The British Journal of Psychiatry (2005) 186: 132-135
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Time trends in eating disorder incidence
LAURA CURRIN, BA
Section of Eating Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry and Mental Health
Department, St George's Hospital Medical School, London
ULRIKE SCHMIDT, MD, MPhil, PhD, MRCPsych
Section of Eating Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry
JANET TREASURE, MD, PhD, FRCP, FRCPsych
Section of Eating Disorders, Institute of Psychiatry and Guy's, King's
and St Thomas's Medical School, London, UK
HERSHEL JICK, MD
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Correspondence:
Laura Currin, Section of Eating Disorders, Box 059, Institute of Psychiatry,
De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, UK. Tel: +44 (0)20 7848 0367; fax: +44
(0)20 7848 0182; e-mail:
l.currin{at}iop.kcl.ac.uk
Declaration of interest None.

ABSTRACT
Background During the years 1988-1993 the primary care incidence
of
anorexia nervosa in the UK remained stable, but the incidence
of bulimia
nervosa increased threefold.
Aims To determine whether the incidence of anorexia nervosa remained
stable, and that of bulimia nervosa continued to increase, in the years
1994-2000.
Method The General Practice Research Database was screened for new
cases of anorexia and bulimia nervosa between 1994 and 2000. Annual incidence
rates were calculated for females aged 10-39 years and compared with rates
from the previous 5 years.
Results In 2000 primary care incidence rates were 4.7 and 6.6 per
100 000 population for anorexia and bulimia nervosa, respectively. The
incidence of anorexia nervosa remained remarkably consistent over the period
studied. Overall there was an increase in the incidence of bulimia, but rates
declined after a peak in 1996.
Conclusions This study provides further evidence for the stability
of anorexia nervosa incidence rates. Decreased symptom recognition and changes
in service use might have contributed to observed changes in the incidence of
bulimia nervosa.

INTRODUCTION
Trends in disease incidence are important for conceptualising
disease
aetiology and planning health services. Several studies
have used
meta-analysis to determine whether eating disorder
incidence has changed over
time, although these have largely
focused on anorexia nervosa. Prior results
indicate a small
global increase in the incidence of anorexia nervosa
throughout
the 20th century (
Keel &
Klump, 2003), with a stable European
incidence since the 1970s
(
Hoek & van Hoeken, 2003).
Only
three studies have specifically focused on trends in the incidence
of
bulimia nervosa, owing to its later recognition as a diagnostic
category and
the tendency to report prevalence rather than
incidence. However, prior work
found a threefold increase in
the UK primary care incidence of bulimia nervosa
between 1988
and 1993 (
Turnbull et
al, 1996). This leaves two important
questions: has the
incidence of anorexia nervosa remained stable,
and is the incidence of bulimia
nervosa continuing to rise
as dramatically as previously reported?

METHOD
We analysed the annual incidence rates of eating disorders within
a primary
care setting, extending the work done by Turnbull
et al
(
1996). The General Practice
Research Database (GPRD;
http://www.gprd.com)
was searched for newly recorded cases
of anorexia and bulimia nervosa between
1994 and 2000 inclusive.
This database covers approximately 280 general
practitioners
and over 3 million patients (about 5% of the total UK
population).
Although inner-London and smaller practices are slightly
underrepresented,
the patients are broadly representative of the UK population
with respect to age and gender. Diagnostic information was
recorded using a
modified version of the Oxford Medical Information
System (OXMIS) or Read
classification system (depending on
the year in question). The high quality of
data recording has
been previously validated
(
Walley & Mantgani, 1997;
Jick et al, 2003).
The GPRD was searched for first-time diagnoses of anorexia and bulimia
nervosa made between 1 January 1994 and 31 December 2000. Annual incidence
rates were calculated for women aged 10-39 years. This cohort represents the
vast majority of registered cases, and was the group considered in the
previous study (Turnbull et al,
1996). Incidence rates were calculated by dividing the number of
eating disorder cases diagnosed annually by the total number of people in this
age group registered with a general practitioner (GP) in that year. These
annual incidence rates were then compared with figures collected using an
identical method from the years 1988-1993
(Turnbull et al,
1996). In addition, incidence for the total population was
calculated for the year 2000, and stratified by age group and gender.
During the period studied there have been changes to the formal diagnostic
criteria for bulimia nervosa. However, the GPRD uses general practitioner
rather than psychiatric diagnoses, minimising the effect of these changes. In
addition, concurrent notes and referral letters for cases from the year of
peak incidence were compared with those from the most recent year available to
determine whether there had been changes in diagnostic habits.

