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Authors' reply

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Stuart B. Murray
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, 401 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, California, USA. Email: drstuartmurray@gmail.com;
Scott Griffiths
Affiliation:
School of Psychology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia
Jonathan M. Mond
Affiliation:
DepArtment of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2016 

We thank Dr Abed for his comment on our recent editorial but dispute the implication that delineating the symptom profiles of male versus female eating disorder pathology neglects the aetiological precursors of eating disorders. On the contrary, careful delineation of the spectrum of disordered eating that occurs at the population level is essential in developing comprehensive aetiological frameworks. For many years, the male experience of disordered eating has been under-represented in empirical and clinical research. The purpose of our editorial Reference Murray, Griffiths and Mond1 was to highlight both the male experience of eating disorder pathology, and the historical failure to recognise and index this pathology.

Although our piece was not intended to address considerations of aetiology, it is important to note that there is strikingly little evidence to support the sexual competition hypothesis as an aetiological framework for muscularity-oriented disordered eating, as proposed by Abed. Indeed, much of the work cited by Abed was conducted in female samples, with a consequent focus on the drive for thinness, and the study mentioned by Abed, Reference Li, Smith, Griskevicius, Cason and Bryan2 in which the sexual competition hypothesis was assessed in non-clinical male and female populations, is merely another example of male eating disorder pathology being assessed through the lens of female-oriented measurement tools. As such, the statement that the sexual competition hypothesis provides a cogent framework in accounting for the aetiology of muscularity-oriented disordered eating goes beyond what the current evidence base permits. The propensity to extrapolate findings from thinness-oriented studies of eating disorder pathology to males is the very problem which our editorial aimed to highlight.

In our view, the assertion that evolution-instilled competition for mates provides a framework for understanding the aetiology of eating disorder pathology is problematic for at least two reasons. First, eating disorders are associated with a substantially elevated risk of mortality, Reference Arcelus, Mitchell, Wales and Nielsen3 a distinct evolutionary disadvantage. Second, clinical eating disorder pathology is frequently characterised by a reduction in libido and active avoidance of sexual relationships, Reference Pinheiro, Raney, Thornton, Ficther, Berrettini and Goldman4 observations that are at odds with the purported goal of dietary restraint. Additionally, this framework offers little insight into how to distinguish those who develop clinical eating disorders from the far greater numbers of individuals who engage in purposeful dietary restraint with the goal of modifying their shape or weight, many of whom presumably desire a mate. No doubt a more comprehensive aetiological framework for eating disorder pathology needs to take better account of the reciprocal influences of a broad range of factors, but to say that ‘these disorders are the outcome of a gene–environment interaction’ is a diffuse and perhaps oversimplified statement which is likely more harmful than helpful.

References

1 Murray, SB, Griffiths, S, Mond, JM. Evolving eating disorder psychopathology: conceptualising muscularity-oriented disordered eating. Br J Psychiatry 2016; 208: 414–5.Google Scholar
2 Li, NP, Smith, AR, Griskevicius, V, Cason, MJ, Bryan, A. Intrasexual competition and eating restriction in heterosexual and homosexual individuals. Evol Hum Behav 2010; 31: 365–72.Google Scholar
3 Arcelus, J, Mitchell, AJ, Wales, J, Nielsen, S. Mortality rates in patients with anorexia nervosa and other eating disorders: a meta-analysis of 36 studies. Arch Gen Psychiatry 2011; 68: 724–31.Google Scholar
4 Pinheiro, AP, Raney, TJ, Thornton, LM, Ficther, MM, Berrettini, WH, Goldman, D, et al. Sexual functioning in women with eating disorders. Int J Eat Disord 2010; 43: 123–9.Google Scholar
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