Canadian Psychiatric Association

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Guest Editorial
Eating Disorders
Paul E. Garfinkel
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In Review
Pharmacologic Treatment of Eating Disorders
April J Zhu, B Timothy Walsh
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Psychological Treatments for Anorexia Nervosa: A Review of Published Studies and Promising New Directions
Allan S Kaplan

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Original Research
Acute Psychiatric Inpatient Care for People With a Dual Diagnosis: Patient Profiles and Lengths of Stay

Philip Burge, Hélène Ouellette-Kuntz, Haider Saeed, Bruce McCreary, Dana Paquette, Franklin Sim

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Canadian Geriatric Psychiatrists: Why Do They Do It? A Delphi Study
Susan Lieff, Diana Clarke

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Relation of Blood Counts During Clozapine Treatment to Serum Concentrations of Clozapine and Nor-Clozapine
L Kola Oyewumi, Zack Z Cernovsky, David J Freeman, David L Streiner

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Research Methods in Psychiatry
Breaking Up is Hard to Do: The Heartbreak of Dichotomizing Continuous Data
David L Streiner

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Brief Communciation
Treatment Resistance in Anorexia Nervosa and the Pervasiveness of Ethics in Clinical Decision making
Chris MacDonald

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Topiramate Use in Obese Patients With Binge Eating Disorder: An Open Study
Jose C Appolinario, Leonardo F Fontenelle, Marcelo Papelbaum, Joao R Bueno, Walmir Coutinho

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Book Reviews

The Depressed Child and Adolescent. 2nd ed.

Clinical Assessment of Dangerousness: Empirical Contributions

The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness

The Evolution of Psychoanalysis: Contemporary Theory and Practice

Psychiatrie gériatrique: esquisse d'une histoire médicale par l'élaboration de son langage

Démystifier les maladies mentales: les troubles de l'enfance et de l'adolescence


Books Received


Letters to the Editor

RE: Who Develops Severe or Fatal Adverse Drug Reactions to Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors?

RE: Canadian and American Psychiatrists' Attitudes Toward Dissociative Disorder Diagnoses

Acute Onset of Schizophrenia Following Autocastration

The World Trade Center Disaster

Selenium, Thyroid Hormones, Mood, and Behaviour

Brief Communication

Topiramate Use in Obese Patients With Binge Eating Disorder: An Open Study

Jose C Appolinario, MD1, Leonardo F Fontenelle, MD2, Marcelo Papelbaum, MD3,
João R Bueno, MD4, Walmir Coutinho, MD5

 

Objective: To assess topiramate’s efficacy and tolerability in a group of obese binge eaters with no neuropsychiatric comorbidity.

Method: We consecutively selected 8 obese patients with binge eating disorder (BED) and no medical or psychiatric comorbidity from individuals seeking treatment for obesity. Treatment with topiramate at 150 mg daily was administered over a 16-week period. To assesss outcome, we employed the days with binge episodes per week (DBE), the Binge Eating Scale (BES), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and body weight evaluation.

Results: Of the 6 patients who completed the trial, all showed reduced binge eating. Four patients presented a total remission, and 2 had a marked reduction in binge eating frequency. The mean DBE decreased significantly from 4.3 to 1.1 (P = 0.03), as did the BES scores, which fell from 31.8 to 15.3 (P = 0.04). Moreover, there was a statistically significant weight loss (mean 4.1 kg, P = 0.04). The most frequent side effects were paresthesias, fatigue, and somnolence.

Conclusion: Topiramate may be an effective and well-tolerated agent in the treatment of BED in obese patients.

(Can J Psychiatry 2002;47:271–273)

Clinical Implications

  • Topiramate may be an effective agent for obese patients with binge eating disorder (BED).
  • Topiramate acts in BED in the absence of a mood disorder.
  • A double-blind placebo-controlled study is indicated.

Limitations

  • This was an uncontrolled trial.
  • The study had a small sample size.
  • BED is associated with a high placebo response.

