* * Search the Gazette
 
Harvard shieldHarvard University Gazette Harvard University Gazette
* Harvard News Office | Photo reprints | Previous issues | Contact us | Circulation
Current Issue:
March 09, 2006


News
News, events, features

Science/Research
Latest scientific findings

Profiles
The people behind the university

Community
Harvard and neighbor communities

Sports
Scores, highlights, upcoming games

On Campus
Newsmakers, notes, students, police log

Arts
Museums, concerts, theater

Calendar
Two-week listing of upcoming events

Subscribe  xml button
Gazette headlines delivered to your desktop

 

 


HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES

Binge eating disorder may have genetic ties, McLean Hospital study finds

Researchers at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital have reported that binge eating disorder runs in families, raising the possibility that this condition may have a genetic basis.

In the study, published in the March 6 issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry, the researchers found that family members of obese individuals with binge eating disorder were twice as likely to suffer from the condition, as were family members of obese individuals who did not have a history of binge eating. "This indicates that there may be a genetic component to binge eating disorder,'' said lead author James I. Hudson, director of the Biological Psychiatry Laboratory at McLean Hospital.

Binge eating disorder is a condition in which individuals experience uncontrolled eating binges at least twice a week for a period of at least six months. Binge eating disorder is estimated to afflict between 1 and 5 percent of the American population.

The researchers used a so-called "blind" family interview method, in which one investigator interviewed each of the 300 obese individuals selected for the study (half of whom had binge eating disorder and half of whom did not), while two other investigators interviewed 888 family members of those individuals. The group included 431 relatives of individuals with binge eating disorder and 457 relatives of individuals without binge eating disorder. The two family interviewers were kept blind to all diagnostic information about the obese individuals whose family members they were evaluating.

The study found a lifetime diagnosis of binge eating disorder in 87 of the 431 relatives of subjects with binge eating disorder and 44 of the 457 relatives of subjects without the disorder. The study also found that relatives of subjects with binge eating disorder were 2.5 times more likely to be severely obese than relatives of subjects without the disorder.

"This observation suggests that whatever genetic factors are causing binge eating disorder are also at play in causing severe obesity,'' Hudson said. "The current epidemic of obesity has many causes. This study says that there may be a psychobiological cause for obesity, one that is related to impulsive binge eating.''

Hudson said he hopes this study will encourage both psychiatrists and obesity specialists to pay more attention to binge eating disorder, something that could lead to looking for possible underlying factors and lead to the development of specific treatments.

"If we could create interventions targeted at the genetic factors that seem to underlie binge eating disorder, then those same interventions should help to reduce the public health burden of obesity," said Hudson.







Copyright 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College