RESULTS
Over the period studied, annual incidence rates for diagnosed
anorexia
nervosa remained stable for females aged 10-39 years
(
Fig. 1). The rate in 1988 was
18.5 per 100 000 (95% CI 10.2-26.9)
and in the year 2000 the rate was 20.1 per
100 000 (95% CI
15.0-25.2), with minimal variation in the intervening years.
In 2000 the age- and gender-adjusted incidence of anorexia
nervosa diagnosed
in primary care was 4.7 per 100 000 population
(95% CI 3.6-5.8). The incidence
rate varied dramatically according
to the age-gender group
(
Table 1). The incidence rate
for
females was 8.6 per 100 000 (95% CI 6.5-10.6) compared with
0.7 per 100
000 (95% CI 0.1-1.3) for males. This translated
to a relative risk for females
to males of 12:1. The highest
incidence, 34.6 per 100 000 population (95% CI
22.0-47.1),
was found in females aged 10-19 years.
The results for bulimia nervosa are very different. As demonstrated by
Turnbull et al
(1996), the early 1990s showed
a marked increase in primary care incidence for women aged 10-39 years which
continued until 1996. Although there was an overall increase in reported cases
of bulimia nervosa from 1988-2000, the incidence rate has fallen by 38.9%
since this peak (Fig. 1). In
2000 the age- and gender-adjusted incidence of bulimia nervosa in primary care
was 6.6 per 100 000 (95% CI 5.3-7.9). The incidence rate for females was 12.4
per 100 000 (9.9-14.9) compared with 0.7 per 100 000 (95% CI 0.1-1.3) for
males. This represents a relative risk for females to males of approximately
18:1. The highest incidence, 35.8 per 100 000 (95% CI 23.0-48.6), was in
females aged 10-19 years.
To control for the changing criteria applied to bulimia nervosa, diagnostic
validity was analysed in a subgroup of cases randomly selected from the years
1996 (n=26) and 2000 (n=19). There are considerable
difficulties associated with a retrospective validation of diagnoses owing to
the limited information available. Cases were defined as probable
bulimia nervosa if all but one of the DSM-IV criteria
(American Psychiatric Association,
1994) were mentioned in the case history. Seventeen of the cases
(37.3%) had insufficient information available to validate diagnoses. Of the
remaining cases, a similar proportion of cases in 1996 and 2000 were either
full or probable bulimia nervosa (82.3% and 81.8%,
respectively). It is important to note that all of the remaining cases were
considered to be eating disorder cases (either not otherwise
specified or anorexia
nervosa).

DISCUSSION
The incidence rate of anorexia nervosa in primary care has remained
extremely stable over the 12 years studied. In contrast, reported
cases of
bulimia nervosa increased during the same period.
However, the peak in bulimia
cases seen in 1996 was followed
by a subsequent decline for the remainder of
the study. This
decline was almost entirely explained by the decrease in
incidence
rates for females aged 20-39 years. In 1993 the incidence rate
for
this group was 56.7 per 100 000 (95% CI 49.2-64.3)
(
Turnbull et al,
1996),
but by 2000 it had fallen to 28.6 per 100 000
(95% CI
21.4-35.8). In contrast, the incidence of bulimia nervosa
in women aged 10-19
years has remained relatively stable: 41.0
per 100 000 in 1993 compared with
35.8 per 100 000 in 2000
(
Turnbull et
al, 1996).

CONTEXT OF FINDINGS
The stability of anorexia nervosa incidence is consistent with
reports from
a review by Hoek & van Hoeken
(
2003), and
the age- and
gender-adjusted incidence is comparable with that
found in another
primary-care study (
Hoek et al,
1995). Our
data suggest that the previous trend of increasing
incidence
of bulimia nervosa in primary care has not continued, and therefore
the age- and gender-adjusted incidence reported here is lower
than other
comparable figures (
Hoek et al,
1995;
Soundy et al,
1995). This finding, that young women aged 10-19 years
have the
highest risk of both anorexia and bulimia nervosa,
corresponds with other
epidemiological evidence that eating
disorders emerge in late adolescence
(
Soundy et al, 1995;
Lucas et al, 1999;
Lewinsohn et al,
2000).
A major strength of our study is the use of a nationally representative
primary care database. Because of the structure of the UK health system most
patients will pass through the care of a GP, even if later referred to
specialist services. Additionally, 20% of patients with anorexia nervosa and
40% of patients with bulimia nervosa are treated exclusively in primary care
(Turnbull et al,
1996). Moreover, time trends were assessed using the same method
over the entire study period, rather than depending on meta-analysis. However,
the use of a primary care database is itself a limitation, in that the
reported figures represent clinically meaningful cases rather than those
meeting DSM-IV criteria. This parallels the picture seen in other studies of
clinical cases. Several specialist services consistently report that the most
common diagnosis is eating disorders not otherwise specified,
and these cases are no less severe in presentation or illness duration than
those meeting full diagnostic criteria
(Millar, 1998;
Ricca et al, 2001;
Fairburn & Harrison, 2003; Turner & Bryant-Waugh,
2004). A second limitation is that only those identified by their
GP are reported in this study; therefore, this study cannot estimate the true
community incidence of these disorders. This limitation is shared by all
epidemiological studies that use service registers.

