Psychol Med. 2025 Nov 6;55:e337. doi: 10.1017/S0033291725102341.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Test whether a dissonance-based transdiagnostic eating disorder treatment, body project treatment (BPT), produces greater reduction in brain reward region response to the thin ideal and behaviors used to pursue this ideal and eating disorder symptoms, and higher abstinence from eating disorder behaviors and remittance from eating disorder diagnoses than a matched transdiagnostic interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT).
METHODS: Women with various eating disorders (N = 83) were randomized to 8-week group-implemented BPT or IPT and completed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at pretest and posttest, and surveys and masked diagnostic interviews at pretest, posttest, and 6-month follow-up.
RESULTS: BPT versus IPT participants showed significantly greater reductions in mid cingulate cortex response to thin models, anterior cingulate cortex response to eating disorder behavior words, eating disorder symptoms (d = 0.54), and body dissatisfaction (d = 0.57), and marginally greater reductions in psychosocial impairment (d = 0.39) at posttest, as well as significantly greater reductions in body dissatisfaction (d = 0.68) and psychosocial impairment (d = 0.63), and marginally greater reductions in eating disorder symptoms (d = 0.53) at 6-month follow-up. At posttest, BPT versus IPT participants showed significantly greater abstinence from binge eating and purging (48% versus 23%, respectively) but did not differ on remittance from eating disorder diagnoses (52% versus 44%, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: Results provide further evidence of target engagement for BPT and suggest that it is more effective than IPT in treating a range of eating disorders.
PMID:41195733 | DOI:10.1017/S0033291725102341
