachan-Fletcher,
a therapist and director of the Eating Disorders Clinic at the University of
Illinois at Chicago.
In the new study, which lasted a year, the women first had psychiatric
treatment and had put on enough weight to be in the normal range before
being given Prozac or placebos. About 27 percent of the 49 participants
randomly assigned Prozac maintained a normal weight and finished the study
versus 32 percent of 44 women on dummy pills; the differences were not
statistically significant. Also, 25 Prozac users and 28 placebo patients
dropped out because of weight loss or dissatisfaction with treatment.
One patient, a 17-year-old on Prozac, attempted suicide. While
antidepressants have been linked with suicidal behavior in children, the
researchers noted that depression often accompanies anorexia, and that
anorexia has one of the highest suicide rates of any psychiatric illness.
Several of the researchers, including lead author Dr. Timothy
Walsh of New York State Psychiatric Institute, have received funding from
Prozac maker Eli Lilly and Co., which provided the study pills. Funding for
the research came from the National Institutes of Health.
Anorexia affects a little over 1 percent of U.S. females and less than 1
percent of males. The National Eating Disorders Association estimates that
about 10 million girls and women and about 1 million
boys
and men have
anorexia
or bulimia, a related eating disorder involving food bingeing and
vomiting for which Prozac has shown some success.
Source: Associated Press
Last updated: 06/06
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