CHANGES IN BULIMIA NERVOSA
There are several potential explanations of the peak in incidence
of
bulimia nervosa seen in the 1990s and its subsequent decline.
It is possible
that patients may now seek help from different
sources. During the study
period, the UK-based Eating Disorder
Association
(
http://www.edauk.com)
has experienced a dramatic
increase in demand for its web-based messaging and
e-mail service
(S. Ringwood, Eating Disorder Association, personal
communication,
2004). Perhaps patients are now turning to a range of different
support services, rather than relying primarily on their GP.
Another possible
explanation relates to changes in professional
or public attention to eating
disorder symptoms. The earlier
period of rising incidence of bulimia might
have been the result
of increased recognition and detection efforts given to a
new
and fashionable diagnosis. In line with this theory,
the
decrease in identified cases mirrors a decline in eating
disorder research
publications. Between the years 1960 and
2000 the number of references about
eating disorders in general
- and bulimia in particular - grew proportionately
much faster
than the total number of Medline citations
(
Theander, 2002).
However,
during the 1990s this rate slowed, and eating disorder
literature is now
published at a slightly lower rate than general
medical literature. Perhaps
during the period of intense academic
interest, clinicians were more attuned
to eating disorder diagnoses
and symptoms. This would have specific
implications for bulimia
nervosa as it is typically a hidden illness, whereas
anorexia
nervosa is more instantly recognisable.
Intense UK press coverage of bulimia during the 1990s might also have
contributed to the apparent rise in incidence. For example, the first reports
of Princess Diana's battle with bulimia appeared in Andrew Morton's 1992 book
Diana: Her True Story (Morton,
1992), and subsequent media interest might have focused attention
on bulimic symptoms and improved public awareness of the disorder. It is
notable that the Princess's death in 1997 coincided with the beginning of the
decline in bulimia incidence. Greater familiarity has been implicated in the
increased incidence of other diseases, including autism and repetitive strain
injury (Brogmus et al,
1996; Kaye et al,
2001). Identification with a public figure's struggle with bulimia
might have temporarily decreased the shame associated with the illness, and
encouraged women to seek help for the first time. This would suggest that some
of the 1990s peak might have been caused by the identification of
long-standing cases, rather than a true increase in community incidence. The
finding that the recent decline is largely due to a reduction in incidence in
the older group (women aged 20-39 years) supports this conclusion.

FUTURE WORK
Further research is needed to determine whether the reported
incidence of
bulimia nervosa will continue to decline in the
UK, or whether this is the
beginning of a stabilisation that
echoes the stable incidence observed for
anorexia nervosa.
This work suggests a need for increased recognition and
treatment
efforts, especially for adolescent women. Even subclinically
disordered eating behaviour during adolescence elevates the
risk of a broad
range of physical and mental health problems
during early adulthood
(
Johnson et al, 2002)
and eating disorder
symptoms in adolescence confer a strong risk of eating
disorders
in young adulthood (
Kotler
et al, 2001). In addition, the National
Institute for
Clinical Excellence (
2004) has
recently called
attention to the lack of research in adolescents with bulimia
nervosa. Given that this age group now shows the highest incidence
of bulimia
in primary care, there needs to be renewed emphasis
on research in this
area.

Clinical Implications and Limitations
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
- The incidence of anorexia nervosa detected by general practitioners has
remained stable for the years 1988-2000, whereas the incidence of bulimia was
marked by a dramatic increase in the 1990s and now appears to be falling.
- Special detection and treatment efforts should be aimed at young women aged
10-19 years, as this is the age group with the highest risk of both anorexia
and bulimia nervosa.
- General practitioners need more information about the presentation of
eating disorder symptoms and the treatments available, to allow early and
effective intervention.
LIMITATIONS
- Only those approaching their general practitioner for treatment could be
detected; this study cannot estimate the number in the community who do not
seek help for their condition.
- Incidence is calculated from general practitioners' clinical diagnoses
rather than DSM-IV criteria.
- It cannot yet be determined whether the decline in bulimia nervosa
incidence during the last 4 years of our study represents a true decrease in
disease incidence or is due to other changing circumstances.

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Received for publication June 23, 2004.
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