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Characterising illness stages and recovery trajectories of eating disorders in young people via remote measurement technology (STORY): a multi-centre prospective cohort study protocol

Authors :
Carina Kuehne
Matthew D. Phillips
Sarah Moody
Callum Bryson
Iain C. Campbell
Pauline Conde
Nicholas Cummins
Sylvane Desrivières
Judith Dineley
Richard Dobson
Daire Douglas
Amos Folarin
Lucy Gallop
Amelia Hemmings
Başak İnce
Luke Mason
Zulqarnain Rashid
Alice Bromell
Christopher Sims
Karina Allen
Chantal Bailie
Parveen Bains
Mike Basher
Francesca Battisti
Julian Baudinet
Katherine Bristow
Nicola Dawson
Lizzie Dodd
Victoria Frater
Robert Freudenthal
Beth Gripton
Carol Kan
Joel W. T. Khor
Nicus Kotze
Stuart Laverack
Lee Martin
Sarah Maxwell
Sarah McDonald
Delysia McKnight
Ruairidh McKay
Jessica Merrin
Mel Nash
Dasha Nicholls
Shirlie Palmer
Samantha Pearce
Catherine Roberts
Lucy Serpell
Emilia Severs
Mima Simic
Amelia Staton
Sian Westaway
Helen Sharpe
Ulrike Schmidt
EDIFY consortium
Source :
BMC Psychiatry, Vol 24, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMC, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Background Eating disorders (EDs) are serious, often chronic, conditions associated with pronounced morbidity, mortality, and dysfunction increasingly affecting young people worldwide. Illness progression, stages and recovery trajectories of EDs are still poorly characterised. The STORY study dynamically and longitudinally assesses young people with different EDs (restricting; bingeing/bulimic presentations) and illness durations (earlier; later stages) compared to healthy controls. Remote measurement technology (RMT) with active and passive sensing is used to advance understanding of the heterogeneity of earlier and more progressed clinical presentations and predictors of recovery or relapse. Methods STORY follows 720 young people aged 16–25 with EDs and 120 healthy controls for 12 months. Online self-report questionnaires regularly assess ED symptoms, psychiatric comorbidities, quality of life, and socioeconomic environment. Additional ongoing monitoring using multi-parametric RMT via smartphones and wearable smart rings (‘Ōura ring’) unobtrusively measures individuals’ daily behaviour and physiology (e.g., Bluetooth connections, sleep, autonomic arousal). A subgroup of participants completes additional in-person cognitive and neuroimaging assessments at study-baseline and after 12 months. Discussion By leveraging these large-scale longitudinal data from participants across ED diagnoses and illness durations, the STORY study seeks to elucidate potential biopsychosocial predictors of outcome, their interplay with developmental and socioemotional changes, and barriers and facilitators of recovery. STORY holds the promise of providing actionable findings that can be translated into clinical practice by informing the development of both early intervention and personalised treatment that is tailored to illness stage and individual circumstances, ultimately disrupting the long-term burden of EDs on individuals and their families.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471244X
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.12095c5241a1445aa79163e2441022c7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-024-05841-w