Key Words: topiramate, binge eating disorder, BED, eating disorder, obesity

Résumé: Utilisation du topiramate chez les patients obèses présentant une hyperphagie boulimique : une étude ouverte


Binge Eating Disorder (BED) is a novel diagnostic entity characterized by recurrent binge eating episodes without any of the subsequent compensatory behaviour commonly seen in patients with bulimia (1). Approximately 30% of patients participating in weight-loss programs and 70% of individuals in Overeaters Anonymous display this condition (2). Pharmacologic intervention may be an important part of a multidisciplinary approach to treating binge eating behaviour. There are few studies investigating pharmacologic treatments in cases of BED, but the most studied group of agents are the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) (3,4).

Topiramate is a broad-spectrum neurotherapeutic agent that has been approved for use as an adjunctive therapy in the treatment of partial-onset seizures in adults. Its mechanism of action is not fully understood, but the drug is known to enhance g-amino butyric acid (GABA) activity, to block voltage-dependent Na+ channels, to antagonize kainate and AMPA glutamate receptors, and also to inhibit carbonic anhydrase. Well-tolerated in clinical trials, topiramate’s most common adverse effects are somnolence, dizziness, ataxia, speech disorders, psychomotor slowing, and paresthesias. Additionally, a retrospective review of epilepsy patients treated with topiramate suggests that it may be associated with reduced appetite and weight loss (5).

There is increasing interest in the use of topiramate to treat some psychiatric disorders, and preliminary reports have already suggested that topiramate may have mood-stabilizing properties in patients with bipolar disorder (6,7). In the field of eating disorders, Shapira and others published an open-label trial on topiramate use (100 to 1400 mg daily) in 13 patients with BED (8). In their study, all patients had comorbid Axis I psychiatric disorders (bipolar or major depressive disorder) and were receiving other psychotherapeutic agents simultaneously. Eleven patients responded with a moderate-to-marked reduction in binge eating frequency and associated weight loss. Recently, we described the case of a morbidly obese woman with BED and no neuropsychiatric comorbidity who had failed to respond to other agents and was successfully treated with topiramate (9).

This study evaluates topiramate’s efficacy and tolerability in obese patients with BED and in the absence of other psychiatric DSM-IV Axis I comorbidity.

 

Methods

We selected 8 consecutive female outpatients seeking treatment for weight gain after they gave their informed consent. They fulfilled the following inclusion criteria: a body mass index (BMI) above 30, the diagnosis of BED according to DSM-IV criteria, and at least moderately severe binge eating behaviour, as expressed by a score above 17 on the Binge Eating Scale (BES) . The exclusion criteria included any comorbid DSM-IV Axis I psychiatric diagnosis, a history of seizures or epilepsy, pregnancy, lactation, any kind of psychotherapy within 3 months of entry to the study, clinically unstable medical illness, clinically significant abnormal laboratory results, and use of psychiatric medication or antiobesity agents within 3 months of entry to the study. To diagnose BED and other associated psychiatric conditions, we used the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis 1 Disorders (SCID 1/P) (10). We used the Binge Eating Scale (BES) (11) to assess the severity of the binge eating behaviour and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) (12) to evaluate the associated depressive symptoms. The study was approved by the Institute of Diabetes and Endocrinology of Rio de Janeiro Ethical Committee.

The dosage of topiramate was gradually increased in increments of 25 mg every week from 25 mg twice daily in the first 2 weeks to the target dosage of 75 mg twice daily at the end of the second month of treatment. This dosage was maintained until the end of the study.

The efficacy outcome measures were the number of days with binge eating episodes per week (DBE), the BES scores, the BDI scores, body weight, and adverse events. All variables were evaluated by a psychiatrist and an endocrinologist at the outset of the trial, at 2-week intervals in the first 2 months (visit 1, visit 2, visit 3, and visit 4), and thereafter at 4-week intervals until the fourth month of treatment ( visit 5 and visit 6). Statistical analysis included paired t-tests to assess changes in scores from pre- to posttreatment. An intent-to-treat analysis was employed, with the last available evaluation carried forward as endpoint